Synchrony in short-term fluctuations of moose calf body mass and bank volepopulation density supports the mast depression hypothesis

Citation
V. Selas et al., Synchrony in short-term fluctuations of moose calf body mass and bank volepopulation density supports the mast depression hypothesis, OIKOS, 92(2), 2001, pp. 271-278
Citations number
56
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
OIKOS
ISSN journal
00301299 → ACNP
Volume
92
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
271 - 278
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-1299(200102)92:2<271:SISFOM>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
Inter-annual variations in body mass of moose, Alces alces, in Norway and S weden have been considered as most likely due to direct or indirect effects of weather, but so Ear predictions of autumn body mass of moose calves on the basis of weather data have given a poor fit to data. A striking, but hi therto unnoticed, feature of several time series on body mass of moose carv es from south-eastern Norway is an apparently regular 3-4-year fluctuation pattern. This short-term fluctuation could be due to regular Variations in forage quality, e.g. caused by a cyclic seed production of some important f ood plants, as envisaged by the "mast depression" hypothesis. One plant spe cies important as food for moose carves in autumn is bilberry, Vaccinium my rtillus, which usually produces high seed crops (masts) at intervals of 3-4 years. Populations of the bank vole, Clethrionomys glareolus, which feeds on bilberry shoots in winter, are known to peak in bilberry post-mast years . In two study areas in Norway, there was a positive correlation between th e autumn body mass of moose calves and the autumn population index of bank vole in the succeeding year. In the northern area there was an additional p ositive effect of summer precipitation, whereas in the southern area there was an additional negative effect of summer temperature. In both areas, how ever, the effect of weather was less pronounced than that of the bank vole index. These results support the mast depression hypothesis.