Data from: Herbivore size matters for productivity-richness relationships in African savannas
1.Productivity and herbivory often interact to shape plant community composition and species richness with levels of production mediating the impact of herbivory. Yet, differences in herbivore traits such as size, feeding guild, and dietary requirements may result in different impacts of diverse her...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1.Productivity and herbivory often interact to shape plant community
composition and species richness with levels of production mediating the
impact of herbivory. Yet, differences in herbivore traits such as size,
feeding guild, and dietary requirements may result in different impacts of
diverse herbivore guilds across productivity gradients. 2.We used
size-selective herbivore exclosures to separate the effects of herbivory
by larger herbivores, such as elephant, Burchell's zebra, and blue
wildebeest from those of medium/smaller herbivores, such as impala and
warthog, on herbaceous plant communities. These exclosures were
established along a 10-fold productivity gradient, ranging from 90-950 g
m−2 of standing plant biomass in the Kruger National Park, South Africa.
3.Exclusion of all herbivores generally increased plant species richness
at low productivity but decreased richness at high productivity. Exclusion
of medium/smaller herbivores (e.g. impala, warthog) showed stronger
effects on plant richness, particularly loss of forbs, at higher
productivity rather than at lower productivity. In contrast, exclusion of
larger herbivores had stronger effects on plant richness, typically with
increasing forb richness, at low rather than high productivity. 4.The
change in species richness appeared linked to changes in light
availability following herbivore exclusion. Strong increases in shading
led to declines in species richness while more moderate increases in
shading led in increases in species richness, possibly due to amelioration
of heat and water stress by modest increases in shading. 5.Increasing
plant dominance, which likely alters multiple mechanisms of plant
interactions, was correlated with declines in plant richness following
herbivore exclusion. The impact of increasing dominance on plant richness
operated independent of productivity, with the exclusion of impala
appearing particularly important in driving this relationship.
6.Synthesis. We show that the impact of herbivore losses on plant
diversity will be strongly situation dependent and will vary with the
herbivores lost (e.g. larger vs. smaller, grazers vs. browsers), plant
functional type (e.g. grasses vs. forbs), and environmental context (e.g.
productivity). Although larger herbivores are often emphasized for their
strong impacts on community dynamics and ecosystem processes, we show that
smaller, abundant herbivores can exert strong top-down control on plant
communities. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.j6p0b |