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Contrasting elephants and humans as agents of disturbance in Miombo woodlands

A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Science to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2019 / The Miombo woodlands are “disturbance driven savannas”, where people, elephants and fire prevent canopy closure and maintain tree-grass coexistence. Since the end of the 18th century, the woodlands
have undergone dramatic changes to their disturbance regimes, through increases in human and
decreases in elephant populations. This has resulted in a high concentration of human-driven
disturbances in some areas of the woodlands and low disturbances in other areas. Consequently, in
the areas affected by humans, there are high levels of biomass loss, while other areas experience
woody plant encroachment. The ecological impacts of humans and elephants are comparable, but
there are important differences. Although both remove woody biomass, they might impact vegetation
composition and structure differently. The aim of this study was to investigate whether people can
perform a similar functional role to elephants, with regards to biomass removal and potential changes
to savanna structure and composition.
Aboveground woody biomass estimates were obtained from Synthetic Aperture Radar
backscatter and used to (1) compare biomass change at different levels of human (2010 human
population density) and elephant influence (2009 Niassa elephant density); and (2) identify how the intensity of biomass loss differs for humans and historical elephant densities (1.4 elephants/km2)
under different rainfall and initial biomass conditions. Biomass change was calculated between 2007
and 2010 and compared across equal areas inside and outside of Niassa National Reserve. For human
influence, a regional analysis was also done. Published estimates of past elephant densities without
poaching for Niassa National Reserve were used as the historical elephant density. Biomass loss
increases with population density, for both people and elephants. However, rainfall responses show
opposite patterns: biomass loss decreases with rainfall within Niassa National Reserve (under elephant
influence) but increases outside of protected areas (under human influence). Under more mesic
conditions, humans tend to remove more biomass than elephants. This suggests that woodlands with
low rainfall and low human influence have more trees and higher biomass than if elephants were still
present at their historical densities, and that some harvesting by people may be beneficial.
People and elephants both remove woody biomass; however, they do not necessarily select
the same stems. Therefore, species and size class preference of humans and elephants were
compared, to identify potential differences in their impacts on vegetation structure and composition. I
found that humans prefer a wider range of species than elephants, so might filter the canopy layer
more strongly. Elephants’ preference for slightly larger stems suggests that areas utilised by elephants
might result in a more left-skewed size-class distribution than humans in areas without a charcoal
industry. The high regeneration ability of many species, the large overlap in stems used by people and
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elephants and the relative flexibility in what stems can be used for a specific purpose, suggests that
many of these differences in impacts on composition and structure could be mitigated.
While elephants and people clearly have different impacts on woody vegetation, people are a
totally novel ecological and evolutionary force due to some similarities in how both use woody
biomass. The type of human utilisation will determine the stems used and I suggest that since almost
all aboveground woody biomass can be utilised for charcoal, the human impact on the woodlands
could be reduced by decentralising the charcoal industry. Encouraging small scale production in low
rainfall, low human impact areas, could alleviate the pressure on the hotspots of biomass loss. This
could provide rural populations with an additional source of income, and the woodlands with a
disturbance necessary in maintaining, to some extent, the ecosystem structure and functioning.
However, care needs to be taken as increasing accessibility in remote areas could result in rampant
deforestation. Results from this thesis suggest that forest management principals developed in other
ecosystems, which haven’t had mega-fauna for thousands of years, need to be tailored to African
ecosystems. African forest managers therefore need to develop policies that consider the past and
present disturbance regimes of these ecosystems. / TL (2020)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/29665
Date January 2019
CreatorsRansom, Caitlin
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatOnline resource (82 pages), application/pdf

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