Abstract
AbstractGrazing lawns are important food sources in nutrient poor savannas for free-roaming mammalian herbivores. It has been hypothesized that increased grazing pressure by mammalian herbivores can create and maintain patches of lawn grass. We tested whether the application of specific nutrients, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) or in combination with calcitic and dolomitic lime (Ca), in a nutrient poor African savanna, would make the grass sward more nutrient rich, which would attract mammalian herbivores to graze more frequently. We investigated the grazing patterns of six species of mammalian herbivores, namely, blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), Burchell’s zebra (Equus quagga burchellii), common eland (Taurotragus oryx), impala (Aepyceros melampus), square-lipped rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum) and warthog (Phacochoerus africanus). We show that the addition of N attracts and increases the grazing pressure for three of the herbivore species, namely, blue wildebeest, Burchell’s zebra and impala. Our findings suggest that these often abundantly present mammalian herbivores with intermediate body mass, attracted to grazing lawns by the addition of N, can maintain grazing lawns.Conservation implicationsArtificial fertilization with nitrogen attracts large free-roaming herbivore species to localized grazing lawns, stimulating the creation and expansion of high nutrient quality lawn grasses in nutrient poor savannas. This results in a nutrient high food source which would normally not be available in nutrient poor savannas.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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