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Studying the Effects of Climate Change on Moose and Caribou Habitat in Alaska

Differential Effects of Climate-Mediated Forest Change on the Habitats of Two Ungulates Important to Subsistence and Sport Hunting Economies
Principal Investigator
Brad Griffith

Dates

Start Date
2014-04-30
End Date
2016-04-30
Release Date
2014

Summary

Moose and caribou are two very important animals to both subsistence and sport hunting economies in Alaska. Their survival and reproduction is dependent on sufficient winter habitat and food sources, which may be threatened by climate change. During the winter, caribou eat lichens (organisms made up of algae and fungus) that grow on the snow-covered ground. Lichens will likely have a complex response to climate change, affected in different ways by factors like changing precipitation, wildfire, and competition with plants. For example, as temperatures warm, there will likely be less snow cover, exposing more of the lichen to caribou. Simultaneously, increased fire frequency could reduce lichen availability. Moose, on the other hand, [...]

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Contacts

Attached Files

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AK-2014-1_Caribou_KristineSowl_USFWS1.jpg
“Caribou - Credit: Kristine Sowl, USFWS”
thumbnail 995.58 KB image/jpeg
AK-2014-1_Caribou_KristineSowl_USFWS2.jpg
“Caribou - Credit: Kristine Sowl, USFWS”
thumbnail 764.45 KB image/jpeg
AK-2014-1_Moose_KristineSowl_USFWS.jpg
“Moose - Credit: Kristine Sowl, USFWS”
thumbnail 431.62 KB image/jpeg

Purpose

Climate change is a complex process that may affect the food resources of different species of wildlife in contrasting ways. Moose and caribou are important to both subsistence and sport hunting economies throughout Alaska, but their winter diets are quite different; caribou focus on snow covered ground hugging lichens while moose focus on the twigs of erect deciduous shrubs that protrude above the snow. This project will use output from the Integrated Ecosystem Model to estimate the differential effects of climate change on the quantity of food available to these two species throughout most of Alaska and parts of Canada, ~1970-2100. The model integrates the expected effects of climate on lichen and shrub production, wildfire and resulting plant community change, and the restrictions to food availability caused by deep snow and ground icing as a result of rain-on-snow. The results will be stratified by land ownership and landscape characteristics to provide maps of expected changes in winter food for moose and caribou that will be tailored to and directly useable by natural resource managers as they devise strategies for adapting to a changing climate.

Project Extension

parts
typeCOA
valueMS3493
projectStatusIn Progress

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2014
totalFunds176929.0
totalFunds176929.0

Caribou - Credit: Kristine Sowl, USFWS
Caribou - Credit: Kristine Sowl, USFWS

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • Alaska CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

Tags

Provenance

rfpManager-1.90.1

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC 0dd7410c-7bca-40aa-9e7c-1429d506277f
StampID NCCWSC AK13-GB520

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