Grazing in a megagrazer‐dominated savanna does not reduce soil carbon stocks, even at high intensities

Author:

Hyvarinen Olli1ORCID,te Beest Mariska23ORCID,le Roux Elizabeth4ORCID,Kerley Graham I. H.3ORCID,Findlay Nicola25ORCID,Schenkeveld Walter D. C.6ORCID,Trouw Victor2,Cromsigt Joris P. G. M13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Faculty of Forest Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå Sweden

2. Copernicus Institute for Sustainable Development, Utrecht University Utrecht the Netherlands

3. Centre for African Conservation Ecology, Nelson Mandela University Gqeberha South Africa

4. Department of Biology, Center for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changing World (BIOCHANGE) and Center for Ecological Dynamics in a Novel Biosphere, Section for Ecoinformatics and Biodiversity, Aarhus University Aarhus C Denmark

5. KwaZulu‐Natal Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, Soil Fertility and Analytical Services Pietermaritzburg South Africa

6. Soil Chemistry and Chemical Soil Quality Group, Wageningen University and Research Wageningen the Netherlands

Abstract

Recent studies suggest that wild animals can promote ecosystem carbon sinks through their impacts on vegetation and soils. However, livestock studies show that intense levels of grazing reduce soil organic carbon (SOC), leading to concerns that rewilding with large grazers may compromise ecosystem carbon storage. Furthermore, wild grazers can both limit and promote woody plant recruitment and survival on savanna grasslands, with both positive and negative impacts on SOC, depending on the rainfall and soil texture contexts. We used grazing lawns in one of the few African protected savannas that are still dominated by megagrazers (> 1000 kg), namely white rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum, as a model to study the impact of prolonged and intense wild grazing on SOC stocks. We contrasted SOC stocks between patches of varying grazing intensity and woody plant encroachment in sites across different rhino habitat types. We found no differences in SOC stocks between the most‐ and least grazed plots in any of the habitats. Intermediately grazed plots, however, had higher SOC stocks in the top 5 cm compared to most and least grazed plots, but only in the closed‐canopy woodland habitat and not in the open habitats. Importantly, we found no evidence to support the hypothesis that wild grazing reduces SOC, even at high grazing intensities by the world's largest megagrazer. Compared to the non‐encroached reference plots, woody encroached plots had higher SOC stocks in soils with low clay content and lower SOC stocks in soils with high clay content, although only in the top 5 cm. Accordingly, our study highlights that wild grazers may influence SOC indirectly through their impact on tree‐grass ratios in grassy ecosystems. Our study thus provides important insights for future natural climate solutions that focus on wild grazer conservation and restoration.Keywords: fire, grazing impact, rewilding, soil carbon, white rhinoceros, woody encroachment

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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