Abstract

Protected area management agencies often struggle to reliably reconstruct grazer assemblages due to a lack of historical distribution data for their regions. Wrong predictions of grazing assemblages could potentially affect biodiversity negatively. The objective of the study was to determine how well grazing herbivores have become established since introduction to the Mkambati Nature Reserve, South Africa, how this was influenced by facilitation and competition, and how indigenous grazer assemblages can best be predicted for effective ecological restoration. Population trends of several grazing species were investigated in in order to determine how well they have become established since introduction. Five different conceivable grazing assemblages reflecting a range of approaches that are commonly encountered during conservation planning and management decision making were assessed. Species packing was used to predict whether facilitation, competition or co-existence were more likely to occur, and the species packing of the different assemblages were assessed using ANCOVA. Reconstructing a species assemblage using biogeographic and biological information provides the opportunity for a grazer assemblage that allows for facilitatory effects, which in turn leads to an ecosystem that is able to maintain its grazer assemblage structure. The strength of this approach lies in the ability to overcome the problem of depauperate grazer assemblages, resulting from a lack of historical data, by using biogeographical and biological processes, to assist in more effectively reconstructing grazer assemblages. Adaptive management of grazer assemblage restoration through reintroduction, using this approach would further mitigate management risks.

Highlights

  • There have been alarming declines in large mammal populations in protected areas in Africa in the last three decades, which are mainly attributed to habitat loss as well as to consumptive use [1,2]

  • The aim of this study was to determine how well grazing herbivores established since introduction, how it was influenced by facilitation and competition, and how indigenous grazer assemblages can best be predicted for effective ecological restoration

  • Grazer Assemblages for Protected Areas reflects the outcome of the original decision, the subsequent culling (2002) and decision to remove what was considered to be nonindigenous species (2004), and the performance of the remaining species up to 2010

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There have been alarming declines in large mammal populations in protected areas in Africa in the last three decades, which are mainly attributed to habitat loss as well as to consumptive use [1,2]. The ‘current policy’ assemblage produced the lowest degree of species packing (lowest WR), with a resulting increase of likelihood for interspecific competition In this case, facilitation is unlikely, as there were several gaps in the larger weight ranges (medium-large and mega grazers) of the grazer assemblage. The ‘current policy’ assemblage, intended to have a restoration and biodiversity conservation objective, may prove to carry the highest risk In this assemblage, the removal of species might trigger, and could already have triggered, competitive release which may affect lower trophic levels, and cause forage species composition shifts, in response to changed foraging behaviour of the released herbivore species, which could potentially affect biodiversity patterns and processes [31,48,87]. The lack of larger grazers creates an ecosystem devoid of facilitatory effects which in turn leads to an ecosystem which is unable to maintain its herbivore assemblage structure [21]

Objectives
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