Enhancing ecosystem services through collaborative grass removal and fire exclusion in the Eastern Ghats

Author:

Soman Saneesh Cherapurath12ORCID,Anjaneyulu Paradesi34,Kumar Midigesi Anil35,Sharma Himani6,Rao Boyina Ravi Prasad3,Ladouceur Emma1278,Knight Tiffany M.127

Affiliation:

1. Department of Community Ecology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research‐ UFZ Halle Germany

2. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig Leipzig Germany

3. Sri Krishnadevaraya University Anantapur India

4. Kanha Shanti Vanam Heartfulness Institute Chegur India

5. Andaman and Nicobar Regional Center, Botanical Survey of India Port Blair India

6. Foundation for Ecological Security (FES) Anand India

7. Institute of Biology, Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg Halle Germany

8. Leipzig University Leipzig Germany

Abstract

AbstractHuman activities in mesic savanna ecosystems have resulted in plant communities that are heavily dominated by fire‐tolerant grass species, are less diverse, and offer fewer ecosystem services such as palatable plant biomass. Experimental studies manipulating fire and grass presence have mostly been conducted in ecosystems invaded by exotic grass species. However, these experiments are also relevant to ecosystems that have become dominated by native grass species due to changes in human activities. Our study compared three different management treatments in the Eastern Ghats of India, where mesic savanna ecosystems are highly dominated by the unpalatable native Cymbopogon grasses, specifically: (1) control (both Cymbopogon grasses and fire are present), (2) fire exclusion, and (3) manual removal of Cymbopogon grasses and fire exclusion. We found that both grass removal and fire exclusion were necessary to significantly increase palatable herbaceous plant biomass and species diversity, and that species diversity responses were only significant at larger spatial grains of investigation. High site‐to‐site variation in the grass removal and fire exclusion treatment prevented us from detecting significant differences in species composition across treatments, even though particular palatable grass species benefited from the treatment. Our study is in line with research from other mesic savanna systems showing that fire management alone is not sufficient to transition ecosystems to a desired or historical state. We demonstrate how normally costly management practices, such as manual removal of dominant grasses, can be reasonably achieved through collaboration between scientists, community governed village institutions, and government and nongovernment agencies in socioecological systems.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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