Abstract

Vast areas of the African savanna landscapes are characterized by tree‐covered Macrotermes termite mounds embedded within a relatively open savanna matrix. In concert with termites, large herbivores are important determinants of savanna woody vegetation cover. The relative cover of woody species has considerable effects on savanna function. Despite the potentially important ecological relationships between termite mounds, woody plants, large herbivores, and birds, these associations have previously received surprisingly little attention. We experimentally studied the effects of termites and large herbivores on the avian community in Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda, where woody vegetation is essentially limited to termite mounds. Our experiment comprised of four treatments in nine replicates; unfenced termite mounds, fenced mounds (excluding large mammals), unfenced adjacent savanna, and fenced savanna. We recorded species identity, abundance, and behavior of all birds observed on these plots over a two‐month period, from late dry until wet season. Birds used termite mounds almost exclusively, with only 3.5% of observations occurring in the treeless intermound savanna matrix. Mean abundance and species richness of birds doubled on fenced (large herbivores excluded) compared to unfenced mounds. Feeding behavior increased when large mammals were excluded from mounds, both in absolute number of observed individuals, and relative to other behaviors. This study documents the fundamental positive impact of Macrotermes termites on bird abundance and diversity in an African savanna. Birds play crucial functional roles in savanna ecosystems, for example, by dispersing fruits or regulating herbivorous insect populations. Thus, the role of birds in savanna dynamics depends on the distribution and abundance of termite mounds.

Highlights

  • Savanna ecosystems are characterized by a continuous layer of herbaceous plants with large spatial variations in a discontinuous woody cover

  • Birds used the termite mounds almost exclusively compared to the savanna matrix, irrespective of guild and species

  • No birds were observed on the unfenced savanna, we did record 18 individuals, comprising only 3.5% of all the birds noted in the study, when large mammals were excluded from the savanna

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Savanna ecosystems are characterized by a continuous layer of herbaceous plants with large spatial variations in a discontinuous woody cover. Woody plants in termite mounds provide nesting, feeding, and perching sites for birds (Brightsmith, 2000; Kesler & Haig, 2005; Sanchez-­Martinez & Renton, 2009; Vasconcelos, Hoffmann, Araújo, & Vasconcelos, 2015) Both the diversity and abundance of cavity-­nesting birds are significantly correlated with number of termite mounds in miombo woodlands (Joseph et al, 2011), where savanna matrix tree densities are relatively high. Because the termite mounds are resource-­rich areas with diverse and dense forb and woody-­dominated vegetation, compared with the grass-­dominated savanna matrix (Okullo & Moe, 2012b), we predicted that termite mounds would have a greater abundance, species richness, and diversity of birds. | 10081 quality of resources on fenced mounds, frugivores and nectarivores should be more common and spend more time feeding than on unfenced mounds

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| Experimental setup
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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