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Ecol Appl


Title:Deer browsing and soil disturbance induce cascading effects on plant communities: a multilevel path analysis
Author(s):Beguin J; Pothier D; Cote SD;
Address:"Centre d'Etude de la Foret, Departement des Sciences du Bois et de la Foret, Pavilion Abitibi-Price, 2405 Rue de la Terrasse, Universite Laval, Quebec, QC G1V0A6 Canada. julien.beguin.1@ulaval.ca"
Journal Title:Ecol Appl
Year:2011
Volume:21
Issue:2
Page Number:439 - 451
DOI: 10.1890/09-2100.1
ISSN/ISBN:1051-0761 (Print) 1051-0761 (Linking)
Abstract:"Understanding how large herbivores shape plant diversity patterns is an important challenge in community ecology, especially because many ungulate populations in the northern hemisphere have recently expanded. Because species within plant communities can exhibit strong interactions (e.g., competition, facilitation), selective foraging by large herbivores is likely not only to affect the abundance of palatable species, but also to induce cascading effects across entire plant communities. To investigate these possibilities, we first tested the effects of deer browsing and soil disturbance on herbaceous plant diversity patterns in boreal forest, using standard analyses of variance. Second, we evaluated direct and indirect effects of deer browsing and soil disturbance on the small-scale richness of herbaceous taxa using a multilevel path analysis approach. The first set of analyses showed that deer browsing and soil disturbance influenced herb richness. Path analyses revealed that deer browsing and soil disturbance influenced richness via complex chains of interactions, involving dominant (i.e., the most abundant) browsing-tolerant (DBT) taxa and white birch (Betula papyrifera), a species highly preferred by white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). We found no evidence that an increase of white birch in fenced quadrats was the direct cause of a decrease in herb richness. However, we found strong evidence that a higher abundance of DBT taxa (i.e., graminoids and Circium arvense), both in fenced and unfenced quadrats, increased herb layer richness. We propose an empirical model in which competitive interactions between white birch and DBT taxa regulate the strength of facilitative relationships between the abundance of DBT taxa and herb richness. In this model, deer browsing and the intensity of soil disturbance initiate a complex chain of cascading effects in boreal plant communities by controlling the abundance of white birch"
Keywords:Animals Deer/*physiology *Ecosystem Feeding Behavior/*physiology Plants/*classification Quebec *Soil;
Notes:"MedlineBeguin, Julien Pothier, David Cote, Steeve D eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2011/05/14 Ecol Appl. 2011 Mar; 21(2):439-51. doi: 10.1890/09-2100.1"

 
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