Long-term dynamics of voles and lemmings at the timberline and above the willow limit as a test of hypotheses on trophic interactions

被引:51
|
作者
Ekerholm, P [1 ]
Oksanen, L [1 ]
Oksanen, T [1 ]
机构
[1] Umea Univ, Dept Ecol & Environm Sci, SE-90187 Umea, Sweden
关键词
D O I
10.1034/j.1600-0587.2001.d01-211.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
We have monitored population fluctuations of microtine rodents since 1977 in two habitat complexes in Finnmark, northernmost Norway - a low arctic plains landscape, with patches of willow scrubland embedded in lichen-dwarf birch tundra, and in adjacent highlands, occupied by scrub-free heaths, snow-beds and bogs. In the plains landscape, voles were cyclic, with a period of five years, and with wave-Eke density fluctuations. This pattern is consistent with time trajectory of prey in a predator-prey Emit cycle. Autoregression analysis implies that the prey pattern is cleanest in the most productive plains habitats, while dynamics in the prevailing heath and bog habitats are governed by two significant lags, implying that even vole-plant interactions count. In the highlands, lemmings had two outbreaks, characterized by J-shaped growth curves, and separated by long periods of low density. The fluctuation pattern of lemmings in highlands was consistent with the predicted time trajectory of a predator. The implications of time trajectories are corroborated by direct evidence on microtine impacts upon the vegetation and on spatial patterns in predator activity. Even the strong dispersal tendency of lemmings during population peaks is consistent with the conjecture that they are adapted to play the role of a predator in a sustained predator-prey cycle. As a whole, the pattern supports T. Oksanen's modification of the hypothesis of exploitation ecosystems, where both local productivity and the structure of the landscape are taken in account.
引用
收藏
页码:555 / 568
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [2] Long-term decline in numbers of cyclic voles in boreal Sweden:: analysis and presentation of hypotheses
    Hörnfeldt, B
    OIKOS, 2004, 107 (02) : 376 - 392
  • [3] Long-Term Experiments Reveal Strong Interactions Between Lemmings and Plants in the Fennoscandian Highland Tundra
    Johan Olofsson
    Lauri Oksanen
    Tarja Oksanen
    Maria Tuomi
    Katrine S. Hoset
    Risto Virtanen
    Kukka Kyrö
    Ecosystems, 2014, 17 : 606 - 615
  • [4] Long-Term Experiments Reveal Strong Interactions Between Lemmings and Plants in the Fennoscandian Highland Tundra
    Olofsson, Johan
    Oksanen, Lauri
    Oksanen, Tarja
    Tuomi, Maria
    Hoset, Katrine S.
    Virtanen, Risto
    Kyro, Kukka
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2014, 17 (04) : 606 - 615
  • [5] Do hypotheses from short-term studies hold in the long-term? An empirical test
    Hellmann, JJ
    Weiss, SB
    McLaughlin, JF
    Boggs, CL
    Ehrlich, PR
    Launer, AE
    Murphy, DD
    ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 2003, 28 (01) : 74 - 84
  • [6] LONG-TERM BACTERIOPLANKTON DYNAMICS AND ITS TROPHIC ROLE IN PRODUCTIVITY OF THE EUTROPHIC RESERVOIR
    MIKHAILENKO, LE
    DOPOVIDI AKADEMII NAUK UKRAINSKOI RSR SERIYA B-GEOLOGICHNI KHIMICHNI TA BIOLOGICHNI NAUKI, 1984, (12): : 62 - 64
  • [7] Long-term responses in arctic ungulate dynamics to changes in climatic and trophic processes
    Forchhammer, MC
    Post, E
    Stenseth, NC
    Boertmann, DM
    POPULATION ECOLOGY, 2002, 44 (02) : 113 - 120
  • [8] TROPHIC INTERACTIONS IN A SHALLOW LAKE FOLLOWING A REDUCTION IN NUTRIENT LOADING - A LONG-TERM STUDY
    PERROW, MR
    MOSS, B
    STANSFIELD, J
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1994, 275 : 43 - 52
  • [9] Long-term aspen dynamics, trophic cascades, and climate in northern Yellowstone National Park
    Beschta, Robert L.
    Painter, Luke E.
    Levi, Taal
    Ripple, William J.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2016, 46 (04) : 548 - 556
  • [10] Trophic interactions in a shallow lake following a reduction in nutrient loading. A long-term study
    Perrow, M.R.
    Moss, B.
    Stansfield, J.
    Hydrobiologia, 1994, 275-7