Herbivores can indirectly affect ecosystem productivity and processes such as nutrient cycling and decomposition by altering the quantity and quality of resource inputs into the decomposer subsystem. Here, we tested how browsing by red deer impacts on the decomposition of, and nutrient loss from, birch leaf litter (Betula pubescens), and tested whether effects of browsing on these measures were direct, via alteration of the quality of leaf litter, or indirect through long term impacts of deer browsing on soil biological properties. This was tested in a microcosm experiment using soil and litter taken from inside and outside three individual fenced exclosures located at Creag Meagaidh National Nature Reserve, Scotland. We found that litter o...
General EcologyHerbivores have a major impact on the ecological communities they inhabit. In the pas...
International audienceBACKGROUND AND AIMS: The role of deer (family Cervidae) in ecosystem functioni...
It is largely accepted that large mammalian herbivores can indirectly influence ecosystem properties...
Herbivores can have important indirect effects on belowground properties and processes that govern e...
International audienceLitter decomposition is a key process that allows the recycling of nutrients w...
The past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North America and Western Europe...
Herbivores impact soil biogeochemical processes, often increasing nutrient cycling rates under high ...
The past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North America and Western Europe...
Previous studies on the effects of herbivores on nutrient cycling have given little consideration to...
International audienceThe past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North Amer...
There is increasing awareness that similar suites of plant traits may govern foliage palatability an...
Ungulates have become abundant in many temperate forests, shifting tree species composition by brows...
Forest ecosystems have been widely fragmented by human land use. Fragmentation induces significant m...
Herbivores can indirectly affect ecosystem productivity by modifying feedbacks that occur between do...
This study examines the extent to which above-ground trophic processes such as large carnivore preda...
General EcologyHerbivores have a major impact on the ecological communities they inhabit. In the pas...
International audienceBACKGROUND AND AIMS: The role of deer (family Cervidae) in ecosystem functioni...
It is largely accepted that large mammalian herbivores can indirectly influence ecosystem properties...
Herbivores can have important indirect effects on belowground properties and processes that govern e...
International audienceLitter decomposition is a key process that allows the recycling of nutrients w...
The past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North America and Western Europe...
Herbivores impact soil biogeochemical processes, often increasing nutrient cycling rates under high ...
The past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North America and Western Europe...
Previous studies on the effects of herbivores on nutrient cycling have given little consideration to...
International audienceThe past century witnessed a dramatic increase in deer abundance in North Amer...
There is increasing awareness that similar suites of plant traits may govern foliage palatability an...
Ungulates have become abundant in many temperate forests, shifting tree species composition by brows...
Forest ecosystems have been widely fragmented by human land use. Fragmentation induces significant m...
Herbivores can indirectly affect ecosystem productivity by modifying feedbacks that occur between do...
This study examines the extent to which above-ground trophic processes such as large carnivore preda...
General EcologyHerbivores have a major impact on the ecological communities they inhabit. In the pas...
International audienceBACKGROUND AND AIMS: The role of deer (family Cervidae) in ecosystem functioni...
It is largely accepted that large mammalian herbivores can indirectly influence ecosystem properties...