Abstract

Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in southeastern British Columbia subsist for most of the winter on arboreal hair lichen, mostly Bryoria spp. Foraging occurs mainly in old subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) forests near treeline. Here, the lower limit of Bryoria in the canopy is dictated by snowpack depth because hair lichens die when buried in snow. Bryoria is often beyond the reach of caribou in early winter, prompting caribou to move downslope to where lichen occurs lower in the canopy and other foraging modes are possible. Snowpacks are normally deep enough by late winter that caribou can reach Bryoria where it is most abundant, at high elevations. Extending this to inter-annual comparisons, Bryoria should be less accessible during late winter of low-snow years following normal winters, or of normal to low-snow years after deep-snow winters. We hypothesized that when maximum snowpack in late winter is low relative to the deepest of the previous 5 years, mountain caribou will use lower elevations to facilitate foraging (“lichen-snow-caribou” or LSC hypothesis). We tested this with late-winter data from 13 subpopulations. In the dry climatic region generally and for minor snowfall differences in wet and very wet regions, caribou did not shift downslope or in fact were at higher elevations during relatively low-snow years, possibly reflecting the ease of locomotion. The LSC hypothesis was supported within wet and very wet regions when snowpacks were about 1 m or more lower than in recent years. Elevation declined by 300 m (median) to 600 m (25th percentile) for snowpack differences of at least 1.5 m. Greater use of lodgepole pine and western hemlock stands sometimes also occurred. Management strategies emphasizing subalpine fir stands near treeline should be re-examined to ensure protection of a broader range of winter habitats used by caribou under variable snowpack conditions.

Highlights

  • Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) inhabiting the high-snowfall region of southeastern British Columbia, Canada, are known provincially as mountain caribou1 (Heard & Vagt, 1998)

  • Given that Bryoria increases in abundance at higher elevations while Alectoria is more common in valley bottoms, and perhaps because of the higher incidence of predators in valley bottoms during winter (Kinley & Apps, 2001), caribou minimize their time at lower elevations, despite the greater availability of terrestrial vascular forage there (Rominger & Oldemeyer, 1989, 1990)

  • At snowpack variability of 100-149 cm, 4 of 8 subpopulations occurred at significantly lower elevations, 2 had apparently lower but non-significant elevation values, 1 (Columbia-North) had lower 25th and 75th percentile elevations but a non-significantly higher median and caribou in 1 (Purcells-Central, occurring in the dry climate region) used higher elevations

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Summary

Introduction

Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) inhabiting the high-snowfall region of southeastern British Columbia, Canada, are known provincially as mountain caribou (Heard & Vagt, 1998). Alternatives include using lichen from wind-thrown trees or fallen branches, or using terrestrial plants or lichens These options are normally accompanied by downslope movement to areas of lower snow depth, where hair lichens occur lower in the canopy and cratering for terrestrial forage is feasible (Antifeau, 1987; Simpson et al, 1987; Rominger & Oldemeyer, 1989, 1990; Apps et al, 2001; Stevenson et al, 2001). Given that Bryoria increases in abundance at higher elevations while Alectoria is more common in valley bottoms, and perhaps because of the higher incidence of predators in valley bottoms during winter (Kinley & Apps, 2001), caribou minimize their time at lower elevations, despite the greater availability of terrestrial vascular forage there (Rominger & Oldemeyer, 1989, 1990)

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