Premium
Short‐term responses of rehabilitating coastal dune forest ground vegetation to livestock grazing
Author(s) -
Wassenaar Theo D.,
Van Aarde Rudi J.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
african journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.499
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1365-2028
pISSN - 0141-6707
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2028.2001.00318.x
Subject(s) - grazing , species richness , vegetation (pathology) , conservation grazing , plant community , ecology , plant cover , disturbance (geology) , abundance (ecology) , environmental science , grazing pressure , geography , biology , medicine , pathology , paleontology
We investigated the responses of the ground vegetation in a 17‐year‐old coastal dune forest plant community to four levels of experimentally applied livestock grazing (three grazing levels and one ungrazed control) from May 1994 to March 1996. The effects of grazing were apparently subordinate to site‐specific intrinsic vegetation change and there were some indications that rainfall interacted with grazing level. Grazing had some apparent but no significant effects on plant species composition, significantly affected plant species richness over time, and significantly increased the range of species richness and vegetation cover values as well as the relative abundance and numbers of plant species with erect growth forms. Vegetation cover changed significantly over time, independently of grazing. Our results point to two important, easily measured mechanisms for the conservation management of coastal dune forests – the interaction of disturbance type with plant growth form and the increase of variation in community structural variables under disturbance. These mechanisms, although they potentially have wide application and predictive power, have not been studied adequately.