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    Determinants of woody cover in African savannas

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    Date
    2005
    Author
    Zambatis, Nick
    Worden, Jeff
    Tews, Jörg
    Sea, William
    Ringrose, Susan
    Prins, Herbert H T
    Metzger, Kristine L
    Hrabar, Halszka
    Hiernaux, Pierre
    Frost, Peter G H
    February, Edmund C
    Feral, Christie J
    Ekaya, Wellington
    Diouf, Alioune
    Coughenour, Michael B
    Caylor, Kelly K
    Bucini, Gabriela
    Bronn, Andries
    Banyikwa, Feetham
    Ardo, Jonas
    Ludwig, Fulco
    Le Roux, Xavier
    Higgins, Steven I
    Gignoux, Jacques
    Cade, Brian S
    Augustine, David J
    Ratnam, Jayashree
    Scholes, Robert J
    Hanan, Niall P
    Sankaran, Mahesh
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    Metadata
    Show full item record

    Abstract
    Savannas are globally important ecosystems of great significance to human economies. In these biomes, which are characterized by the co-dominance of trees and grasses, woody cover is a chief determinant of ecosystem properties. The availability of resources (water, nutrients) and disturbance regimes (fire, herbivory) are thought to be important in regulating woody cover but perceptions differ on which of these are the primary drivers of savanna structure. Here we show, using data from 854 sites across Africa, that maximum woody cover in savannas receiving a mean annual precipitation (MAP) of less than ~650 mm is constrained by, and increases linearly with, MAP. These arid and semi-arid savannas may be considered ‘stable’ systems in which water constrains woody cover and permits grasses to coexist, while fire, herbivory and soil properties interact to reduce woody cover below the MAP-controlled upper bound. Above a MAP of ~650 mm, savannas are ‘unstable’ systems in which MAP is sufficient for woody canopy closure, and disturbances (fire, herbivory) are required for the coexistence of trees and grass. These results provide insights into the nature of African savannas and suggest that future changes in precipitation6 may considerably affect their distribution and dynamics.
    URI
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/35167
    Citation
    Nature 438, 846-849 (8 December 2005)
    Publisher
    Department of Land Resource Management and Agricultural Technology
    Collections
    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM) [5481]

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