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Herbivore effects on productivity vary by guild: cattle increase mean productivity while wildlife reduce variability

doi: 10.1002/eap.1422
pmid: 28052507
AbstractWild herbivores and livestock share the majority of rangelands worldwide, yet few controlled experiments have addressed their individual, additive, and interactive impacts on ecosystem function. While ungulate herbivores generally reduce standing biomass, their effects on aboveground net primary production (ANPP) can vary by spatial and temporal context, intensity of herbivory, and herbivore identity and species richness. Some evidence indicates that moderate levels of herbivory can stimulate aboveground productivity, but few studies have explicitly tested the relationships among herbivore identity, grazing intensity, and ANPP. We used a long‐term exclosure experiment to examine the effects of three groups of wild and domestic ungulate herbivores (megaherbivores, mesoherbivore wildlife, and cattle) on herbaceous productivity in an African savanna. Using both field measurements (productivity cages) and satellite imagery, we measured the effects of different herbivore guilds, separately and in different combinations, on herbaceous productivity across both space and time. Results from both productivity cage measurements and satellite normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) demonstrated a positive relationship between mean productivity and total ungulate herbivore pressure, driven in particular by the presence of cattle. In contrast, we found that variation in herbaceous productivity across space and time was driven by the presence of wild herbivores (primarily mesoherbivore wildlife), which significantly reduced heterogeneity in ANPP and NDVI across both space and time. Our results indicate that replacing wildlife with cattle (at moderate densities) could lead to similarly productive but more heterogeneous herbaceous plant communities in rangelands.
- University of California, Davis United States
- Dixie State University United States
- Agricultural Research Service United States
- University of Wyoming United States
- Mpala Research Center and Wildlife Foundation Kenya
defaunation, Kenya Long-term Exclosure Experiment, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Elephants, Equidae, aboveground net primary productivity, Grassland, Kenya, 333, livestock, ecosystem function, Animals, Cattle, Biomass, Herbivory, Plant Physiological Phenomena, KLEE, Artiodactyla
defaunation, Kenya Long-term Exclosure Experiment, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Elephants, Equidae, aboveground net primary productivity, Grassland, Kenya, 333, livestock, ecosystem function, Animals, Cattle, Biomass, Herbivory, Plant Physiological Phenomena, KLEE, Artiodactyla
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