Indirect effects of mammalian browsers on vegetation and ground-dwelling insects in an Alaskan floodplain

Citation
O. Suominen et al., Indirect effects of mammalian browsers on vegetation and ground-dwelling insects in an Alaskan floodplain, ECOSCIENCE, 6(4), 1999, pp. 505-510
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
ECOSCIENCE
ISSN journal
11956860 → ACNP
Volume
6
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
505 - 510
Database
ISI
SICI code
1195-6860(1999)6:4<505:IEOMBO>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Several studies in recent years have shown that large mammalian herbivores can have a substantial effect on boreal forest vegetation and soil dynamics . We studied the potential indirect effects of moose and snowshoe hare brow sing on ground-living Orthoptera and Coleoptera and herb-layer vegetation i n seven long-term exclosures and adjacent browsed plots. Insect and plant a ssemblages of exclosures and browsed plots differed from each other. Higher biomass of mosses, grass, and forbs characterized browsed plots, whereas E quisetum spp. and Pyrola asarifolia were more common in unbrowsed plots. In sect abundance was generally higher in browsed plots. Curculionidae was the only insect family that tended to be more abundant inside the exclosures. An enhanced food supply, in the form of feces and carrion of mammalian herb ivores, and the direct and indirect effects of browsing on tree species com position, field-layer vegetation, litter, and microclimate are the probable causes of differences in the studied insect assemblages.