Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France

Understanding and predicting responses of plant community diversity and ecosystem functioning to disturbance is essential to achieving forest conservation and management goals. In recent decades, the abundance and geographic distribution of wild ungulates have expanded in many parts of Europe due to...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xavier Lecomte, Christophe Baltzinger, Anders Mårell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-12-01
Series:Ecological Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X24012238
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846121345855782912
author Xavier Lecomte
Christophe Baltzinger
Anders Mårell
author_facet Xavier Lecomte
Christophe Baltzinger
Anders Mårell
author_sort Xavier Lecomte
collection DOAJ
description Understanding and predicting responses of plant community diversity and ecosystem functioning to disturbance is essential to achieving forest conservation and management goals. In recent decades, the abundance and geographic distribution of wild ungulates have expanded in many parts of Europe due to, among other factors, land-use changes, hunting regulations and lack of predators. The study aims to explore the effects of deer browsing and grazing intensity, estimated through a browsing index on woody and semi-woody plants, on understorey vegetation composition, analysing both taxonomic and functional diversity. Specifically, we aim to test the intermediate disturbance hypothesis (IDH), which states that plant biodiversity peaks at intermediate levels of browsing intensity regarding plant species richness and functional groups. We also aim to identify species revealing different levels of browsing intensity, accounting for plant functional traits. Our results revealed that intermediate levels of browsing intensity, through species replacement, strongly and positively affected total species richness. This result is consistent with the IDH prediction, but distinct patterns varied across plant functional types. Moreover, increasing browsing intensity favoured disturbance-tolerant species by replacing functional traits. These species were characterised by ruderal traits, including high specific leaf area, low leaf dry matter content, small height and seed mass, annual and short lifespans. However, although browsing intensity increased functional richness and decreased functional redundancy, indicator species analysis revealed that high browsing intensity favoured highly competitive, browsing-tolerant perennial species. These results suggest that annual species may fail to colonise the understorey even if they are favoured by deer browsing, thereby affecting the functioning and the stability of ecosystem, with a potential homogenisation of understorey vegetation. Although confounding effects cannot be ruled out (e.g., local vegetation structure and diversity), our study highlights the need to consider functional diversity when assessing deer effects on vegetation to draw a complete picture of plant-large herbivore interactions.
format Article
id doaj-art-bf178ebb18074e41b1c6415585b0a58b
institution Kabale University
issn 1470-160X
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Ecological Indicators
spelling doaj-art-bf178ebb18074e41b1c6415585b0a58b2024-12-16T05:35:00ZengElsevierEcological Indicators1470-160X2024-12-01169112766Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in FranceXavier Lecomte0Christophe Baltzinger1Anders Mårell2Corresponding author.; INRAE, Research Unit Forest Ecosystems (EFNO), F- 45290 Nogent-sur-Vernisson, FranceINRAE, Research Unit Forest Ecosystems (EFNO), F- 45290 Nogent-sur-Vernisson, FranceINRAE, Research Unit Forest Ecosystems (EFNO), F- 45290 Nogent-sur-Vernisson, FranceUnderstanding and predicting responses of plant community diversity and ecosystem functioning to disturbance is essential to achieving forest conservation and management goals. In recent decades, the abundance and geographic distribution of wild ungulates have expanded in many parts of Europe due to, among other factors, land-use changes, hunting regulations and lack of predators. The study aims to explore the effects of deer browsing and grazing intensity, estimated through a browsing index on woody and semi-woody plants, on understorey vegetation composition, analysing both taxonomic and functional diversity. Specifically, we aim to test the intermediate disturbance hypothesis (IDH), which states that plant biodiversity peaks at intermediate levels of browsing intensity regarding plant species richness and functional groups. We also aim to identify species revealing different levels of browsing intensity, accounting for plant functional traits. Our results revealed that intermediate levels of browsing intensity, through species replacement, strongly and positively affected total species richness. This result is consistent with the IDH prediction, but distinct patterns varied across plant functional types. Moreover, increasing browsing intensity favoured disturbance-tolerant species by replacing functional traits. These species were characterised by ruderal traits, including high specific leaf area, low leaf dry matter content, small height and seed mass, annual and short lifespans. However, although browsing intensity increased functional richness and decreased functional redundancy, indicator species analysis revealed that high browsing intensity favoured highly competitive, browsing-tolerant perennial species. These results suggest that annual species may fail to colonise the understorey even if they are favoured by deer browsing, thereby affecting the functioning and the stability of ecosystem, with a potential homogenisation of understorey vegetation. Although confounding effects cannot be ruled out (e.g., local vegetation structure and diversity), our study highlights the need to consider functional diversity when assessing deer effects on vegetation to draw a complete picture of plant-large herbivore interactions.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X24012238Intermediate Disturbance HypothesisFunctional diversitySpecies and trait replacementIndicator speciesCommunity dynamicsLarge herbivore
spellingShingle Xavier Lecomte
Christophe Baltzinger
Anders Mårell
Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
Ecological Indicators
Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis
Functional diversity
Species and trait replacement
Indicator species
Community dynamics
Large herbivore
title Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
title_full Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
title_fullStr Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
title_full_unstemmed Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
title_short Warning in the woods: Species-specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in France
title_sort warning in the woods species specific and functional responses of the understorey along a deer browsing intensity gradient in a mixed temperate forest in france
topic Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis
Functional diversity
Species and trait replacement
Indicator species
Community dynamics
Large herbivore
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X24012238
work_keys_str_mv AT xavierlecomte warninginthewoodsspeciesspecificandfunctionalresponsesoftheunderstoreyalongadeerbrowsingintensitygradientinamixedtemperateforestinfrance
AT christophebaltzinger warninginthewoodsspeciesspecificandfunctionalresponsesoftheunderstoreyalongadeerbrowsingintensitygradientinamixedtemperateforestinfrance
AT andersmarell warninginthewoodsspeciesspecificandfunctionalresponsesoftheunderstoreyalongadeerbrowsingintensitygradientinamixedtemperateforestinfrance