Abstract

ContextHumans and elephants are major disturbance agents in the African savanna woodlands. While both species remove trees, humans selectively harvest larger stems, which are less vulnerable to elephants. Increasing human pressures raise the question of how the altered disturbance regime will modify woodland structure, and in turn biodiversity and ecosystem function.ObjectivesHere we investigate this process in the mopane woodlands of Zambia by examining relationships between woodland structure, species and functional bird diversity, and human and elephant disturbance intensity.MethodsWe conducted a single-season comparison of 178 plots from 45 sites using Bayesian mixed models.ResultsThe effect of elephants on tree density (− 7.7 ± 1.6%; deviation from intercept) and bird species richness (− 15 ± 6%) was greater than that of humans (density: − 3.5 ± 1.5%; bird richness: − 11.6 ± 4.7%). Despite this, elephants did not significantly affect woody biomass or functional bird diversity, whereas humans had a negative effect on both (woody biomass: − 9.3 ± 2.3%; functional bird diversity: − 5 ± 2%). Elephants were associated with reductions in species and functional turnover (5.3 ± 2.5% and 6 ± 3%, respectively).ConclusionsReplacement of elephants by humans is likely to reduce woody biomass and functional bird diversity affecting the woodland structure, sustainability, and functioning. Concentrated elephant disturbance could lead to spatial homogeneity in bird species and functional compositions, potentially reducing the spatial resilience of bird communities. This is the first study to highlight how the difference between elephant and human disturbances leads to dissimilar effects on biodiversity.

Highlights

  • Humans and elephants are integral and ancient parts of the African savanna woodlands, structuring the ecosystem through disturbance (Ellis 2011; CharlesDominique et al 2016)

  • Martin Africa Conservation Programme, World Parrot Trust, Glanmor House, Hayle TR27 4HB, UK. Here we investigate this process in the mopane woodlands of Zambia by examining relationships between woodland structure, species and functional bird diversity, and human and elephant disturbance intensity

  • This study provides mopane woodland specific support to the findings of Mograbi et al, (2017) in Kruger National Park that the magnitude of tree removal by elephants is generally higher than that of humans

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Humans and elephants are integral and ancient parts of the African savanna woodlands, structuring the ecosystem through disturbance (Ellis 2011; CharlesDominique et al 2016). In recent times their relative influence as disturbance agents has radically changed (Boer et al 2013); humans have replaced elephants as the dominant disturbance agents with unknown consequences for biodiversity and ecosystem function. Elephants and humans may be modifying woodland structure and its biodiversity in dissimilar ways, but the identification of such discrepancies—and the assessment of their effects—has received surprisingly little attention. We present a spatial comparison of the effects of disturbance by humans and elephants on (i) structural attributes of the woody vegetation (ii) species and functional diversity of birds in the mopane woodlands of Zambia

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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