4.7 Article

Modelling occurrence and status of mat-forming lichens in boreal forests to assess the past and current quality of reindeer winter pastures

期刊

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
卷 96, 期 -, 页码 99-106

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2018.08.008

关键词

Caribou; Ground lichen; Lichen growth; Lichen volume; Reindeer forage; Reindeer husbandry; Terricolous lichen

资金

  1. Swedish Research Council Formas
  2. Lars Hiertas Minne Foundation
  3. Anna and Gunnar Vidfelt's fund for biological research
  4. Gunnar and Ruth Workman's fund for botanical research in Norrland, Sweden

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lichens play an essential role in northern ecosystems as important contributors to the water, nutrient and carbon cycles, as well as the main winter food resource for reindeer (Rangifer tarandus, also called caribou in North America), the most abundant herbivores in arctic and subarctic regions. Today, climate change and several types of land use are rapidly transforming northern ecosystems and challenging lichen growth. Since lichens are important indicators of ecosystem health and habitat suitability for reindeer, large-scale assessments are needed to estimate their past, present and future status. In our study, we aimed to develop models and equations that can be used by stakeholders to identify the occurrence of lichen-dominated boreal forests and to determine lichen conditions in those forests. Data were collected in Sweden and most input data are publicly available. We focused on mat-forming lichens belonging to the genera Cladonia and Cetraria, which are dominant species in the reindeer and caribou winter diet. Our models described lichen-dominated forests as being dominated by Scots pine (Pines sylvestris), having low basal area and thin canopy cover, and being located in south-and west-facing areas with high summer precipitation, low winter precipitation and temperature, and on gentle slopes. Within those forests, lichen biomass was positively related to tree canopy cover and summer precipitation, while negatively and exponentially related to intensity of use of the area by reindeer. Forest, meteorological, topographic and soil data can be used as input in our models to determine lichen conditions without having to estimate lichen biomass through demanding and expensive fieldwork.

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