Rangeland Ecology & Management

Get reliable science

Disturbance, species loss and compensation : Wildfire and grazing effects on the avian community and its food supply in the Serengeti Ecosystem, Tanzania
Author
Nkwabi, A K
Sinclair, A R E
Metzger, K L
Mduma, S A R
Publisher
Austral Ecology
Publication Year
2011
Body

An important question in biodiversity studies is whether disturbances in ecosystems will cause a net loss of species or whether such losses can be compensated by replacement of other species. We use two natural disturbances, fire and grazing, to examine the response of bird and arthropod communities in grasslands of Serengeti, Tanzania. Both burning and grazing by migrant ungulates take place at the end of the rains in June -July. We documented the communities before disturbance, then 1, 4 and 20 weeks after disturbance on three replicate plots and compared them with three undisturbed plots. Birds were recorded by observation, arthropods from pitfall, tray trap and sweepnet samples. We expected that as the grass biomass was reduced by either disturbance, bird communities would change with concomitant change in arthropod food abundance. Alternatively, bird communities would change not with the absolute amount of food but with the greater accessibility of food as the grass structure changed from long to short grass. Results showed first that both bird species richness and abundance increased after both types of disturbance, but burnt sites showed a greater increase than that for grazed sites. Second, there was a change in bird species composition with disturbance. The functionally equivalent athi short-toed lark (Calandrella athensis) was replaced by the red-capped lark (Calandrella cinerea). Third, the abundance of most groups of arthropods was lower on disturbed sites than those on undisturbed sites, and the reduction of arthropod numbers was greatest on burnt sites. These results imply that bird abundance did not occur through an increase in arthropod abundance but rather through a change in the grass structure making food more accessible; and the higher predation could have caused the lower arthropod abundance. In addition, some bird species replaced others thus functionally compensating for their loss.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
36
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
403-412
Journal Name
Austral Ecology
Keywords
compensation
Ecosystem function
grasslands
Serengeti birds
ecosystem ecology
birds
invertebrates
fire ecology
management
Tanzania
Africa