Abstract

Factors controlling savanna woody vegetation structure vary at multiple spatial and temporal scales, and as a consequence, unraveling their combined effects has proven to be a classic challenge in savanna ecology. We used airborne LiDAR (light detection and ranging) to map three-dimensional woody vegetation structure throughout four savanna watersheds, each contrasting in geologic substrate and climate, in Kruger National Park, South Africa. By comparison of the four watersheds, we found that geologic substrate had a stronger effect than climate in determining watershed-scale differences in vegetation structural properties, including cover, height and crown density. Generalized Linear Models were used to assess the spatial distribution of woody vegetation structural properties, including cover, height and crown density, in relation to mapped hydrologic, topographic and fire history traits. For each substrate and climate combination, models incorporating topography, hydrology and fire history explained up to 30% of the remaining variation in woody canopy structure, but inclusion of a spatial autocovariate term further improved model performance. Both crown density and the cover of shorter woody canopies were determined more by unknown factors likely to be changing on smaller spatial scales, such as soil texture, herbivore abundance or fire behavior, than by our mapped regional-scale changes in topography and hydrology. We also detected patterns in spatial covariance at distances up to 50–450 m, depending on watershed and structural metric. Our results suggest that large-scale environmental factors play a smaller role than is often attributed to them in determining woody vegetation structure in southern African savannas. This highlights the need for more spatially-explicit, wide-area analyses using high resolution remote sensing techniques.

Highlights

  • Both grass and woody plant vegetation contribute to the primary production of savannas, yet mixtures of these diverse growth forms persist along a broad spatial and temporal continuum in these ecosystems [1]

  • Rainfall had a detectable effect on vegetation structure, especially the amount of taller vegetation present (Fig 2)

  • Medium- and large-sized tree vegetation was nearly non-existent in the dry basalt watershed, while at the other extreme nearly 5% of the vegetation cover in the wet granite watershed was made up of these two tree classes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Both grass and woody plant vegetation contribute to the primary production of savannas, yet mixtures of these diverse growth forms persist along a broad spatial and temporal continuum in these ecosystems [1]. Vegetation growth form and structural composition within any given savanna landscape results from a multitude of interacting, multi-scale influences [2,3]. Within any given rainfall regime, tree cover and structure greatly depend upon the hydrologic features of a site [7]. Because of their physical interaction with water [8], geologic substrate and soils are major influences on savanna vegetation structure. Parent material affects soil texture and fertility, resulting in regional-scale variability of vegetation structure [9]. Catenas are a common feature in African savanna landscapes, resulting from differential hydrologic conditions along hillslopes [12]. Gradients of vegetation structure are often found along catenas [13,14]

Methods
Results
Discussion
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