Abstract

Abstract Cattle and other livestock graze more than a quarter of the world's terrestrial area and are widely regarded to be drivers of global biodiversity declines. Studies often compare the effects of livestock presence/absence but, to our knowledge, no studies have tested for interactive effects between large wild herbivores and livestock at varying stocking rates on small‐bodied wild vertebrates. We investigated the effects of cattle stocking rates (none/moderate/high) on the diversity of wildlife 0.05–1,000 kg using camera traps at a long‐term exclosure experiment within a semi‐arid savanna ecosystem in central Kenya. In addition, by selectively excluding wild ‘mesoherbivores’ (50–1,000 kg) and ‘megaherbivores’ (>1,000 kg; elephant and giraffe), we tested whether the presence of these two wild herbivore guilds (collectively, ‘larger wild herbivores’) mediates the effect of cattle stocking rate on habitat use and diversity of ‘smaller wildlife’ (mammals ranging between 10 and 70 cm shoulder height and birds). Our results show that cattle enhance alpha diversity of smaller wildlife (with or without larger wild herbivore presence) and of all wildlife 0.05–1,000 kg (with or without megaherbivore presence), by altering vegetation structure. However, for smaller wildlife, this effect is less pronounced in the presence of larger wild herbivores, which also shorten grass. In the absence of cattle, mesoherbivore‐accessible sites showed higher alpha diversity of smaller wildlife than sites excluding mesoherbivores. Smaller wildlife habitat use was increased by high cattle stocking rates and wild mesoherbivores more in the presence of the other. Synthesis and applications. Our findings imply that grazing, whether by livestock or wildlife, can enhance local savanna wildlife diversity. The biodiversity benefits of localised increases in herbivory are likely to be due to shortened grass and associated visibility improvements (for predator avoidance/foraging). This suggests that land managers can increase local biodiversity by shortening grass, with wild or domestic herbivores (or both), at least in patches within a taller grass matrix.

Highlights

  • Over a quarter of the Earth's land surface is grazed by cattle and/ or other domestic animals (Steinfeld et al, 2006)

  • We investigated the effects of cattle stocking rates on the diversity of wildlife 0.05–1,000 kg using camera traps at a long-term exclosure experiment within a semi-arid savanna ecosystem in central Kenya

  • By selectively excluding wild ‘mesoherbivores’ (50–1,000 kg) and ‘megaherbivores’ (>1,000 kg; elephant and giraffe), we tested whether the presence of these two wild herbivore guilds mediates the effect of cattle stocking rate on habitat use and diversity of ‘smaller wildlife’

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Over a quarter of the Earth's land surface is grazed by cattle and/ or other domestic animals (Steinfeld et al, 2006). Our objectives were to investigate: (a) how cattle stocking rate affects alpha (local) diversity of wildlife 0.05–1,000 kg, and (b) whether cattle stocking rate effects on diversity and habitat use by smaller wild vertebrates (mammal and bird species 10–70 cm shoulder height [s.h.]) are mediated by the presence of ‘mesoherbivores’ (50–1,000 kg) and ‘megaherbivores’ (elephant and giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis)—collectively termed ‘larger wild herbivores’. Such information can guide land management decisions that promote biodiversity in mixed-use rangelands, while maintaining productive and economically viable livestock systems to feed a growing human population

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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