Post-Soviet fire and grazing regimes govern the abundance of a key ecosystem engineer on the Eurasian steppe, the yellow ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Diversity and Distributions
Abstract
Aim: Grazing intensity and fire patterns across the Eurasian steppes have changed
dramatically over the past decades due to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
and Kazakhstan is now a global fire hotspot. The implications of these changes for
ecosystem functioning are largely unclear. We aimed to understand the effects of
changed grazing intensity and fire frequency on a key ecosystem engineer, the yellow
ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus, on a very large scale.
Location: Kazakhstan.
Methods: Ground squirrels were surveyed in an area of ca. 100,000 ha in the dry
steppe of central Kazakhstan, using hierarchical distance sampling at more than 200
random points, stratified by fire frequency and livestock grazing intensity. We modelled abundance as a function of different variables, grouped at the landscape scale
(fire and grazing), meso-scale (soil and vegetation structure) and at burrow scale (plant
traits such as palatability, digestibility and nutrient content).
Results: Ground squirrels prefer areas of a high wormwood cover (Artemisia spp.) and
high plant species richness, which are moderately grazed, preferably by cattle, with
only rare fire occurrence. High squirrel densities were also related to the availability
of nitrogen-rich plants of high nutritional value for herbivores.
Main Conclusions: Yellow ground squirrels seem to reach their density optima by balancing trade-offs between optimal foraging in areas of short, nutrient-rich vegetation
and a good visibility of approaching predators. Post-Soviet changes in grazing pressure, resulting in higher fire recurrence rates due to grass encroachment and litter
accumulation (i.e. fuel for wildfire), have likely affected the abundance of burrowing
mammals and associated biodiversity across huge parts of the Eurasian steppes and
semideserts.
Description
Citation
Post-Soviet fire and grazing regimes govern the abundance of a key ecosystem engineer on the Eurasian steppe, the yellow ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus/Koshkina A. [et al.] //Diversity and Distributions . - 2022 - Vol. 29. - pp.395–408 .