Abstract

Elephant are considered major drivers of ecosystems, but their effects within small-scale landscape features and on other herbivores still remain unclear. Elephant impact on vegetation has been widely studied in areas where elephant have been present for many years. We therefore examined the combined effect of short-term elephant presence (< 4 years) and hillslope position on tree species assemblages, resource availability, browsing intensity and soil properties. Short-term elephant presence did not affect woody species assemblages, but did affect height distribution, with greater sapling densities in elephant access areas. Overall tree and stem densities were also not affected by elephant. By contrast, slope position affected woody species assemblages, but not height distributions and densities. Variation in species assemblages was statistically best explained by levels of total cations, Zinc, sand and clay. Although elephant and mesoherbivore browsing intensities were unaffected by slope position, we found lower mesoherbivore browsing intensity on crests with high elephant browsing intensity. Thus, elephant appear to indirectly facilitate the survival of saplings, via the displacement of mesoherbivores, providing a window of opportunity for saplings to grow into taller trees. In the short-term, effects of elephant can be minor and in the opposite direction of expectation. In addition, such behavioural displacement promotes recruitment of saplings into larger height classes. The interaction between slope position and elephant effect found here is in contrast with other studies, and illustrates the importance of examining ecosystem complexity as a function of variation in species presence and topography. The absence of a direct effect of elephant on vegetation, but the presence of an effect on mesoherbivore browsing, is relevant for conservation areas especially where both herbivore groups are actively managed.

Highlights

  • The African savanna biome, characterised by a high degree of horizontal and vertical spatial heterogeneity, harbours one of the most diverse assemblages of large herbivores [1,2]

  • We examined the effect of soil properties on woody species assemblages on footslopes and crests, as soil properties may differ between slope positions, and are an important determinant of species composition [13]

  • Footslopes harboured 20 species not encountered on crests, and crests had 13 species that were not recorded on footslopes, both slope positions had 35 species in common

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The African savanna biome, characterised by a high degree of horizontal and vertical spatial heterogeneity, harbours one of the most diverse assemblages of large herbivores [1,2]. Species use the landscape differently depending on their specific nutritional requirements and the spatial heterogeneity of the available resources [3]. Many complex factors determine herbivore foraging behaviour and the consequent use of the landscape, including the quality, availability, spatial distribution of resources, and specific nutritional requirements [3,4], as well as predation risk [5] and competition from other herbivores [6]. The impact of herbivores on vegetation is spatially heterogeneous across the savanna landscape [7,8]. Much of the spatial heterogeneity of herbivory is understood as a function of the distance to major water sources, such as rivers and waterholes, at the landscape level [9,10]. Ecohydrological conditions can vary at much smaller spatial scales, such as within hillslopes

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.