Publication | Open Access
Effects of Wind-Hardened Snow on Foraging by Reindeer (<i>Rangifer Tarandus</i>)
86
Citations
7
References
1991
Year
Snow HardnessGlacierForagingPermafrostEngineeringGeomorphologyEvolutionary BiologyForestryEntomologyGeographyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionForage AvailabilityIntegrated Snow HardnessAnimal BehaviorEarth ScienceWind-hardened SnowSnow Avalanche
Various methods were investigated for assessing the relationship between wind-hardened snow (upsik) and forage availability to reindeer. Mean bottom area of individual craters was not a function of depth, hardness or integrated hardness. Individual crater area was partially dependent on specific cratering time (r2 = .60). Cratering time per active period increased with integrated snow hardness (r2 = .88). Number of craters and total area cratered increased with decreasing site hardness. Reindeer always cratered microsites of lesser depth and hardness than found in the general feeding site. A threefold decrease in snow hardness resulted in a fourfold increase in forage availability.Key words: Rangifer, snow hardness, snow depth, forage availability
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1