Abstract

Abstract The long‐term influence of persistent small herbivores on successional plant community configuration is rarely studied. We used a herbivore exclusion experiment along the successional gradient in a salt‐marsh system, to investigate the effects of hares and geese, and hares alone, on plant diversity at five successional stages (the earliest, two early, the intermediate and the late successional stages) in the short and long term, i.e. 7 and 22 years, respectively. Plant diversity declined over time at all successional stages except for the earliest one. Small herbivores slowed down species decline, but only at one early successional stage. Small herbivores slowed down species decline via decreasing dominance of preferred grass Festuca rubra in the short term, and less preferred Elytrigia atherica in the long term. The effects of hares and geese were more pronounced than hares alone, indicating an important additive role of geese, especially in the long term. Synthesis. Small herbivores can have a strong and long‐lasting impact on plant diversity, but it highly depends on the abundance of small herbivores, which in turn depends on the quality and abundance of forage plants. A diverse herbivore community may have more positive effects on regulating plant communities.

Highlights

  • Small vertebrate herbivores (1 kg < body mass < 10 kg) affect plant community composition and structure (Allan & Crawley, 2011; Crawley, 1990; Johnson et al, 2011; Kuijper & Bakker, 2005; Madsen et al,. 2011; Pascual, Alberti, Daleo, & Iribarne, 2017)

  • Small herbivores slowed down species decline via decreasing dominance of pre‐ ferred grass Festuca rubra in the short term, and less preferred Elytrigia atherica in the long term

  • Our 22‐year herbivore exclusion experiment along the successional gradient revealed that small herbivores slowed down plant diversity decline, but only at one early successional stage, where

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Small vertebrate herbivores (1 kg < body mass < 10 kg) affect plant community composition and structure (Allan & Crawley, 2011; Crawley, 1990; Johnson et al, 2011; Kuijper & Bakker, 2005; Madsen et al,. 2011; Pascual, Alberti, Daleo, & Iribarne, 2017). Limited stud‐ ies suggest that small herbivores impact plant diversity (Alberti, Canepuccia, Pascual, Pérez, & Iribame, 2011; Bakker, Ritchie, Olff, Milchunas, & Knops, 2006; Bromberg, Crain, & Bertness, 2009; Gough & Grace, 1998a, 1998b; Pascual et al, 2017). Those studies were relatively short‐term (20 years), and no studies have looked at the effects of small herbivores on plant diversity along successional gradients. These effects would only be apparent in the short term at early stages, as vegetation succession leads to less preferred plant species in the long term

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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