Outbreaks by canopy-feeding geometrid moth cause state-dependent shifts in understorey plant communities
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5983Dato
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The increased spread of insect outbreaks is
among the most severe impacts of climate warming predicted
for northern boreal forest ecosystems. Compound
disturbances by insect herbivores can cause sharp transitions
between vegetation states with implications for ecosystem
productivity and climate feedbacks. By analysing
vegetation plots prior to and immediately after a severe and
widespread outbreak by geometrid moths in the birch forest-
tundra ecotone, we document a shift in forest understorey
community composition in response to the moth
outbreak. Prior to the moth outbreak, the plots divided into
two oligotrophic and one eutrophic plant community. The
moth outbreak caused a vegetation state shift in the two
oligotrophic communities, but only minor changes in the
eutrophic community. In the spatially most widespread
communities, oligotrophic dwarf shrub birch forest, dominance
by the allelopathic dwarf shrub Empetrum nigrum
ssp. hermaphroditum, was effectively broken and replaced
by a community dominated by the graminoid Avenella
flexuosa, in a manner qualitatively similar to the effect of
wild fires in E. nigrum communities in coniferous boreal
forest further south. As dominance by E. nigrum is associated
with retrogressive succession the observed vegetation
state shift has widespread implications for ecosystem
productivity on a regional scale. Our findings reveal that
the impact of moth outbreaks on the northern boreal birch
forest system is highly initial-state dependent, and that the
widespread oligotrophic communities have a low resistance
to such disturbances. This provides a case for the
notion that climate impacts on arctic and northern boreal
vegetation may take place most abruptly when conveyed
by changed dynamics of irruptive herbivores.
Forlag
Springer VerlagSitering
Oecologia 173(2013) nr. 3 s. 859-870Metadata
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