We used a dendroecological approach that involved examination of debarking
lesions (trampling scars) produced by caribou (Rangifer tarandus) hooves on
surficial roots and low branches of conifers to assess caribou activity in
the summer range of the Riviere George caribou herd in northeastern Quebec
-Labrador over the last 100 years. We deduced changes in caribou activity f
rom the age-frequency distributions of trampling scars in three widely spac
ed (> 100 km) old-growth conifer stands in the Riviere George area. We used
the fluctuating patterns in age distributions, described by residuals of t
he log-linear regression, as an index of the number of trampling scars with
time. This index indicated that caribou activity at the three sites follow
ed a general decreasing trend from the turn of the last century to around 1
950. There were two stages of rapid decline, around 1905-1915 and 1940, sep
arated by a minor increase in the 1920-1930s. A sustained increase occurred
from the 1950s to the 1980s. A comparison with survey and historical data
for caribou suggested that these fluctuations in this common signal of acti
vity at the three sites resulted mainly from fluctuations in caribou abunda
nce that occurred throughout the 20th century in northeastern Quebec-Labrad
or. The increase in caribou activity during the 1920-1930s suggested by the
frequency of trampling scars is not reported in the historical record. Car
ibou trampling scars on conifers may offer a new opportunity to assess larg
e-scale spatial and temporal population trends of caribou in subarctic and
boreal zones.