Abstract

Arctic warming is causing widespread “greening” of tundra ecosystems. What this means for plant-herbivore relations, including the grazing pressure herbivores exert on increasingly productive tundra ecosystems, is poorly understood. Svalbard is one of the fastest warming places on Earth, with concomitant increases in both forage biomass and reindeer numbers. In 11 years between 1998 and 2023, we measured grass biomass and the proportion of shoots grazed in mesic grass-dominated tundra to evaluate whether increased forage biomass of grass absorbed the grazing pressure of more reindeer. Also, we used GPS data from adult female reindeer (2009-2023) to identify if grazing pressure was relieved by spillover into other habitats. During the study period, reindeer abundance, estimated by annual capture-mark-recapture, tripled, while grass biomass only doubled. Grazing pressure increased from 4% to 8%, which was lower than expected from the increased reindeer density. This discrepancy was not caused by spillover into other habitats, but rather by increased grazing in higher-biomass patches that have emerged with summer warming. Our findings support the notion that increased summer forage has contributed to Svalbard reindeer population growth, notably by making available higher biomass grass swards that allow for greater food offtake.

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