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Wiley Open Access, Ecography, 6(20), p. 595-604, 1997

DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.1997.tb00428.x

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Secondary succession and summer herbivory in a subarctic grassland: Community structure and diversity

Journal article published in 1997 by Kristjan Zobel, Mari Moora, Valerie K. Brown, Pekka Niemela, Martin Zobel ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

A field experiment was established in a subarctic grassland in the Finnish Lapland to study the role of summer herbivory in plant community succession Perennial vegetation and moss cover were removed in an area of 324 m2 The site was divided into four blocks, of which two were fenced to prevent herbivory by large mammals (reindeer, hare)Early successional changes in the vegetation were assessed Mean species richness per 3 × 3 m plot was consistently higher in the fenced area, indicating that herbivory can suppress small-scale diversity Herbivory affected the height of several plant species However, there was no correlation between frequency and height of individual species There was a weak indication that taller species were more successful m early succession when grazed Light competition is apparently not a key process determining successional change Thus, in early stage of succession, summer herbivory has little effect on diversity by limiting light competition, and most species are equally successful in grazed and ungrazed plots There was some indirect evidence about competitive interactions in the developing community However, unlike temperate grasslands, large mammal herbivory and competition for light seem not to be important determinants of community change in this subarctic grassland (at least what concernes early successional stages) This may be explained by the harshness of local climate, and abundance of light due to the polar day