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Long‐term exclusion of invasive ungulates alters tree recruitment and functional traits but not total forest carbon.

Authors :
Allen, Kara
Bellingham, Peter J.
Richardson, Sarah J.
Allen, Robert B.
Burrows, Larry E.
Carswell, Fiona E.
Husheer, Sean W.
St. John, Mark G.
Peltzer, Duane A.
Source :
Ecological Applications; Jun2023, Vol. 33 Issue 4, p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Forests are major carbon (C) sinks, but their ability to sequester C and thus mitigate climate change, varies with the environment, disturbance regime, and biotic interactions. Herbivory by invasive, nonnative ungulates can have profound ecosystem effects, yet its consequences for forest C stocks remain poorly understood. We determined the impact of invasive ungulates on C pools, both above‐ and belowground (to 30 cm), and on forest structure and diversity using 26 paired long‐term (>20 years) ungulate exclosures and adjacent unfenced control plots located in native temperate rainforests across New Zealand, spanning 36–41° S. Total ecosystem C was similar between ungulate exclosure (299.93 ± 25.94 Mg C ha−1) and unfenced control (324.60 ± 38.39 Mg C ha−1) plots. Most (60%) variation in total ecosystem C was explained by the biomass of the largest tree (mean diameter at breast height [dbh]: 88 cm) within each plot. Ungulate exclusion increased the abundance and diversity of saplings and small trees (dbh ≥2.5, <10 cm) compared with unfenced controls, but these accounted for ~5% of total ecosystem C, demonstrating that a few, large trees dominate the total forest ecosystem C but are unaffected by invasive ungulates at a timescale of 20–50 years. However, changes in understory C pools, species composition, and functional diversity did occur following long‐term ungulate exclusion. Our findings suggest that, although the removal of invasive herbivores may not affect total forest C at the decadal scale, major shifts in the diversity and composition of regenerating species will have longer term consequences for ecosystem processes and forest C. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10510761
Volume :
33
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Ecological Applications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164065092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2836