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Conservation lessons from large-mammal manipulations in East African savannas: the KLEE, UHURU, and GLADE experiments

Authors :
Goheen, JR
Augustine, DJ
Veblen, KE
Kimuyu, DM
Palmer, TM
Porensky, LM
Pringle, RM
Ratnam, J
Riginos, C
Sankaran, M
Ford, AT
Hassan, AA
Jakopak, R
Kartzinel, TR
Kurukura, S
Louthan, AM
Odadi, WO
Otieno, TO
Wambua, AM
Young, HS
Young, TP
Source :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1429(1)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

African savannas support an iconic fauna, but they are undergoing large-scale population declines and extinctions of large (>5 kg) mammals. Long-term, controlled, replicated experiments that explore the consequences of this defaunation (and its replacement with livestock) are rare. The Mpala Research Centre in Laikipia County, Kenya, hosts three such experiments, spanning two adjacent ecosystems and environmental gradients within them: the Kenya Long-Term Exclosure Experiment (KLEE; since 1995), the Glade Legacies and Defaunation Experiment (GLADE; since 1999), and the Ungulate Herbivory Under Rainfall Uncertainty experiment (UHURU; since 2008). Common themes unifying these experiments are (1) evidence of profound effects of large mammalian herbivores on herbaceous and woody plant communities; (2) competition and compensation across herbivore guilds, including rodents; and (3) trophic cascades and other indirect effects. We synthesize findings from the past two decades to highlight generalities and idiosyncrasies among these experiments, and highlight six lessons that we believe are pertinent for conservation. The removal of large mammalian herbivores has dramatic effects on the ecology of these ecosystems; their ability to rebound from these changes (after possible refaunation) remains unexplored.

Details

ISSN :
17496632 and 00778923
Volume :
1429
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....2a9dd32600c5d47c3713331e25eef79a