Feeding Across the ESN:

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Feeding Across the ESN: Studying Herbivore-Ecosystem Interactions Following Fire in Black Spruce Forests Characterizing and inferring patterns and processes through measurements and experiments Studying consequences and extending time scales with long-term monitoring . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Feeding Across the ESN:

Studying Herbivore-Ecosystem Interactions Following Fire in Black Spruce Forests

• Characterizing and inferring patterns and processes through measurements and experiments

• Studying consequences and extending time scales with long-term monitoring

Browsing inventories on seedlings, saplings and trees

What are the most useful data we can collect now to a) help guide experiments and long-term monitoring, and b) inform

modeling efforts?

Hare browsing on spruce seedlings at intermediate-aged sites (from 2011

releves)

Fire Scar

BD GM GR GS LG MD WD

% B

row

sed

by H

ares

0

20

40

60

80

100 HARDWOODMIXEDPICMAR

NA NANANA

Herbivores are clearly capable of having profound effects on successional dynamics.

Where and how is this occurring, and where and how do we quantify these impacts?

How do changing disturbance regimes affect linkages between vegetation, herbivore densities & browsing patterns, and humans across space and time?

Helmer's Ridge (1998 Frost Fire)

2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010

See

ding

Den

sity

(ste

ms

m-2

)

10

100

1000

10000BETNEOPICMARPOPTRESALIX

How soon after fire does herbivory become important, and who eats seedlings?

SL1A (2001 Survey Line Fire)

2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

See

dlin

g D

ensi

ty (s

tem

s m

-2)

10

100

1000

BETNEOPICMARPOPBALPOPTRESALIX

SL1B (2001 Survey Line Fire)

2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

See

dlin

g D

ensi

ty (s

tem

s m

-2)

1

10

100

1000

BETNEOPICMARSALIX

FP5C (2010 Willow Creek Fire)

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

See

dlin

g D

ensi

ty (s

tem

s m

-2)

1

10

100

1000

10000

BETNEOPICMARPOPBALPOPTRE

Plant-herbivore interactions – Alix Conway (Ph.D)• Objective 1: Determine the impact of mammalian herbivory

on the growth and survival of early post-fire regeneration.

40x40 ft exclosures set up at ESN sites varying in species composition

and growth.

In each exclosure, and control, 20 individuals of black spruce, trembling aspen, and paper

birch have been tagged and measured.

• Objective 2: Estimate the sensitivity and response of woody tree species to winter and summer simulated browsing.

Three (6x6ft) exclosures have been set up in a lowland area that burned in 2004. Clipping experiments will take place in 2014 and 2015 by simulating winter and summer browsing. Tree architecture and growth of clipped paper birch, control unclipped trees, and spruce within each

treatment (clipped vs unclipped) will be monitored.

• Objective 3: Expand inference about plant-herbivore interactions by reconstructing herbivory history.

Mid-successional stands varying in fire severity.

Use dendrochronological techniques to determine past episodes of herbivory and time to escape herbivory.

Detailed stem analysis that indicates browsing frequency and the effect on radial and vertical

growth (stunted growth period).

• Objective 4: Incorporate mechanistic description of herbivory and fire frequency into predictive models.

– Forest gap models (eg. FORSPACE) will be used to simulate successional trajectories including field data collected on tree species growth and responses to herbivory.

Length of time trees are stunted in vertical growth due to herbivory can be used as an important parameter in forest simulation models to describe lag in volume accumulation.

2

6

10

14

1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980

First year of growth

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Ald

er s

tem

s (#

)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

K. Kielland

Nossov et al. (2011)

Effects of browsers on plant community composition

Butler et al. (2007, 2008)

2009

2013

> DBH < DBH

Ald

er D

ensi

ty (s

tem

s ha

-1)

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

CLIPCTL

2013

Yukon RiverWillow Clipping Experiment

Alder in intermediate-aged fire scars:

Why isn’t it everywhere??

•Role of herbivores?

•Legacies of fire or human disturbance?

•Spatial and temporal patterns?

•Consequences for N cycling

Tanana-Kuskokwim Lowlands

Yukon-Tanana UplandsRay MountainsLong-Term Monitoring Program:

•Density and browsing intensity of shrubs, and tree seedlings and saplings

•Exclosures

•Pellet counts

•Insect & pathogen surveys?

Using the ESN to understand the role of pests and pathogens in regulating forest dynamics at regional scales

experiments

short-term studies & long-term experiments

aerial surveys

Prefire Organic Layer (cm)

5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Res

idua

l Org

anic

Lay

er (c

m)

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25 xericsubxericsubxeric to mesicmesicmesic to subhygricsubhygric

Composite Burn Index (Total)

1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0

Har

dwoo

d D

ensi

ty (a

s %

)0

20

40

60

80

100

120

xericsubxericsubxeric to mesicmesicmesic to subhygricsubhygric

Young Sites

Hardwood Basal Area (m2 ha-1)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Abo

vegr

ound

Bio

mas

s (k

g ha

-1)

0

20x103

40x103

60x103

80x103

100x103

120x103

140x103 Big DenverGerstle RiverGoldstreamLivengoodMurphy DomeWickersham Dome

Hardwood Basal Area (m2 ha-1)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Abo

vegr

ound

Bio

mas

s (k

g ha

-1)

0

20x103

40x103

60x103

80x103

100x103

120x103

140x103 AspenBirchBlack SpruceAspen BSBirch BSHardwood BS

Intermediate-Aged Sites

Black Spruce Density (stems ha-1)

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000

BS

Abo

vegr

ound

Bio

mas

s (k

g ha

-1)

0

20x103

40x103

60x103

80x103

100x103

BCEFBig DenverCPCRWDonnely DomeGerstle RiverGoldstreamMurphy DomeNenana RidgeTatalinaWashinton CreekYukon River

Mature Sites