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Herbivory on Acacia seedlings in an East African savanna
Authors:Margaret T Shaw  Felicia Keesing  Richard S Ostfeld
Abstract:Trees critically affect the functioning of savanna ecosystems through their effects on nutrient cycling, water availability, and patterns of space use by wildlife. Therefore, whatever factors influence successful recruitment of tree seedlings are important filters controlling savanna ecosystem function. In African savannas, large mammals have been considered the most important agents of mortality for adult trees, but their impacts on tree seedlings are not well‐known. Similarly, the effects of rodents and invertebrates as seedling predators are largely unstudied in Africa. To assess the relative roles of large mammals, rodents, and invertebrates as predators of Acacia seedlings in an African savanna, we conducted two experiments in which we exposed Acacia drepanolobium seedlings to different guilds of herbivores. In the first experiment, seedlings exposed to rodent and invertebrate herbivores did not suffer greater damage than did seedlings exposed only to invertebrates, suggesting that invertebrates caused most of the damage to the seedlings. In the second experiment, 63% of seedlings exposed to all herbivores (large mammals, rodents, and invertebrates) suffered major damage or mortality in 14 days. Seedlings exposed to only rodents and invertebrates, however, suffered damage at a faster rate than did seedlings exposed to rodents, invertebrates, and large mammals, suggesting that small herbivores (rodents and invertebrates) might be compensating for the removal of large herbivores. Certain specific types of damage, such as cotyledon removal, were significantly more common in areas from which large mammals had been excluded, suggesting that the invertebrate herbivore community may differ between areas with and without large mammals. Overall, invertebrates caused the greatest damage to seedlings while rodents had relatively little effect and no seedlings were consumed or trampled by large mammals. Our results indicate that invertebrates can have a pronounced influence on seedling survival for a dominant savanna tree, which in turn may influence tree recruitment and ecosystem function.
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