Abstract

BackgroundAcquiring greater understanding of the factors causing changes in vegetation structure - particularly with the potential to cause regime shifts - is important in adaptively managed conservation areas. Large trees (≥5 m in height) play an important ecosystem function, and are associated with a stable ecological state in the African savanna. There is concern that large tree densities are declining in a number of protected areas, including the Kruger National Park, South Africa. In this paper the results of a field study designed to monitor change in a savanna system are presented and discussed.Methodology/Principal FindingsDeveloping the first phase of a monitoring protocol to measure the change in tree species composition, density and size distribution, whilst also identifying factors driving change. A central issue is the discrete spatial distribution of large trees in the landscape, making point sampling approaches relatively ineffective. Accordingly, fourteen 10 m wide transects were aligned perpendicular to large rivers (3.0–6.6 km in length) and eight transects were located at fixed-point photographic locations (1.0–1.6 km in length). Using accumulation curves, we established that the majority of tree species were sampled within 3 km. Furthermore, the key ecological drivers (e.g. fire, herbivory, drought and disease) which influence large tree use and impact were also recorded within 3 km.Conclusions/SignificanceThe technique presented provides an effective method for monitoring changes in large tree abundance, size distribution and use by the main ecological drivers across the savanna landscape. However, the monitoring of rare tree species would require individual marking approaches due to their low densities and specific habitat requirements. Repeat sampling intervals would vary depending on the factor of concern and proposed management mitigation. Once a monitoring protocol has been identified and evaluated, the next stage is to integrate that protocol into a decision-making system, which highlights potential leading indicators of change. Frequent monitoring would be required to establish the rate and direction of change. This approach may be useful in generating monitoring protocols for other dynamic systems.

Highlights

  • Decisions in conservation management were based predominantly on the experience of wildlife managers

  • Of particular concern in conservation management is the potential for regime shifts, whereby ecosystems change from one state to another under pressure from one or more ecological drivers

  • More recently an integrated approach has been pursued, for example determining the interaction of elephants and fire [23,48,49] and the influence of elephants, drought and the provision of artificial water sources [50] on savanna vegetation structure

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Summary

Introduction

Decisions in conservation management were based predominantly on the experience of wildlife managers. Many parks subscribe to an active interventionist approach to perturb the system in a direction required to meet stated objectives [3,5] Any such approach, and one that pursues active adaptive management, requires monitoring of key indicators in order to gauge progress Of particular concern in conservation management is the potential for regime shifts, whereby ecosystems change from one state to another under pressure from one or more ecological drivers (see [7,8]). These changes can be both rapid and irreversible, depending upon the system in question ([7]). In this paper the results of a field study designed to monitor change in a savanna system are presented and discussed

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