Large trees, fertile islands, and birds in arid savanna

Citation
Wrj. Dean et al., Large trees, fertile islands, and birds in arid savanna, J ARID ENV, 41(1), 1999, pp. 61-78
Citations number
55
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS
ISSN journal
01401963 → ACNP
Volume
41
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
61 - 78
Database
ISI
SICI code
0140-1963(199901)41:1<61:LTFIAB>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Large Acacia erioloba trees scattered through the sparse grassy vegetation of arid oligotrophic savanna are focal points for animal activity because t hey supply nest sites, shade and scarce food resources. Faeces, fallen nest material and carcass remains left below trees elevate levels of nutrients available to plants in the soil beneath large trees. Soil concentrations of N and K were two times greater, and P concentrations 2.5 times greater und er canopies of A. erioloba trees than in surrounding grassy shrubland. Plant species with fleshy fruits (Boscia, Grewia, Lycium and Solanum spp.) occurred in 8% of treeless plots and beneath 17% of A. erioloba saplings, b ut their frequency increased to 90% beneath large trees. Dead A. erioloba t rees were replaced by matrix vegetation (54%) and large shrubs with fleshy fruits (28%) rather than by conspecifics (17%). The distribution of fleshy- fruited plants in the Kalahari is thus dynamic and tied to the distribution of large trees such as Acacia erioloba. The shade beneath the canopies of large spreading trees was used by birds ( particularly Kori Bustards Ardeotis kori) and mammals (mainly Springbok Ant idorcas marsupialis, Gemsbok Oryx gazella, Blue Wildebeest Connochaetes tau rinus and Bat-eared Fox Otocyon megalotis) as a resting place during the he at of the day. Large raptors (>1.5 kg) and vultures (>5 kg) seldom perched on saplings, and more frugivorous bird species and individuals were seen an mature than sapling or dead trees. Nests of raptors, and the large communa l nests of Sociable Weavers Philetarius socius were found mainly in large t rees, and the nests of the Tree Rat Thallomys paedulcus were found in cavit ies in the stems of large trees. Acacia erioloba and the only other large t ree, Acacia haematoxylon, apparently structure plant and animal communities and determine pattern and patch dynamics in this arid savanna. We suggest that their role in maintaining biodiversity in the Kalahari cannot be served by the homogeneous thickets of stunted acacias that develop where the vegetati on is overgrazed. (C) 1999 Academic Press.