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When Winners Become Losers: Predicted Nonlinear Responses of Arctic Birds to Increasing Woody Vegetation

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  • Sarah J Thompson
  • Colleen M Handel
  • Rachel M Richardson
  • Lance B McNew

Abstract

Climate change is facilitating rapid changes in the composition and distribution of vegetation at northern latitudes, raising questions about the responses of wildlife that rely on arctic ecosystems. One widely observed change occurring in arctic tundra ecosystems is an increasing dominance of deciduous shrub vegetation. Our goals were to examine the tolerance of arctic-nesting bird species to existing gradients of vegetation along the boreal forest-tundra ecotone, to predict the abundance of species across different heights and densities of shrubs, and to identify species that will be most or least responsive to ongoing expansion of shrubs in tundra ecosystems. We conducted 1,208 point counts on 12 study blocks from 2012–2014 in northwestern Alaska, using repeated surveys to account for imperfect detection of birds. We considered the importance of shrub height, density of low and tall shrubs (i.e. shrubs >0.5 m tall), percent of ground cover attributed to shrubs (including dwarf shrubs

Suggested Citation

  • Sarah J Thompson & Colleen M Handel & Rachel M Richardson & Lance B McNew, 2016. "When Winners Become Losers: Predicted Nonlinear Responses of Arctic Birds to Increasing Woody Vegetation," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(11), pages 1-17, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0164755
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164755
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