Abstract

Savanna ecosystems are dominated by two distinct plant life forms, grasses and trees, but the interactions between them are poorly understood. Here, we quantified the effects of isolated savanna trees on grass biomass as a function of distance from the base of the tree and tree height, across a precipitation gradient in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Our results suggest that mean annual precipitation (MAP) mediates the nature of tree-grass interactions in these ecosystems, with the impact of trees on grass biomass shifting qualitatively between 550 and 737 mm MAP. Tree effects on grass biomass were facilitative in drier sites (MAP≤550 mm), with higher grass biomass observed beneath tree canopies than outside. In contrast, at the wettest site (MAP = 737 mm), grass biomass did not differ significantly beneath and outside tree canopies. Within this overall precipitation-driven pattern, tree height had positive effect on sub-canopy grass biomass at some sites, but these effects were weak and not consistent across the rainfall gradient. For a more synthetic understanding of tree-grass interactions in savannas, future studies should focus on isolating the different mechanisms by which trees influence grass biomass, both positively and negatively, and elucidate how their relative strengths change over broad environmental gradients.

Highlights

  • Savannas are ecosystems characterised by a continuous grass layer and a discontinuous tree layer

  • The minimum adequate model explaining grass biomass included the main effects of rainfall, distance and tree height and the two-way interactions between rainfall and distance, and rainfall and height (Table 2)

  • Tree effects on grass biomass beneath canopies changed across the rainfall gradient

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Summary

Introduction

Savannas are ecosystems characterised by a continuous grass layer and a discontinuous tree layer. They cover over 20% of the Earth’s total land surface and support a significant proportion of the planet’s livestock and wild herbivores [1,2]. The ratio of trees to grasses in savannas can vary depending on several environmental factors with precipitation and soil properties generally considered the predominant drivers at large scales [1,2,3,4,5] which in turn modulate plant-plant interactions at local scales [6,7,8]. Ecologists have emphasized the role of competition between trees and grasses as being a key determinant of savanna structure [1,9,10]. Facilitation can occur through various mechanisms including refuge from physical stress [18], refuge from predation [17], refuge from competition [19], and improved resource availability [20]

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