Grazer movements: spatial and temporal responses to burning in a tall-grass African savanna
S. Archibald A C and W. J. Bond BA Botany Department University of Cape Town, Private Bag 7701, Rondebosch, South Africa.
B Email: bond@botzoo.uct.ac.za
C Corresponding author. Telephone: +27 21 650 3771; fax +27 21 650 4041; email: sarchiba@botzoo.uct.ac.za
International Journal of Wildland Fire 13(3) 377-385 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF03070
Submitted: 6 October 2003 Accepted: 6 July 2004 Published: 16 November 2004
Abstract
The consequences of burning on grazer distributions in the landscape were investigated in a savanna system in South Africa. Distribution and extent of fires can be highly variable within and between years, but how this influences patterns of grazing is not well understood. Three years of fire and grazer distribution data from Hluhluwe-Umfolozi Park, KwaZulu Natal were used to describe how animals respond to different burn situations. Animals were attracted to the burnt areas after fires and this resulted in a decrease in grazer densities in unburnt areas. This effect was more pronounced when a larger area of the park had burnt, and increased over time as area burnt increased. Thus, grazing pressure in an area will depend on the size, timing and distribution of fires in a larger spatial context. Fires also seem to promote a more uniform grazing environment: although grazer density overall is higher in areas that have burnt, the grazers are more dispersed in these areas, and grazing at any one point may be less intense than in the unburnt areas (which are grazed patchily). Therefore at the beginning of the wet season—a key time of year for grass growth—fires are acting to decrease grazing pressure at any one point in both burnt and unburnt areas. The presence of fire in grazing systems could affect grass community composition because fire alters the intensity and frequency of utilisation of the grass sward.
Additional keywords: fire; grazer movements; grazing; post-fire regrowth; spatial context; variability.
Adler PB, Raff DA , Lauenroth WK (2001) The effect of grazing on the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation. Oecologia 128, 465–479.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Archibald SA, Bond WJ, Stock WD , Fairbanks DHK (In press) Shaping the landscape: fire-grazer interactions in an African savanna. Ecological Applications. ,
Balfour DA , Howison OE (2002) Spatial and temporal variation in a mesic savanna fire regime: responses to variation in annual rainfall. African Journal of Range and Forage Science 19, 45–53.
Briggs JM, Nellis MD, Turner CL, Henebry GM , Su H (1998) A landscape perspective of patterns and processes in tallgrass prairie. In (Eds AK Knapp, JM Briggs, DC Hartnett , SL Collins ) pp. 265–279. (Oxford University Press: New York)
Brooks PM (1981) ‘Subpopulation areas for zebra, wildebeest, and buffalo in the central complex, Zululand, and their application in game removal programs.’ (KZNC Wildlife Authority: Hluhluwe-Umfolozi Park, South Africa)
Brooks PM , Macdonald IAW (1983) The Hluhluwe-Umfolozi Reserve: An ecological case history. In (Ed. N Owen-Smith ) pp. 51–53. (Sigma Press: Pretoria)
Coppedge BR , Shaw JH (1998) Bison grazing patterns on seasonally burned tallgrass prairie. Journal of Range Management 51, 258–264.
Coppock DL , Detling JK (1986) Alteration of bison and black-tailed prairie dog grazing interaction by prescribed burning. The Journal of Wildlife Management 50, 452–454.
Drent RH , van der Wal R (1999) Cyclic grazing in vertebrates and the manipulation of the food resource. In (Eds H Olff, VK Brown, RH Drent , SL Collins ) pp. 271–299. (Blackwell Science: Oxford)
Everson CS , Everson TM (1987) Factors affecting the timing of grassland regrowth after fire in the montane grasslands of Natal. South African Forestry Journal 142, 47–52.
Fuhlendorf SD , Engle DM (2001) Restoring heterogeneity on rangelands: ecosystem management based on evolutionary grazing patterns. Bioscience 51, 625–632.
Gureja N , Owen-Smith N (2002) Comparative use of burnt grassland by rare antelope species in a lowveld game ranch, South Africa. South African Journal of Wildlife Research 32, 31–38.
Hall H (1984) Man’s historical and traditional use of fire in Southern Africa. In (Eds PV Booysen, NM Tainton, RH Drent , SL Collins ) pp. 40–52. (Springer-Verlag: Berlin)
Hobbs NT, Schimel DS, Owensby CE , Ojima DS (1991) Fire and grazing in the tallgrass prairie: contingent effects on nitrogen budgets. Ecology 72, 1374–1382.
Knapp AK, Blair JM, Briggs JM, Collins SL, Hartnett DC, Johnson LC , Towne EG (1999) The keystone role of bison in North American tallgrass prairie. Bioscience 49, 39–51.
Lemaire G, Hodgson J, de Moraes A, Carvalho PCdF, Nabinger C (2000) ‘Grassland ecophysiology and grazing ecology.’ (CABI Publishing: New York)
Melton DA (1987) Habitat selection and resource scarcity. South African Journal of Science 83, 646–651.
Moe SR, Wegge P , Kapela EB (1990) The influence of man-made fires on large wild herbivores in Lake Burungi area in northern Tanzania. African Journal of Ecology 28, 35–43.
Nellis MD , Briggs JM (1989) The effect of spatial scale on Konza landscape classification using textural analysis. Landscape Ecology 2, 93–100.
| Crossref |
O’Connor TG (1985) ‘A synthesis of field experiments concerning the grass layer in the savanna regions of southern Africa.’ (Foundation for Research and Development: Pretoria)
O’Connor TG (1994) Composition and population responses of an African savanna grassland to rainfall and grazing. Journal of Applied Ecology 31, 155–171.
Owen-Smith N (1982) Factors influencing the consumption of plant products by large herbivores. In (Eds BJ Huntley, BH Walker, RH Drent , SL Collins ) pp. 359–404. (Springer-Verlag: Berlin)
Owen-Smith N (1988) ‘Megaherbivores: the influence of very large body size on ecology.’ (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge)
Scott JD (1959) Principles of pasture management. In (Ed. D Meredith ) pp. 18–26. (Central News Agency: Johannesburg)
Tainton NM (1999) ‘Veld management in South Africa.’ (University of Natal Press: Pietermaritzburg)
Tainton NM , Mentis MT (1984) Fire in grassland. In (Eds P Booysen, NM Tainton, RH Drent , SL Collins ) pp. 40–52. (Springer-Verlag: Berlin)
Tomor BM , Owen-Smith N (2002) Comparative use of burnt and unburnt grassland by grazing ungulates in the Nylsvley nature reserve, South Africa. African Journal of Ecology 40, 201–204.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
van de Vijver CADM (1999). ‘Fire and life in Tarangire: the effects of burning and herbivory on an East African savanna system.’ PhD thesis, Wageningen University, Wageningen. 177 pp.
Vinton MA, Hartnett DC, Finck EJ , Briggs JM (1993) Interactive effects of fire, bison (Bison bison) grazing and plant community composition in tallgrass prairie. American Midland Naturalist 129, 10–18.
Wateley A , Porter RN (1983) The woody vegetation communities of the Hluhluwe-Corridor-Umfolozi Game Reserve Complex. Bothalia 14, 745–758.
Weber GE, Moloney K , Jeltsch F (2000) Simulated long-term vegetation response to alternative stocking strategies in savanna rangelands. Plant Ecology 150, 77–96.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Wilsey BJ (1996) Variation in use of green flushes following burns among African ungulate species: the importance of body size. African Journal of Ecology 34, 32–38.