The biogeochemical boomerang: Site fidelity creates nutritional hotspots that may promote recurrent calving site reuse

Abstract Animals interact with nutrient cycles by consuming and depositing nutrients, interactions studied separately in nutritional ecology and zoogeochemistry. Recent theoretical work bridges these disciplines, highlighting that animal‐driven nutrient recycling could be crucial in helping animals...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ecology Letters
Main Authors: Ferraro, Kristy M., Albrecht, Dara, Hendrix, Jack G., Wal, Eric Vander, Schmitz, Oswald J., Webber, Quinn M. R., Bradford, Mark A.
Other Authors: National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, Animal Welfare Institute
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.14491
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/ele.14491
Description
Summary:Abstract Animals interact with nutrient cycles by consuming and depositing nutrients, interactions studied separately in nutritional ecology and zoogeochemistry. Recent theoretical work bridges these disciplines, highlighting that animal‐driven nutrient recycling could be crucial in helping animals meet their nutritional needs. When animals exhibit site fidelity, they consistently deposit nutrients, potentially improving vegetation quality. We investigated this potential feedback by analysing changes in forage nitrogen stocks following simulated caribou calving. We found that forage nitrogen stocks increased after 2 weeks and remained elevated after 1 year, a change due to increased forage quality, not quantity. We also developed a nutrient budget within calving grounds, demonstrating that natal fluid and calf carcasses contribute substantial nitrogen subsidies. We, thus, highlight a positive zoogeochemical feedback whereby nutrients deposited during calving become bioavailable during lactation and provide evidence that site fidelity creates a biogeochemical boomerang in which animals deposit nutrients that can be reused later.