Arid
DOI10.1111/j.1466-8238.2008.00416.x
Diversity and species composition of West African ungulate assemblages: effects of fire, climate and soil
Klop, Erik1; Prins, Herbert H. T.2
通讯作者Klop, Erik
来源期刊GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
ISSN1466-822X
出版年2008
卷号17期号:6页码:778-787
英文摘要

Aim Anthropogenic fires are a major component of the ecology of rangelands throughout the world. To assess the effects of these fires on the diversity patterns of herbivores, we related gradients in fire occurrence, climate and soil fertility to patterns in alpha and beta diversity of African ungulates.


Location West Africa.


Methods We used a survey-based approach for ungulates in 37 protected areas in desert, savanna and rain forest habitats throughout West Africa, combined with satellite images of fire occurrence and digital maps of actual evapotranspiration and soil fertility. Alpha diversity was related to the environmental variables using conventional and spatial regression models. We investigated beta diversity using partial Mantel tests and ordination techniques, and by partitioning the variance in assemblage composition into environmental and spatial components.


Results The species richness of grazers showed a quadratic relationship with actual evapotranspiration, whereas that of browsers and frugivores showed a linear relationship. However, in the multiple regression models fire occurrence was the only variable that significantly correlated with the species richness of grazers. Soil fertility was weakly related to overall beta diversity and the species richness of browsers, but was non-significant in the multiple regression models. Fire occurrence was the most important variable explaining species composition of the overall species set and of grazers, whereas the assemblage composition of browsers and frugivores was explained mostly by actual evapotranspiration.


Main conclusions In contrast to previous studies, our analyses show that moisture and nutrients alone fail to adequately predict the diversity patterns of grazing ungulates. Rather, the species richness and assemblage composition of grazers are largely governed by anthropogenic fires that modify the quality and structure of the grass sward. Diversity patterns of browsers and frugivores are markedly different from grazers and depend mainly on the availability of moisture, which is positively correlated with the availability of foliage and fruits. Our study highlights the importance of incorporating major human-induced disturbances or habitat alterations into analyses of diversity patterns.


英文关键词Actual evapotranspiration anthropogenic effects community composition diversity fire soil fertility spatial effects species richness ungulates variance partitioning
类型Article
语种英语
国家Netherlands
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000260114200011
WOS关键词SPATIAL AUTOCORRELATION ; GEOGRAPHICAL ECOLOGY ; RED HERRINGS ; NUTRIENT CONCENTRATIONS ; POSTFIRE REGROWTH ; MINERAL-NUTRITION ; LARGE HERBIVORES ; NATIONAL-PARK ; SAVANNA ; CONSEQUENCES
WOS类目Ecology ; Geography, Physical
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Physical Geography
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/157553
作者单位1.Leiden Univ, Inst Environm Sci, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands;
2.Wageningen Univ, Resource Ecol Grp, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Klop, Erik,Prins, Herbert H. T.. Diversity and species composition of West African ungulate assemblages: effects of fire, climate and soil[J],2008,17(6):778-787.
APA Klop, Erik,&Prins, Herbert H. T..(2008).Diversity and species composition of West African ungulate assemblages: effects of fire, climate and soil.GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY,17(6),778-787.
MLA Klop, Erik,et al."Diversity and species composition of West African ungulate assemblages: effects of fire, climate and soil".GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY 17.6(2008):778-787.
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