Abstract

Scavengers can have strong impacts on food webs, and awareness of their role in ecosystems has increased during the last decades. In our study, we used baited camera traps to quantify the structure of the winter scavenger community in central Scandinavia across a forest–alpine continuum and assess how climatic conditions affected spatial patterns of species occurrences at baits. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed that the main habitat type (forest or alpine tundra) and snow depth was main determinants of the community structure. According to a joint species distribution model within the HMSC framework, species richness tended to be higher in forest than in alpine tundra habitat, but was only weakly associated with temperature and snow depth. However, we observed stronger and more diverse impacts of these covariates on individual species. Occurrence at baits by habitat generalists (red fox, golden eagle, and common raven) typically increased at low temperatures and high snow depth, probably due to increased energetic demands and lower abundance of natural prey in harsh winter conditions. On the contrary, occurrence at baits by forest specialists (e.g., Eurasian jay) tended to decrease in deep snow, which is possibly a consequence of reduced bait detectability and accessibility. In general, the influence of environmental covariates on species richness and occurrence at baits was lower in alpine tundra than in forests, and habitat generalists dominated the scavenger communities in both forest and alpine tundra. Following forecasted climate change, altered environmental conditions are likely to cause range expansion of boreal species and range contraction of typical alpine species such as the arctic fox. Our results suggest that altered snow conditions will possibly be a main driver of changes in species community structure.

Highlights

  • Scavengers are an important component of ecosystems due to their effect on nutrient cycling, stabilizing food webs, and disease transmission (Mateo-Tomás et al, 2017)

  • The occurrence at baits by different species changed along the forest–alpine gradient, we found a surprisingly small difference in species richness between forest and alpine tundra habitats

  • This relates to the fact that species richness, which we expressed as the number of different species visiting bait stations, is inherently a product of the probabilities of occurrence at baits by each of the different species present in each of the habitats

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Scavengers are an important component of ecosystems due to their effect on nutrient cycling, stabilizing food webs, and disease transmission (Mateo-Tomás et al, 2017). This study aims to quantify the structure of the winter scavenger community across a forest–alpine gradient in central Scandinavia, with a special focus on the underlying drivers of the occurrence at baits by different scavenging species with respect to climatic conditions and habitat types. We did this by placing baited camera traps along the forest–alpine gradient. Scavenger species could be restricted by climatic conditions We predict that both temperature and snow depth are important factors structuring the scavenger guild by limiting their distribution and affecting their activity patterns when present. Since birds mostly locate food by eyesight and have limited ability to dig through deep snow, we predict that snow depth might affect bird scavenging more than mammal scavenging

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| Study design and field sampling
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
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