Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna

Bibliography: leaves 127-133. === Fires are often used as a management tool in both game reserves and rangelands to manipulate food availability for grazing animals. After fires, large areas of the landscape are quickly covered with nutritious new regrowth, which grazers move into and utilise as a f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Archibald, Sally
Other Authors: Bond, William J
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6222
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-62222020-10-06T05:11:07Z Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna Archibald, Sally Bond, William J Botany Bibliography: leaves 127-133. Fires are often used as a management tool in both game reserves and rangelands to manipulate food availability for grazing animals. After fires, large areas of the landscape are quickly covered with nutritious new regrowth, which grazers move into and utilise as a food resource. The effect of this change in animal grazing patterns on the grass communities is not yet well understood. Certain grass communities depend on heavy, continuous grazing for their persistence: they are out-competed by taller-growing species in the absence of grazing. Conversely, the taller-growing species die out under heavy grazing. Thus, in many savanna and grassland ecosystems, the grass community present in an area depends on how frequently and how intensively the area is grazed. Every year, fires in these systems are altering the distribution of grazing in space and time, by altering the proportions and distributions of short, palatable grass. In my MSc I present data describing how fire alters grazing patterns, and I show how this can result in the disappearance of intensively grazed patches in the landscape. I also use a model to illustrate how this effect might be mediated by rainfall and grazer density, and by different fire regimes. I investigate long-term consequences of this process on the distributions of alternative grassland states in Hluhluwe Umfolozi Park and show that lawn-grass-dominated areas are associated with a less-frequent fire regime. Thus, although large fires provide high-quality grazing in the short term, in the long term they could be limiting the amount of grazing in an area, because they prevent the initiation and spread of grazing-tolerant lawn-grasslands, which can support high grazer numbers and a high diversity of grazers. 2014-08-13T14:14:03Z 2014-08-13T14:14:03Z 2003 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6222 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Botany
spellingShingle Botany
Archibald, Sally
Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
description Bibliography: leaves 127-133. === Fires are often used as a management tool in both game reserves and rangelands to manipulate food availability for grazing animals. After fires, large areas of the landscape are quickly covered with nutritious new regrowth, which grazers move into and utilise as a food resource. The effect of this change in animal grazing patterns on the grass communities is not yet well understood. Certain grass communities depend on heavy, continuous grazing for their persistence: they are out-competed by taller-growing species in the absence of grazing. Conversely, the taller-growing species die out under heavy grazing. Thus, in many savanna and grassland ecosystems, the grass community present in an area depends on how frequently and how intensively the area is grazed. Every year, fires in these systems are altering the distribution of grazing in space and time, by altering the proportions and distributions of short, palatable grass. In my MSc I present data describing how fire alters grazing patterns, and I show how this can result in the disappearance of intensively grazed patches in the landscape. I also use a model to illustrate how this effect might be mediated by rainfall and grazer density, and by different fire regimes. I investigate long-term consequences of this process on the distributions of alternative grassland states in Hluhluwe Umfolozi Park and show that lawn-grass-dominated areas are associated with a less-frequent fire regime. Thus, although large fires provide high-quality grazing in the short term, in the long term they could be limiting the amount of grazing in an area, because they prevent the initiation and spread of grazing-tolerant lawn-grasslands, which can support high grazer numbers and a high diversity of grazers.
author2 Bond, William J
author_facet Bond, William J
Archibald, Sally
author Archibald, Sally
author_sort Archibald, Sally
title Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
title_short Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
title_full Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
title_fullStr Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
title_full_unstemmed Effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
title_sort effects of frequent burning on grass-grazer interactions in a mesic savanna
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6222
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