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Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve

Historical fossilised spores of Sporomiella, a coprophilous fungus that only grows on the dung of herbivores. has been used to infer unknown herbivore abundances or biomass and identity periods of mega-herbivore extinction in the palaeo-record. ln Africa. however. mega-herbivores are still extant an...

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Main Author: Thomas, Alicia Jessica
Other Authors: Gillson, Lindsey
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Thomas, Alicia Jessica
author2 Gillson, Lindsey
author_browse Gillson, Lindsey
Thomas, Alicia Jessica
author_facet Gillson, Lindsey
Thomas, Alicia Jessica
author_sort Thomas, Alicia Jessica
collection Thesis
description Historical fossilised spores of Sporomiella, a coprophilous fungus that only grows on the dung of herbivores. has been used to infer unknown herbivore abundances or biomass and identity periods of mega-herbivore extinction in the palaeo-record. ln Africa. however. mega-herbivores are still extant and there is therefore a unique opportunity to calibrate Sporomiella abundance against known herbivore biomass. This study was carried out within the Hluhluwe-lmfolozi Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa (28°00'-28°26'S. 31°43'-32°00'E. Fig 2(a) and (6)). We evaluated the relationship between Sporomiella concentration and herbivore abundance. as indicated by total dung abundances. We investigated three aspects of this relationship: [1] the relationship between Sporomiella abundance and total herbivore dung abundance. [2] the relationship between Sporomiella and individual herbivore species, where we also divided all the herbivores into Mega-herbivores and Meso-herbivores to determine their relationship with Sporomiella densities. [3] finally, we tested the differences between the regions of the reserve by comparing the different areas of the park, as each system has its own unique drivers (Hluhluwe (fire driven), Imfolozi (herbivore driven) and the corridor (fire and herbivore driven)), with the concentration of Sporomiella. We found no significant relationships between Sporomiella concentration and total herbivore dung abundances, which suggests that the fungus may be selectively growing on certain herbivore species rather than on all herbivore dung and / or the amount of dung for each species is not accurately reflected by dung counts [because amount of dung per species isn't accurately reflected by dung counts?]. This isn't reflected in clung counts. When the sites that had zero Sporomiella were excluded from the analysis. Sporomiella concentration was significantly related to elephant and white rhino dung abundance, which could be related to site specific condition. Mega-herbivores and meso-herbivores dung abundance showed no significant relationship with Sporomiella concentrations. implying that neither group is the main contributors to Sporomiella concentration. There was also no significant difference in Sporomiella-concentration between the different areas of the park, providing no evidence that spores are differentially distributed throughout the park. Sporomiella concentrations showed no significant difference between the different types of vegetation and grasses within the park. This suggests that the spores are not specific to certain vegetation or grass types.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25578 Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve Thomas, Alicia Jessica Gillson, Lindsey Bond, William J Botany Historical fossilised spores of Sporomiella, a coprophilous fungus that only grows on the dung of herbivores. has been used to infer unknown herbivore abundances or biomass and identity periods of mega-herbivore extinction in the palaeo-record. ln Africa. however. mega-herbivores are still extant and there is therefore a unique opportunity to calibrate Sporomiella abundance against known herbivore biomass. This study was carried out within the Hluhluwe-lmfolozi Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa (28°00'-28°26'S. 31°43'-32°00'E. Fig 2(a) and (6)). We evaluated the relationship between Sporomiella concentration and herbivore abundance. as indicated by total dung abundances. We investigated three aspects of this relationship: [1] the relationship between Sporomiella abundance and total herbivore dung abundance. [2] the relationship between Sporomiella and individual herbivore species, where we also divided all the herbivores into Mega-herbivores and Meso-herbivores to determine their relationship with Sporomiella densities. [3] finally, we tested the differences between the regions of the reserve by comparing the different areas of the park, as each system has its own unique drivers (Hluhluwe (fire driven), Imfolozi (herbivore driven) and the corridor (fire and herbivore driven)), with the concentration of Sporomiella. We found no significant relationships between Sporomiella concentration and total herbivore dung abundances, which suggests that the fungus may be selectively growing on certain herbivore species rather than on all herbivore dung and / or the amount of dung for each species is not accurately reflected by dung counts [because amount of dung per species isn't accurately reflected by dung counts?]. This isn't reflected in clung counts. When the sites that had zero Sporomiella were excluded from the analysis. Sporomiella concentration was significantly related to elephant and white rhino dung abundance, which could be related to site specific condition. Mega-herbivores and meso-herbivores dung abundance showed no significant relationship with Sporomiella concentrations. implying that neither group is the main contributors to Sporomiella concentration. There was also no significant difference in Sporomiella-concentration between the different areas of the park, providing no evidence that spores are differentially distributed throughout the park. Sporomiella concentrations showed no significant difference between the different types of vegetation and grasses within the park. This suggests that the spores are not specific to certain vegetation or grass types. 2017-10-11T10:55:10Z 2017-10-11T10:55:10Z 2007 2017-02-07T13:50:49Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25578 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Thomas, Alicia Jessica
Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
title_full Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
title_fullStr Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
title_full_unstemmed Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
title_short Using Sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve
title_sort using sporormiella to track herbivore biomass within the hluhluwe imfolozi game reserve
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25578
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasaliciajessica usingsporormiellatotrackherbivorebiomasswithinthehluhluweimfolozigamereserve