Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands

Forbs dominate southern Africa's rangeland plant diversity, but have been ignored in favour of grasses that are important for livestock production. To facilitate better conservation management I examined the interaction between patterns of diversity, forb recruitment and disturbance effects acr...

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Main Author: Uys, Roger Gregory
Other Authors: Bond, William J
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6200
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-62002020-08-08T05:14:03Z Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands Uys, Roger Gregory Bond, William J Botany Forbs dominate southern Africa's rangeland plant diversity, but have been ignored in favour of grasses that are important for livestock production. To facilitate better conservation management I examined the interaction between patterns of diversity, forb recruitment and disturbance effects across the mesic to semi-arid rangelands east of the escarpment in southern Africa. Results were compared to a well studied North American tallgrass prairie, Konza. Sampled between 1 m2 and 1000 m2 across 25 sites, species and family richness increased with mean annual precipitation up to â2000 m a.s.l., above which cooler temperatures accounted for a decline. Forb functional types ranged from persistent (long-lived, resprouters) in the fire-prone mesic rangelands to more recruiting (short-lived, reseeders) taxa in the drought-prone semi-arid areas. Mesic rangelands should therefore tolerate frequent, low intensity defoliation, and semiarid floras be better suited to infrequent intense disturbances. Seedling recruitment matched richness patterns, primarily increasing with precipitation. Recruitment was highest in the fire treatment at the three mesic sites, but proportionately higher in the animal digging and drought treatments at the three semi-arid sites. Seedling composition differed from the adult sward, suggesting that some species may not recolonise transformed lands. Despite predictions of the Milchunas et al. (1988) and Olff and Ritchie (1998) grazing models, exclusion of large mammalian grazers from 40 m x 40 m plots did not appear to impact forb diversity. Instead, grazing effects sampled in 100 x 1m' quadrats per treatment, across ten sites, were overridden by the mesic to semi-arid gradient along which the sites were orientated. Species richness declined under heavy communal cattle grazing along fence-line contrasts at two mesic sites, with soft-leaved monocot (orbs being replaced by short-lived divot weeds not found inside the adjacent lightly grazed nature reserves. Marked differences in the diversity and disturbance responses of tallgrass prairie and southern African rangelands suggest that management strategies cannot be extrapolated from similar ecosystems around the world. 2014-08-13T14:10:32Z 2014-08-13T14:10:32Z 2006 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6200 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Botany
spellingShingle Botany
Uys, Roger Gregory
Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
description Forbs dominate southern Africa's rangeland plant diversity, but have been ignored in favour of grasses that are important for livestock production. To facilitate better conservation management I examined the interaction between patterns of diversity, forb recruitment and disturbance effects across the mesic to semi-arid rangelands east of the escarpment in southern Africa. Results were compared to a well studied North American tallgrass prairie, Konza. Sampled between 1 m2 and 1000 m2 across 25 sites, species and family richness increased with mean annual precipitation up to â2000 m a.s.l., above which cooler temperatures accounted for a decline. Forb functional types ranged from persistent (long-lived, resprouters) in the fire-prone mesic rangelands to more recruiting (short-lived, reseeders) taxa in the drought-prone semi-arid areas. Mesic rangelands should therefore tolerate frequent, low intensity defoliation, and semiarid floras be better suited to infrequent intense disturbances. Seedling recruitment matched richness patterns, primarily increasing with precipitation. Recruitment was highest in the fire treatment at the three mesic sites, but proportionately higher in the animal digging and drought treatments at the three semi-arid sites. Seedling composition differed from the adult sward, suggesting that some species may not recolonise transformed lands. Despite predictions of the Milchunas et al. (1988) and Olff and Ritchie (1998) grazing models, exclusion of large mammalian grazers from 40 m x 40 m plots did not appear to impact forb diversity. Instead, grazing effects sampled in 100 x 1m' quadrats per treatment, across ten sites, were overridden by the mesic to semi-arid gradient along which the sites were orientated. Species richness declined under heavy communal cattle grazing along fence-line contrasts at two mesic sites, with soft-leaved monocot (orbs being replaced by short-lived divot weeds not found inside the adjacent lightly grazed nature reserves. Marked differences in the diversity and disturbance responses of tallgrass prairie and southern African rangelands suggest that management strategies cannot be extrapolated from similar ecosystems around the world.
author2 Bond, William J
author_facet Bond, William J
Uys, Roger Gregory
author Uys, Roger Gregory
author_sort Uys, Roger Gregory
title Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
title_short Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
title_full Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
title_fullStr Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of plant diversity and their management across South African Rangelands
title_sort patterns of plant diversity and their management across south african rangelands
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6200
work_keys_str_mv AT uysrogergregory patternsofplantdiversityandtheirmanagementacrosssouthafricanrangelands
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