Arid
DOI10.1002/ecy.1557
Elephants in the understory: opposing direct and indirect effects of consumption and ecosystem engineering by megaherbivores
Coverdale, Tyler C.1; Kartzinel, Tyler R.1; Grabowski, Kathryn L.1; Shriver, Robert K.2; Hassan, Abdikadir A.3; Goheen, Jacob R.4; Palmer, Todd M.5; Pringle, Robert M.1
通讯作者Coverdale, Tyler C.
来源期刊ECOLOGY
ISSN0012-9658
EISSN1939-9170
出版年2016
卷号97期号:11页码:3219-3230
英文摘要

Positive indirect effects of consumers on their resources can stabilize food webs by preventing overexploitation, but the coupling of trophic and non-trophic interactions remains poorly integrated into our understanding of community dynamics. Elephants engineer African savanna ecosystems by toppling trees and breaking branches, and although their negative effects on trees are well documented, their effects on small-statured plants remain poorly understood. Using data on 117 understory plant taxa collected over 7 yr within 36 1-ha experimental plots in a semi-arid Kenyan savanna, we measured the strength and direction of elephant impacts on understory vegetation. We found that elephants had neutral effects on most (83-89%) species, with a similar frequency of positive and negative responses among the remainder. Overall, estimated understory biomass was 5-14% greater in the presence of elephants across a range of rainfall levels. Whereas direct consumption likely accounts for the negative effects, positive effects are presumably indirect. We hypothesized that elephants create associational refuges for understory plants by damaging tree canopies in ways that physically inhibit feeding by other large herbivores. As predicted, understory biomass and species richness beneath elephant-damaged trees were 55% and 21% greater, respectively, than under undamaged trees. Experimentally simulated elephant damage increased understory biomass by 37% and species richness by 49% after 1yr. Conversely, experimentally removing elephant damaged branches decreased understory biomass by 39% and richness by 30% relative to sham-manipulated trees. Camera-trap surveys revealed that elephant damage reduced the frequency of herbivory by 71%, whereas we detected no significant effect of damage on temperature, light, or soil moisture. We conclude that elephants locally facilitate understory plants by creating refuges from herbivory, which countervails the direct negative effects of consumption and enhances larger-scale biomass and diversity by promoting the persistence of rare and palatable species. Our results offer a counterpoint to concerns about the deleterious impacts of elephant overpopulation that should be considered in debates over wildlife management in African protected areas: understory species comprise the bulk of savanna plant biodiversity, and their responses to elephants are buffered by the interplay of opposing consumptive and non-consumptive interactions.


英文关键词African savannas associational defenses disturbance elephant damage extinction facilitation herbivory ivory poaching Loxodonta africana megafauna plant diversity wildlife management
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; Kenya
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000387228200031
WOS关键词KRUGER-NATIONAL-PARK ; AFRICAN ELEPHANTS ; SEMIARID SAVANNA ; LARGE HERBIVORES ; IMPACTS ; FIRE ; HABITAT ; TREES ; PRODUCTIVITY ; COMMUNITIES
WOS类目Ecology
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/192458
作者单位1.Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA;
2.Duke Univ, Univ Program Ecol, Durham, NC 27708 USA;
3.Mpala Res Ctr, POB 555, Nanyuki, Kenya;
4.Univ Wyoming, Dept Zool & Physiol, Laramie, WY 82071 USA;
5.Univ Florida, Dept Biol, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
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GB/T 7714
Coverdale, Tyler C.,Kartzinel, Tyler R.,Grabowski, Kathryn L.,et al. Elephants in the understory: opposing direct and indirect effects of consumption and ecosystem engineering by megaherbivores[J],2016,97(11):3219-3230.
APA Coverdale, Tyler C..,Kartzinel, Tyler R..,Grabowski, Kathryn L..,Shriver, Robert K..,Hassan, Abdikadir A..,...&Pringle, Robert M..(2016).Elephants in the understory: opposing direct and indirect effects of consumption and ecosystem engineering by megaherbivores.ECOLOGY,97(11),3219-3230.
MLA Coverdale, Tyler C.,et al."Elephants in the understory: opposing direct and indirect effects of consumption and ecosystem engineering by megaherbivores".ECOLOGY 97.11(2016):3219-3230.
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