Forb community responses to an extensive drought in two contrasting land-use types of a semi-arid Lowveld savanna
Abstract
Projected increases in the frequency and severity of drought events are expected to impose changes in the ecology
of native forb communities in semi-arid ecosystems. We examined the state of forb communities during, and
directly after an extreme drought event across two contrasting land-use types, which included a protected area
(high diversity of free roaming wild herbivores) and communal rangeland (long history of intensive cattle grazing)
in a semi-arid Lowveld savanna of the Gazankulu area, South Africa. Forb floristic data were collected towards the
end of the drought and repeated after the drought release a few months later. Forb community composition was
significantly different among land-use types. Community changes were not induced by annual forb emergence
alone, but through species-specific dominance shifts, which differed among land-use types. Forb richness,
diversity and biomass were equally low at both land-use types and increased significantly after the drought release,
although the magnitude of response was much stronger in the protected area, whereas drought contributed to a
directional change in the protected area with a complete post-drought turnover in both annual and perennial forb
species, much less variability was observed in the communal rangeland, which may suggest long-term effects
imposed by land-use history
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/34533https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.2989/10220119.2020.1726464?needAccess=true
https://doi.org/10.2989/10220119.2020.1726464