Abstract

AbstractManagement strategies aimed at rehabilitating degraded and cleared forests often rely on temporary or permanent exclusion of herbivores (wild animals, livestock or both). But in many cases, this simple management technique is not sufficient to induce ecosystem restoration: many negative effects keep the ecosystem in a suboptimal, low biomass state. The presence of such stable states requires restoration measures to act on multiple stress factors simultaneously.Compensating for all limiting factors is neither practically nor economically feasible. But detailed knowledge about the autoecology of tree species – i.e. their site requirements, regeneration strategies and recruitment dynamics – may be used to tailor management to the most pertinent problems. Here we illustrate this approach with results from forest restoration experiments in grazing exclosures in northern Ethiopia using African wild olive (Olea europaea ssp. cuspidata) as a representative Afromontane climax species.The recruitment of African wild olive is affected by seed limitation, restricted seed dispersal and germination and survival limitation. The exclusion of grazing animals as a single measure to restore forest is not enough. Degraded grazing land moves into a state dominated by persistent shrubs, arresting forest succession and discouraging local stakeholders. Direct sowing or planting of seedlings in fertile patches under selected pioneer shrubs, however, may help to overcome this form of bush encroachment, in particular during years with an above-average rainfall.

Highlights

  • Water table drainage Loss of biodiversityNo more grazing No more cutting of wood Aim: restoration of natural forest vegetation

  • Biomass of vegetation in relation to grazing Only low biomass levels are possible if the grazing pressure > Fd

  • Reducing the grazing pressure (*) does not necessarily induce ecosystem restoration: the system is stuck in the low biomass state

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Summary

Water table drainage Loss of biodiversity

No more grazing No more cutting of wood Aim: restoration of natural forest vegetation. – to reduce erosion – to increase rainwater infiltration – to provide fodder and woody biomass. Undifferentiated (dry monodominant) Afromontane forest of the Ethiopian highland (Friis 1992)?. See e.g. Mengistu et al (2005) J Arid Environ 60:259-281 Aerts et al (2006) Appl Veg Sci 9:117-126. Sudden loss of transparency and vegetation in shallow lakes after human eutrophication. Turbid water state: No submerged vegetation Phytoplankton (algae) Bottom-feeding fish (via runoff from fields,...). Scheffer et al (2001) Nature 413:591-596 Drawings from Scheffer (1999) Conserv Ecol 3:11 (www.consecol.org/vol3/iss2/art11/)

Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems
Unmanaged exclosures
Overall conclusion
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