Abstract

Long‐term monitoring is critical to determine the stability and sustainability of wildlife populations, and if change has occurred, why. We have followed population density changes in the small mammal community in the boreal forest of the southern Yukon for 46 years with density estimates by live trapping on 3–5 unmanipulated grids in spring and autumn. This community consists of 10 species and was responsible for 9% of the energy flow in the herbivore component of this ecosystem from 1986 to 1996, but this increased to 38% from 2003 to 2014. Small mammals, although small in size, are large in the transfer of energy from plants to predators and decomposers. Four species form the bulk of the biomass. There was a shift in the dominant species from the 1970s to the 2000s, with Myodes rutilus increasing in relative abundance by 22% and Peromyscus maniculatus decreasing by 22%. From 2007 to 2018, Myodes comprised 63% of the catch, Peromyscus 20%, and Microtus species 17%. Possible causes of these changes involve climate change, which is increasing primary production in this boreal forest, and an associated increase in the abundance of 3 rodent predators, marten (Martes americana), ermine (Mustela ermine) and coyotes (Canis latrans). Following and understanding these and potential future changes will require long‐term monitoring studies on a large scale to measure metapopulation dynamics. The small mammal community in northern Canada is being affected by climate change and cannot remain stable. Changes will be critically dependent on food–web interactions that are species‐specific.

Highlights

  • Correspondence: Charles Krebs, Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Blvd., Vancouver, B.C

  • In this paper we report the small mammal community dynamics in a Yukon boreal forest over a time period of 46 years

  • In this paper we report on 46 years of population changes in small rodents of the Yukon boreal forest

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Summary

Introduction

In this paper we report the small mammal community dynamics in a Yukon boreal forest over a time period of 46 years. Proximately 57% of the Canadian land surface and is dominated by evergreen coniferous trees, typically white spruce (Picea glauca) in the forested valleys of the Kluane Lake area. The herbivorous trophic level in the forested zone is dominated by snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus Erxleben, 1777), which fluctuate in a 9–10-year cycle. This cycle affects many, but not all, species in the food web and has been reviewed extensively in Krebs et al (2001, 2018a). We concentrate here on the small mammal community, only one part of the boreal forest fauna described in Krebs et al (2001) and in Boonstra et al (2018)

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