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Gilg, O., B. Sittler, And I. Hanski. (2011). Will Collared Lemmings and their predators be the first vertebrates to “fall over the cliff” in Greenland due to global climate changes? in R. T. Watson, G. Hunt, T. J. Cade, M. Fuller, and E. Potapov (Eds.). Gyrfalcons and ptarmigan in a changing world. The Peregrine Fund, Boise, Idaho, USA. Bachelor's thesis, , .
Abstract: The high-Arctic has the world’s simplest terrestrial vertebrate predator-prey community, with the collared lemming (Dicrostonyx groenlandicus) being the single main prey of four predators, the Snowy Owl (Bubo scandiacus), Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus), Long-tailed Skua (Stercorarius longicaudus), and stoat (Mustela erminea). Using a 20-year time series and a model that has been previously parameterized with data from northeast Greenland, we analysed the population and community level consequences of the ongoing and predicted climate change. Species’ responses are complex, because in addition to the direct effects of climate change, which vary depending on species’ life histories, species are affected indirectly through interactions with their prey and predator species. The lemming-predator community exemplifies these complications, yet a robust conclusion emerges: in practically all scenarios and for the ranges of parameter values examined, climate change increases the length of the lemming population cycle and decreases the maximum densities reached during the fluctuations. The latter change, in particular, is detrimental to populations of their predators, which are adapted to make use of the years of prey abundance. Indeed, in northeast Greenland, even the Gyrfalcon is strongly dependent on lemmings, for the densities of larger prey as Arctic hare and ptarmigan are too low in most years.
Therefore, climate change will indirectly induce a decline in predators’ reproductive success and population densities, and may ultimately lead to local extinctions of some of the predator species. Based on these results, we conclude that the recent anomalous observations of lemming population dynamics may well be the first signs of a severe impact of climate change on the lemming-predator communities in northeast Greenland and presumably also elsewhere in the high-Arctic
Programme: 1036
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