Data from: Grazing herbivores reduce herbaceous biomass and fire activity across African savannas
Fire and herbivory interact to alter ecosystems and carbon cycling. In savannas, herbivores can reduce fire activity by removing grass biomass, but the size of these effects and what regulates them remain uncertain. To examine grazing effects on fuels and fire regimes across African savannas, we com...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fire and herbivory interact to alter ecosystems and carbon cycling. In
savannas, herbivores can reduce fire activity by removing grass biomass,
but the size of these effects and what regulates them remain uncertain. To
examine grazing effects on fuels and fire regimes across African savannas,
we combined data from herbivore exclosure experiments with remotely sensed
data on fire activity and herbivore density. We show that, broadly across
African savannas, grazing herbivores substantially reduce both herbaceous
biomass and fire activity. The size of these effects was strongly
associated with grazing herbivore densities and, surprisingly, was mostly
consistent across different environments. A one-zebra increase in
herbivore biomass density (~100 kg/km2 of metabolic biomass) resulted in a
~53 kg/ha reduction in standing herbaceous biomass and a ~0.43 percentage
point reduction in burned area. Our results indicate that fire models can
be improved by incorporating grazing effects on grass biomass. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.q2bvq83q2 |