Abstract

Habitat degradation caused by woody plant encroachment has been a common phenomenon in savanna ecosystems. An increasing woody plant cover in open grassland reduces grazing grounds and, consecutively, impacts mammalian herbivores, but structural changes and their associated impact have rarely been assessed and quantified. We analyzed the extent of woody plant encroachment via remote sensing and used transects and plots to assess encroaching woody plant species and their associated impacts on herbaceous plant and herbivore species in Maswa Game Reserve, Tanzania. We found that woody plant cover had increased by 0.5% to 2.6% per annum over the last thirty years, while in other parts of the park it has decreased by 0.5% to 1.5% per annum. Acacia drepanolobium was the dominant encroaching woody species, and the number of stems in heavily encroached sites was seven times and three times higher than in open grassland and at medium encroached sites, respectively. In encroached plots, grazer and mixed feeder species occurrence were reduced while the presence of browser species was slightly elevated. Furthermore, our finding shows that bare ground cover is positively correlated with an increase of woody plant cover. Additionally, the number of herbaceous species slightly increased with the increase of woody plant encroachment, while the herbaceous cover was negatively correlated with the increase of woody plant cover. We suggest that fire regimes should be taken up to suppress the ongoing encroachment processes while strongly encroached sites might need mechanical intervention to control dense vegetation. This emphasis is on fire, particularly prescribed fire as a management tool of vegetation in Savanna ecosystem. We conclude that, woody plant encroachment is driven by different factors such as fire, mega-herbivores and topology that may interactively trigger woody plant encroachment in Savanna ecosystem.

Highlights

  • Habitat degradation caused by woody plant encroachment has been a common phenomenon in savanna ecosystems (Archer et al, 2017)

  • We found a significant change in woody plant cover in Maswa Game Reserve, in the middle of the reserve between the years 1986 and 2018

  • Our finding of many seedlings and saplings suggests that woody plant encroachment is ongoing and, with time more woody thickening will be realized in open grassland

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Summary

Introduction

Habitat degradation caused by woody plant encroachment has been a common phenomenon in savanna ecosystems (Archer et al, 2017). During this process, thicket species, shrubs and trees increase in density and cover encroaching into open grassland (Van Auken, 2000; Ward, 2005). New thickets have been formed in savanna and woodland areas as a result of woody plant encroachment (Khavhagali & Bond, 2008). Bush encroachment decreases herbaceous production and biomass, species richness and diversity (Van Auken, 2009; Khavhagali & Bond, 2008). As herbaceous production and biomass decreases, native plant seed rain becomes reduced, and natural storage of dormant seeds within the soil decreases with time (Saatkamp, Poschlod, & Venable, 2014)

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