4.4 Article

Are trees of intermediate density more facilitative? Canopy effects of four East African legume trees

Journal

APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 291-303

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/avsc.12218

Keywords

Bush encroachment; Canopy density; Facilitation; Shading; Sub-canopy; Understorey vegetation

Funding

  1. International Foundation for Science (IFS)
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation via a Georg Forster Research Fellowship
  3. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01LL1304-D]

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Questions: Do East African legume trees differ in their canopy effects? Have species with intermediate canopy density more pronounced facilitative effects on understorey primary production, community composition and diversity? How are canopy effects related to species' encroachment status, and modulated by a local aridity gradient? Location: Upland and lowland environments of the Borana rangelands, an arid thornbush savanna in southern Ethiopia. Methods: We harnessed pastoralists' local ecological knowledge to rank the encroachment status of six legume tree species previously known as Acacia, and correlated this rank to a dendrometric proxy of canopy density. Vegetation releves (1 m(2)) were placed in sub-canopy and adjacent inter-canopy habitats of four legume tree species that differed in canopy density and encroachment status (Vachellia bussei, V. drepanolobium, V. seyal, V. tortilis). Using mixed-effects ANOVA, we evaluated effects of tree species and habitat (sub-canopy or inter-canopy) on total, forb and grass biomass, and on species diversity, comparing results for lowland and upland sites. Effects on floristic composition were assessed via PERMANOVA and NMDS. Results: Species' encroachment status and canopy density were negatively correlated. Most pronounced facilitative effects (more frequent and larger differences between sub-canopy and inter-canopy habitats) were found for a species with intermediate canopy density (V. bussei). Diversity in its understorey vegetation increased up to 32% (total biomass: 29%, forb biomass: 40%). In contrast, the species with the most open canopy (V. drepanolobium; also the most encroaching species) never exerted significant facilitative effects. In contrast to expectations, canopy effects were more frequent in (climatically less arid) upland environments, probably due to a redistribution of water within the landscape. Large differences in facilitative effects across tree individuals indicate that a high intraspecific variability of canopy traits and/or small-scale differences in abiotic site conditions have partly overridden species-specific differences in canopy architecture. Conclusion: Our study provides new insights on why encroaching legume tree species may decrease herbaceous production: they tend to have more open canopies, with small facilitative effects on sub-canopy herbaceous production. We thus recommend promoting an open savanna with the tree layer dominated by species with a high facilitative potential tomaintain forage provision and species diversity.

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