Ecological Impacts of Deer Overabundance
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada · Center for Northern Studies · +2 more institutions
Abstract
▪ Abstract Deer have expanded their range and increased dramatically in abundance worldwide in recent decades. They inflict major economic losses in forestry, agriculture, and transportation and contribute to the transmission of several animal and human diseases. Their impact on natural ecosystems is also dramatic but less quantified. By foraging selectively, deer affect the growth and survival of many herb, shrub, and tree species, modifying patterns of relative abundance and vegetation dynamics. Cascading effects on other species extend to insects, birds, and other mammals. In forests, sustained overbrowsing reduces plant cover and diversity, alters nutrient and carbon cycling, and redirects succession to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 240
Authors
5- SDSteeve D. CôtéCorresponding
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Center for Northern Studies, Université Laval
- TPThomas P. Rooney
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- JTJean‐Pierre Tremblay
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Center for Northern Studies, Université Laval
- CDChristian Dussault
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Center for Northern Studies, Université Laval
- DMDonald M. Waller
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Topics & keywords
- Ecology
- Abundance (ecology)
- Foraging
- Ecosystem
- Ecological succession
- Shrub
- Biology
- Vegetation (pathology)