Fire, resprouting and variability: a recipe for grass-tree coexistence in savanna
Authored by SI Higgins, WJ Bond, WSW Trollope
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2745.2000.00435.x
Sponsors:
Mellon Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1 Savanna ecosystems are characterized by the codominance of two
different life forms: grasses and trees. An operational understanding of
how these two different life forms coexist is essential for
understanding savanna function and for predicting its response to future
environmental change.
2 The existing model, which proposes that grasses and trees coexist by a
separation of rooting niches, is not supported by recent empirical
investigations. Our aim was to define an alternative mechanism of
grass-tree coexistence in savanna ecosystems. The model we have built
concentrates on life history-disturbance interactions between grasses
and trees.
3 The model demonstrates coexistence for a wide range of environmental
conditions, and exhibits long periods of slow decline in adult tree
numbers interspersed with relatively infrequent recruitment events.
Recruitment is controlled by rainfall, which limits seedling
establishment, and fire, which prevents recruitment into adult size
classes. Decline in adult tree numbers is the result of continuing, but
low levels, of adult mortality. Both aspects of the dynamics are
consistent with an established non-equilibrium mechanism of coexistence
(the storage effect).
4 A sensitivity analysis indicated that data on tree resprouting
ability, stem growth rates and the relationship between seedling
establishment and wet season drought are essential for predicting both
the range of conditions for which coexistence is possible and the
response of savanna ecosystems to environmental change.
5 Our analysis suggests that understanding grass-tree interactions in
savanna requires consideration of the long-term effects of life
history-disturbance interactions on demography, rather than the
fine-scale effects of resource competition on physiological performance.
Tags
Competition
Dynamics
ecosystems
Plant-communities
Woodland
Soil-moisture
African humid savanna
Semi-arid savanna
Herbaceous
vegetation
Rooting patterns