Abstract

Treelines are advancing on a global scale and encroaching upon alpine ecosystems. Browsing by vertebrate herbivores could affect treeline dynamics and forest expansion by limiting growth of trees. However, this has not been experimentally investigated, and due to a combination of herbivore behaviour and plant responses to herbivory, is unlikely to be a simple relationship. A long term (8 years of manipulation), large scale (0.3 km 2) sheep enclosure experiment, in the Scandes of Norway, was used to investigate the effect of three densities of sheep (no sheep, low and high densities with respectively 0, 25 and 80 sheep km −2) on tree growth within a mountain birch ( Betula pubescens tortuosa) treeline ecotone. Birch trees were most likely to be browsed at intermediate heights of around 100–130 cm and the likelihood of an individual being browsed did not differ between low and high sheep densities. However, when browsed, the intensity of browsing increased with sheep density. High densities of sheep reduced the net annual shoot growth of young mountain birch in comparison to growth in the absence of sheep. The long-term height growth of smaller mountain birch (stem diameter < 15 mm) was also reduced at high densities of sheep, but the height growth of larger birch was resistant to browsing, even though these trees were on average still within browsing height. This study shows that susceptibility to browsing in birch decreases with size, but by restraining the height growth of trees high densities of sheep can keep trees at heights at which they remain susceptible to browsing. Reductions in livestock density over a period as short as 8 years can thus facilitate altitudinal forest expansion.

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