4.5 Review

Uncovering the different scales in deer-forest interactions

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 10, 页码 5017-5024

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7439

关键词

boreal; browsing; density; hierarchical; landscape ecology; plant– herbivore interactions; temperate; temporal; spatial

资金

  1. Secretaria de Educacion Superior, Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion

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This study evaluates the effects of wild deer browsing on temperate and boreal forests at different scales by synthesizing seminal papers. It proposes a framework based on modern technology to answer multiscale research questions previously identified.
Deer are regarded to be a keystone species as they play a crucial role in the way an ecosystem functions. Most deer-forest interaction studies apply a single scale - process of analyzing ecological interactions by only taking into account one dependent variable - to understand how deer browsing behavior shapes different forest components, but they overlook the fact that forests respond to multiple scales simultaneously. This research evaluates the effect of browsing by wild deer on temperate and boreal forests at different scales by synthesizing seminal papers, specifically (a) what are the effects of deer population density in forest regeneration? (b) What are the effects of deer when forests present diverging spatial characteristics? (c) What are the effects on vegetation at different temporal scales? and (d) What are the hierarchical effects of deer when considering other trophic levels? Additionally, a framework based on modern technology is proposed to answer the multiscale research questions previously identified. When analyzing deer-forest interactions at different scales, the strongest relationships occur at the extremes. For example: when deer assemblage occurs in low or high density and is composed of a mix of small and large species. As forests on poor soils remain restrained in size, isolated and chronically browsed. When forests harbor incomplete trophic levels, the effects spill over to lower trophic levels. To better understand the complexities in deer-forest interactions, researchers should combine technology-based instruments like fixed sensors and drones with field-tested methods such observational studies and experiments to tackle multiscale research questions.

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