Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.

The functional trait-based approach is increasingly used to predict responses of ecological communities to disturbances, but most studies target a single taxonomic group. Here, we assessed the resilience of a forest ecosystem to an overabundant herbivore population by assessing changes in 19 functio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marianne Bachand, Stéphanie Pellerin, Marco Moretti, Isabelle Aubin, Jean-Pierre Tremblay, Steeve D Côté, Monique Poulin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3938752?pdf=render
_version_ 1818132979234373632
author Marianne Bachand
Stéphanie Pellerin
Marco Moretti
Isabelle Aubin
Jean-Pierre Tremblay
Steeve D Côté
Monique Poulin
author_facet Marianne Bachand
Stéphanie Pellerin
Marco Moretti
Isabelle Aubin
Jean-Pierre Tremblay
Steeve D Côté
Monique Poulin
author_sort Marianne Bachand
collection DOAJ
description The functional trait-based approach is increasingly used to predict responses of ecological communities to disturbances, but most studies target a single taxonomic group. Here, we assessed the resilience of a forest ecosystem to an overabundant herbivore population by assessing changes in 19 functional traits for plant, 13 traits for ground beetle and 16 traits for songbird communities after six years of controlled browsing on Anticosti Island (Quebec, Canada). Our results indicated that plants were more responsive to 6 years of reduced browsing pressure than ground beetles and songbirds. However, co-inertia analysis revealed that ground beetle communities responded in a similar way than plant communities with stronger relationships between plant and ground beetle traits at reduced deer density, a pattern not detected between plant and songbird. High deer density favored plants species that reproduce vegetatively and with abiotic pollination and seed dispersal, traits implying little interaction with animal. On the other hand, traits found at reduced deer density mostly involved trophic interaction. For example, plants in this treatment had fleshy fruits and large seeds dispersed by birds or other animals whereas ground beetle species were carnivorous. Overall, our results suggest that plant communities recovered some functional components to overabundant herbivore populations, since most traits associated with undisturbed forests were reestablished after six years of deer reduction. The re-establishment of functional plant communities with traits involving trophic interaction induces changes in the ground-beetle trait community, but forest structure remains likely insufficiently heterogeneous to shift the songbird trait community within six years.
first_indexed 2024-12-11T08:45:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-9caebdd36a8c4633a979a3bdd94e0bf7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-11T08:45:26Z
publishDate 2014-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-9caebdd36a8c4633a979a3bdd94e0bf72022-12-22T01:14:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e9043710.1371/journal.pone.0090437Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.Marianne BachandStéphanie PellerinMarco MorettiIsabelle AubinJean-Pierre TremblaySteeve D CôtéMonique PoulinThe functional trait-based approach is increasingly used to predict responses of ecological communities to disturbances, but most studies target a single taxonomic group. Here, we assessed the resilience of a forest ecosystem to an overabundant herbivore population by assessing changes in 19 functional traits for plant, 13 traits for ground beetle and 16 traits for songbird communities after six years of controlled browsing on Anticosti Island (Quebec, Canada). Our results indicated that plants were more responsive to 6 years of reduced browsing pressure than ground beetles and songbirds. However, co-inertia analysis revealed that ground beetle communities responded in a similar way than plant communities with stronger relationships between plant and ground beetle traits at reduced deer density, a pattern not detected between plant and songbird. High deer density favored plants species that reproduce vegetatively and with abiotic pollination and seed dispersal, traits implying little interaction with animal. On the other hand, traits found at reduced deer density mostly involved trophic interaction. For example, plants in this treatment had fleshy fruits and large seeds dispersed by birds or other animals whereas ground beetle species were carnivorous. Overall, our results suggest that plant communities recovered some functional components to overabundant herbivore populations, since most traits associated with undisturbed forests were reestablished after six years of deer reduction. The re-establishment of functional plant communities with traits involving trophic interaction induces changes in the ground-beetle trait community, but forest structure remains likely insufficiently heterogeneous to shift the songbird trait community within six years.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3938752?pdf=render
spellingShingle Marianne Bachand
Stéphanie Pellerin
Marco Moretti
Isabelle Aubin
Jean-Pierre Tremblay
Steeve D Côté
Monique Poulin
Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
PLoS ONE
title Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
title_full Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
title_fullStr Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
title_full_unstemmed Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
title_short Functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density.
title_sort functional responses and resilience of boreal forest ecosystem after reduction of deer density
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3938752?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT mariannebachand functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT stephaniepellerin functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT marcomoretti functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT isabelleaubin functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT jeanpierretremblay functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT steevedcote functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity
AT moniquepoulin functionalresponsesandresilienceofborealforestecosystemafterreductionofdeerdensity