Abstract

Lichens are the primary winter forage for large herds of migratory caribou (Rangifer tarandus). Caribou select for lichens more than they are available across the landscape and they generally avoid, during winter, habitat that has been burned by wildfires for decades while lichen abundance recovers. However, the relative importance of lichens in the diet is subject to debate. From 2010-2013, we conducted one of the largest microhistological studies of the early fall (58 samples from 1 site) and late winter (338 samples from 58 sites) diets of barren-ground caribou. Lichens con­stituted ~ 71% of the late winter diets of caribou in northwest Alaska, whereas moss (11%) and shrubs (9%) were the next most common forage items. Early fall diets were very similar to late winter, perhaps because deciduous vegetation is senescent during both periods. Diets of males, non-pregnant females and pregnant females were not significantly different. Pregnancy was not associated with the abundance of any forage type during winter but was associated with higher physiological stress. This result was expected as fall body condition dictates conception, caribou are ‘capital’ breeders, and gestation can be energetically demanding. Caribou that migrated south (i.e., wintered south of 67.1°N) had lower levels of nutritional stress, higher levels of lichen in the diet, and lower levels of moss and shrubs compared to caribou that did not migrate south. Future investigations into the potential connection between lichen abundance in the winter diet and survivorship, as well as linking the late summer diets of individuals to their reproductive success, should be undertaken.

Highlights

  • The importance of lichens in the winter diet of caribou (Rangifer tarandus) has been debated for nearly a century (Klein, 1982)

  • For the 20122013 data, we found significant differences in the percentage of lichens in the diet between winter ranges (χ2 (1) = 12.53, P < 0.01); diets of caribou on the southern winter range had a greater percentage of lichens in their diets than caribou on the northern winter range (Fig. 4A, β South = 0.605 ± 0.184 SE, logit space)

  • All sites (n = 9) with an average of < 59% lichens in the diet were on the northern winter range, while all sites (n = 15) with > 80% were in the south

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of lichens in the winter diet of caribou (Rangifer tarandus) has been debated for nearly a century (Klein, 1982). Terricolous lichens constitute the majority of the diet of migratory barren-ground caribou that face predation pressure (Klein, 1982; Russell et al, 1993; Joly et al, 2007b; Gustine et al, 2012; Joly et al, 2015). Non-migratory populations exist with little to no lichen in their diet (Thomas & Edmonds, 1983; Adamczewski et al, 1988). These populations often experience little to no predation pressure. Maternal investment in the fetus is relatively small for caribou during the first 2

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