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Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire

Increasing elephant populations have been implicated in the decline of woody vegetation throughout Africa. The problem is particularly relevant to the Kruger National Park in South Africa, where elephant populations have almost doubled in the last 10 years. One manner in which elephants utilize tree...

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Main Author: Moncrieff, Glenn
Other Authors: Midgley, Jeremy J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Moncrieff, Glenn
author2 Midgley, Jeremy J
author_browse Midgley, Jeremy J
Moncrieff, Glenn
author_facet Midgley, Jeremy J
Moncrieff, Glenn
author_sort Moncrieff, Glenn
collection Thesis
description Increasing elephant populations have been implicated in the decline of woody vegetation throughout Africa. The problem is particularly relevant to the Kruger National Park in South Africa, where elephant populations have almost doubled in the last 10 years. One manner in which elephants utilize trees is by stripping their bark. The role of bark stripping in increasing stem vulnerability to fire and the mechanism through which fire damage is mediated were investigated by experimentally removing bark and burning Acacia nigrescens stems. Field surveys were conducted in order to investigate patterns of bark stripping in relation to mortality patterns of large trees occurring subsequent to natural fires. In the experimental study, an increasing probability of mortality was associated with increasing amount of bark removed when trees were burnt. However, when trees were stripped but not burnt, simulating damage to cambium and phloem, none died in the 4-month period over which the experiment ran. This was taken as evidence that fire-induced xylem damage causes stem mortality. However, fire did kill a greater proportion of the remaining stem cambium around the circumference when bark had been removed. The field surveys indicate that bark stripping by elephants is frequent on large stems (44%) and that larger trees are more heavily impacted. The only variable measured that explained mortality patterns well was the percent of bark removed around the stem circumference up to 3m (p = 0.0076). These results indicate that damage to xylem is important in determining post-fire survival and that bark stripping by elephants increases the vulnerability of stems to fire. This increased vulnerability is a result of both increased damage to cambium and damage to exposed xylem. The high proportion of trees stripped by elephants and the increase in vulnerability to mortality associated with bark stripping suggests that unless elephant population growth is curbed, large Acacia nigrescens trees will eventually be eliminated from this ecosystem.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:06.076Z
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
publishDateRange 2017
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26666 Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire Moncrieff, Glenn Midgley, Jeremy J Kruger, Laurence M Botany Increasing elephant populations have been implicated in the decline of woody vegetation throughout Africa. The problem is particularly relevant to the Kruger National Park in South Africa, where elephant populations have almost doubled in the last 10 years. One manner in which elephants utilize trees is by stripping their bark. The role of bark stripping in increasing stem vulnerability to fire and the mechanism through which fire damage is mediated were investigated by experimentally removing bark and burning Acacia nigrescens stems. Field surveys were conducted in order to investigate patterns of bark stripping in relation to mortality patterns of large trees occurring subsequent to natural fires. In the experimental study, an increasing probability of mortality was associated with increasing amount of bark removed when trees were burnt. However, when trees were stripped but not burnt, simulating damage to cambium and phloem, none died in the 4-month period over which the experiment ran. This was taken as evidence that fire-induced xylem damage causes stem mortality. However, fire did kill a greater proportion of the remaining stem cambium around the circumference when bark had been removed. The field surveys indicate that bark stripping by elephants is frequent on large stems (44%) and that larger trees are more heavily impacted. The only variable measured that explained mortality patterns well was the percent of bark removed around the stem circumference up to 3m (p = 0.0076). These results indicate that damage to xylem is important in determining post-fire survival and that bark stripping by elephants increases the vulnerability of stems to fire. This increased vulnerability is a result of both increased damage to cambium and damage to exposed xylem. The high proportion of trees stripped by elephants and the increase in vulnerability to mortality associated with bark stripping suggests that unless elephant population growth is curbed, large Acacia nigrescens trees will eventually be eliminated from this ecosystem. 2017-12-14T12:21:42Z 2017-12-14T12:21:42Z 2007 2017-02-09T13:24:38Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26666 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Moncrieff, Glenn
Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
title_full Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
title_fullStr Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
title_full_unstemmed Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
title_short Patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in Acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
title_sort patterns and mechanisms of stem mortality in acacia nigrescens induced by elephants and fire
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26666
work_keys_str_mv AT moncrieffglenn patternsandmechanismsofstemmortalityinacacianigrescensinducedbyelephantsandfire