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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Temporal and spatial variation in population structure of the African baobab (adansonia digitata) in the Kruger National Park, South Africa

Taylor, Robert William January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the academic requirements for the degree of Master of Science in the School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. June 2016 / The African baobab (Adansonia digitata) is a charismatic and iconic tree. This keystone species has highly specific moisture requirements for recruitment, a very slow life history, low dispersal capabilities, and is exposed to heavy, often destructive utilization by baboons, elephants and humans. These characteristics result in the reduced ability for baobabs to accommodate and respond to changing environmental conditions. During periods of unfavourable conditions, baobabs rely on the persistence of established individuals for the survival of the population. The Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa falls within the southern-most distribution of the baobab. A perceived lack of recruitment together with high numbers of dead large baobabs recorded in aerial surveys prompted concern over local population decline in the early 1990s. Long-term monitoring is necessary in order to quantify changes occurring within the KNP baobab population. For this reason Dr Ian Whyte sampled 424 baobab trees in northern KNP in 1995/1996 to describe population size-class distributions and elephant damage. Nearly all of these baobabs, with the addition of 486 individuals were resampled in 2001 by Michele Hofmeyr. This study resampled the majority of these 910 baobabs plus 126 individuals within 50m of those previously sampled, culminated in a data set spanning 18 years and most of the dominant vegetation and climatic zones within the baobab’s KNP range. Photographs taken in 1995/6 and repeated in 2013 allowed for simultaneous direct visual comparisons of elephant damage to baobab stems. This study aimed to record the temporal and spatial changes in the demographics of, and damage to, this sample of 1036 baobabs in order to define and evaluate the factors threatening KNP baobab persistence. The overall population stem diameter structure of baobabs in the KNP showed a healthy inverse J-shaped distribution, with a high proportion of smaller trees and a decreasing proportion of larger trees at each sampling snapshot. However no seedling recruitment was observed during intensive searches within 50m of sampled trees, accumulating in a total area of 4km2. Growth was only noticeable in sub-adult trees >0.15m and <1m in stem diameter. Annualised mortality increased three-fold between the periods 1995/6-2001 (0.25%) and 2001-2013 (0.79%). It is speculated that this increase in mortality is due to the cumulative effect of increased elephant damage, together with below average rainfall years of 2002 to 2013. Trees that had previously sustained severe and very severe damage contributed the highest proportion (32%) of mortality. When comparing sizeclasses, the majority of mortality (61%) was recorded within the <1m stem diameter size-class. However, a high proportion of very large trees (21% of the 4- 4.5m and 29% of the 5-5.5m stem-diameter baobabs sampled) had died from unknown causes. With no recruitment of seedlings evident and little recruitment between size classes, mortality alone was not enough to significantly change the baobab population structure between 1995/6, 2001 and 2013. This might change should more very large (>4m stem-diameter) trees die, as these size classes make up less than 2% of the population. At a spatial scale, maximum fire return interval, level of elephant damage and mean annual temperature all had significant impacts on the size-class distribution of baobabs. Longer (>30 years) maximum fire return intervals and higher mean annual temperatures (23°C) supported an inverse J-shaped baobab population structure whilst shorter (<30 years) maximum fire return intervals and lower mean annual temperatures (21-22°C) supported a bell-shaped population structure. Increases in bark damage over time correlated with increased elephant density (primarily attributed to mature male elephant density). Smaller baobabs – those less than <1m in stem diameter, generally escaped elephant utilization altogether, or suffered very severe damage by elephants. Despite a 3-fold increase in mortality and no recruitment over the 18 year study period, the KNP baobab population has maintained its inverse J-shaped population structure. The high proportion of mortality in the >4m stem diameter is however concerning as the persistence of these large baobabs is essential for the survival of the population during unfavourable conditions for recruitment.

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