Some ecological side-effects of chemical and physical bush clearing in a southern African rangeland ecosystem

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Authors

Haussmann, Natalie S.
Kalwij, Jesse M.
Bezuidenhout, Stephan

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Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Bush thickening is amajor concern to farmers of arid and semi-arid rangelands; reactive intervention remains the norm. Herewe compared some of the short-termecological implications of chemical and physical removal of the bush encroacher Acacia mellifera in the central Highland savanna of Namibia.We selected 21 invaded sites, 7 had been chemically cleared, 7 had been physically cleared and 7 had never been cleared. Fromeach site,we recorded grass species composition, as well as the densities of A. mellifera, the undesired perennial shrub Pechuel-loeschea leubnitziae and a non-targeted tree Acacia erioloba, 24–30 months post-treatment. We fitted one-way ANOVA models to test for the effect of treatment on grass species richness and density of targeted and non-targeted tree species. A canonical correspondence analysis was used to determine how treatment affected grass species composition. While both treatments reduced the density of the bush encroacher, P. leubnitziae effectively replaced A. mellifera in chemically treated sites, where die-back presumably happened faster and nutrient and water competition decreased more rapidly. In such sites, perennial grass species were effectively outcompeted by P. leubnitiziae.

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Keywords

Acacia giraffae, Bush encroachment, Namibia, Physical soil disturbance, Sage bush, Savannah, Senegalia mellifera, Vachellia erioloba

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Haussmann, NS, Kalwij, JM & Bezuidenhout, S 2016, 'Some ecological side-effects of chemical and physical bush clearing in a southern African rangeland ecosystem', South African Journal of Botany, vol. 102, pp. 234-239.