2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2003.00816.x
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The impact of cattle ranching on large‐scale vegetation patterns in a coastal savanna in Tanzania

Abstract: Summary1. The success of large-scale cattle ranching in African savanna vegetation has often been limited by problems of bush encroachment and disease (in particular trypanosomiasis spread by tsetse flies). Mkwaja Ranch, occupying an area of 462 km 2 on the coast of Tanzania, is a recent example of a large ranching enterprise that failed within the savanna environment. It was closed in 2000 after 48 years of operation. In this paper we describe the main vegetation types of the area (excluding closed forest veg… Show more

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Cited by 122 publications
(128 citation statements)
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“…By avoiding predators, prey species can shape the habitat vegetation structure of their refuge area (Ripple and Beschta 2004). Bush-encroached areas are usually composed of small trees at high densities (Jeltsch et al 1997;Tobler et al 2003). In addition to their structural disadvantage of poor visibility, our study showed that small trees do not contribute as much to the structural and nutritional quality of the beneath-crown grass layer as large trees do.…”
Section: Tree Sizementioning
confidence: 71%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…By avoiding predators, prey species can shape the habitat vegetation structure of their refuge area (Ripple and Beschta 2004). Bush-encroached areas are usually composed of small trees at high densities (Jeltsch et al 1997;Tobler et al 2003). In addition to their structural disadvantage of poor visibility, our study showed that small trees do not contribute as much to the structural and nutritional quality of the beneath-crown grass layer as large trees do.…”
Section: Tree Sizementioning
confidence: 71%
“…Low recruitment rates of large tree species have also been reported by Holdo (2003) and Caro et al (2005). In addition, open savannahs become denser due to bush encroachment which is often the result of landscapes being over-grazed (Jeltsch et al 1997;Tobler et al 2003) and because of poor fire management (Eckhardt et al 2000). Since bush-encroached areas are mostly dominated by small and densely growing trees, tree size might be important in influencing grass quality and structure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Shifts from grassland to shrubland may be related to changes in climate (Polley et al, 1997;Morgan et al, 2007), fire frequency and grazing intensity Roques et al, 2001;Tobler et al, 2003), and browsing pressure . In some areas of Africa, woodlands have declined in protected areas coincident with a concentration of elephants into these areas (e.g., Laws, 1970;Van de Vijver et al, 1999).…”
Section: Native Browsers and Rangeland Shrub Encroachmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some areas of Africa, woodlands have declined in protected areas coincident with a concentration of elephants into these areas (e.g., Laws, 1970;Van de Vijver et al, 1999). Conversely, woodland expansion is often observed in African rangelands managed for cattle production (Scholes and Archer, 1997;Oba et al, 2000;Roques et al, 2001;Tobler et al, 2003). A consequence of lowered tree or shrub densities may be increased availability of understory nutrients (Treydte et al, 2007), whereas increased densities of trees and shrubs can negatively affect grass productivity (Scholes and Archer, 1997;Smit and Rethman, 2000).…”
Section: Native Browsers and Rangeland Shrub Encroachmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Observing an ecological change like this is diffi cult on a coarse spatial scale. In particular, increases in shrub biomass caused by intensive grazing (Tobler et al, 2003;Laliberte et al, 2004), increases in the biomass of unpalatable plants, such as thorny shrubs and plants with prostrate growth forms (Nakamura et al, 2000;Wuyunna et al, 2004), increases in the biomass of xerophytic or halophytic plants (Kawanabe et al, 1998), and increases in the proportion of C 4 plants (Tsendeekhuu & Black, 2005) have been reported as signs of change.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%