Holdo Ricardo M, Holt Robert D, Fryxell John M
Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2009 Jan;19(1):95-109. doi: 10.1890/07-1954.1.
Vertebrate herbivores and fire are known to be important drivers of vegetation dynamics in African savannas. It is of particular importance to understand how changes in herbivore population density, especially of elephants, and fire frequency will affect the amount of tree cover in savanna ecosystems, given the critical importance of tree cover for biodiversity, ecosystem function, and human welfare. We developed a spatially realistic simulation model of vegetation, fire, and dominant herbivore dynamics, tailored to the Serengeti ecosystem of east Africa. The model includes key processes such as tree-grass competition, fire, and resource-based density dependence and adaptive movement by herbivores. We used the model to project the ecosystem 100 years into the future from its present state under different fire, browsing (determined by elephant population density), and grazing (with and without wildebeest present) regimes. The model produced the following key results: (1) elephants and fire exert synergistic negative effects on woody cover; when grazers are excluded, the impact of fire and the strength of the elephant-fire interaction increase; (2) at present population densities of 0.15 elephants/km2, the total amount of woody cover is predicted to remain stable in the absence of fire, but the mature tree population is predicted to decline regardless of the fire regime; without grazers present to mitigate the effects of fire, the size structure of the tree population will become dominated by seedlings and mature trees; (3) spatial heterogeneity in tree cover varies unimodally with elephant population density; fire increases heterogeneity in the presence of grazers and decreases it in their absence; (4) the marked rainfall gradient in the Serengeti directly affects the pattern of tree cover in the absence of fire; with fire, the woody cover is determined by the grazing patterns of the migratory wildebeest, which are partly rainfall driven. Our results show that, in open migratory ecosystems such as the Serengeti, grazers can modulate the impact of fire and the strength of the interaction between fire and browsers by altering fuel loads and responding to the distribution of grass across the landscape, and thus exert strong effects on spatial patterns of tree cover.
脊椎动物食草动物和火被认为是非洲稀树草原植被动态变化的重要驱动因素。鉴于树木覆盖对于生物多样性、生态系统功能和人类福祉至关重要,了解食草动物种群密度的变化,尤其是大象的种群密度变化以及火灾频率如何影响稀树草原生态系统中的树木覆盖量就显得尤为重要。我们针对东非塞伦盖蒂生态系统,开发了一个关于植被、火灾和主要食草动物动态的空间逼真模拟模型。该模型包括树木与草本植物竞争、火灾以及基于资源的密度依赖性和食草动物适应性移动等关键过程。我们利用该模型预测了在不同火灾、啃食(由大象种群密度决定)和放牧(有或没有角马存在)情况下,该生态系统从当前状态开始100年后的情况。该模型得出了以下关键结果:(1)大象和火灾对木本植物覆盖产生协同负面影响;当食草动物被排除时,火灾的影响以及大象与火灾相互作用的强度会增加;(2)在目前每平方公里0.15头大象的种群密度下,预计在没有火灾的情况下木本植物覆盖总量将保持稳定,但无论火灾情况如何,成熟树木种群预计都会减少;如果没有食草动物来减轻火灾的影响,树木种群的大小结构将由幼苗和成熟树木主导;(3)树木覆盖的空间异质性随大象种群密度呈单峰变化;在有食草动物的情况下,火灾会增加异质性,而在没有食草动物的情况下则会降低异质性;(4)塞伦盖蒂明显的降雨梯度在没有火灾的情况下直接影响树木覆盖模式;有火灾时,木本植物覆盖由迁徙角马的放牧模式决定,而角马的放牧模式部分受降雨驱动。我们的结果表明,在像塞伦盖蒂这样的开放迁徙生态系统中,食草动物可以通过改变燃料负荷并响应整个景观中草的分布来调节火灾的影响以及火灾与食草动物之间相互作用的强度,从而对树木覆盖的空间模式产生强烈影响。