Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Habitat selection by large herbivores in relation to fire at the Bontebok National Park (1974-2009) : the effects of management changes
Author
Kraaij, T
Novellie, P A
Publisher
African Journal of Range & Forage Science
Publication Year
2010
Body

The Bontebok National Park has long been faced with the dilemma of reconciling the need for short-interval fires, which promote grazing for bontebok, with that for longer-interval fires to maintain plant diversity. We explored habitat selection by various large herbivores in relation to veld age (time since fire), different management regimes, and vegetation type. Taller grass grazers (Cape mountain zebra and red hartebeest) were introduced in the 1980s to prolong the usefulness of older veld to bontebok through a grazing succession. We found that all herbivores favoured young veld and largely avoided veld > 5 years old. Zebra and hartebeest competed with bontebok in utilising young veld rather than grazing facilitation occurring. In 2004, the fire rotation was prolonged to favour plant diversity, resulting in reduced availability of young veld. In compensation, the bontebok stocking rate was reduced. Bontebok densities subsequently declined proportionally across veld ages, thereby averting high animal densities on the smaller area of young veld. Fire significantly influenced bontebok habitat use equally during the old and new burning regimes. Herbivores did not distinguish between the two predominant vegetation types at Bontebok National Park. However, previously disturbed areas with Cynodon dactylon lawns were favoured by most herbivores despite not being burnt.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
27
Journal Number
1
Journal Pages
21-27
Journal Name
African Journal of Range & Forage Science
Keywords
fire
management
national park
herbivores
Cape mountain zebra
Fynbos
grazing succession
red hartebeeste
renosterveld
grazing
stocking rates
Bontebok National Park
South Africa