A dissertation presented to the Faculty of Science in
fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Environmental Sciences degree
University of the Witwatersrand, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences.
South Africa, Johannesburg.
March, 2016 / Understanding how trees limit light will advance theories of bush encroachment and
tree-grass coexistence in savannas and it will enable us to explore how we can best
conserve fire maintained, fire-dependent vegetation systems in South Africa and how our
biome boundaries may shift. In order to understand how fire maintains the boundary
between closed canopies and open grassy environments, the aim of this research was to test
the hypothesis that; tree traits affect light that passes through the canopies of trees to the
ground, by in
uencing the threshold tree density at which grass stops growing under trees.
Using the Point-Centered-Quarter method I estimated tree density using a proxy, mean
PCQ distance, to refl
ect changes in inter-tree distance across the gradient of tree density.
At the same plots I used dry-weight ranking to record changes in grass cover, species
composition and abundance, a balance scale to weigh wet and dry grass biomass, in
tandem with densiometer measurements and hemispherical images to obtain canopy cover
and the amount of sunlight received by the ground, in addition to the tree density data.
To elucidate the interaction between tree traits and sunlight (correlation, boxplots, ANOVA,
post-hoc test, MRD, quartile-regression analyses and linear modelling) as well as response of
grass species to light (regression analysis, boxplots, ANOVA and GAMs), respective passable
analyses were employed using R. The results show that biomass declines with changes in
grass species composition and abundance, that are in turn driven by decline in light
transmittance; when horizontal and compound leafed trees, especially on short, umbrella
shaped trees with horizontal spheroids prevail. Consequently reducing light loving grass
species with characteristics that lead to high fire frequency and intensity; high cover,
height and biomass, that prevail when tall trees with vertically angled leaves and spheroids
dominate, leading to higher light transmittance. This succinct understanding highlights
variation in the tree-grass relationship across savanna ecosystems, suggesting site-specific
interventions and recommendations to bush encroachment. Findings reveal value in
monitoring tree canopy cover across savanna ecosystems; using it as an early warning
proxy for changes in primary production and fire regimes. Conclusions challenge
assumptions about the minimum light tolerance of grass, and provide important clues to
help disantangle mechanisms by which grasses may persist at low light levels.
Key words: Savanna, South Africa, light transmittance, trees, grass, bush encroachment / LG2017
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/21669 |
Date | January 2016 |
Creators | Nondlazi, Basanda Xhantilomzi |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | Online resource (xiii, 92 leaves), application/pdf |
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