Megaherbivores suppress precipitation-driven plant irruptions in a
tropical savanna
Abstract
Irruptions in plant and animal populations are not uncommon but the
factors underlying irruptions are rarely explored quantitatively. In
addition, it has been suggested that these irruptions may be reduced by
predators or herbivores, but there is a paucity of controlled
experimental evidence. Using data from the Kenya Long-term Exclosure
Experiment (KLEE), we show that populations of perennial Hibiscus spp.
(primarily H. flavifolius) show multiple short-term irruptions a year
after rainy periods, increasing in abundance in some cases by more than
an order of magnitude before declining in ensuing months and years. We
demonstrate that these irruptions are largely limited to experimental
plots from which large mammalian herbivores have been excluded,
particularly megaherbivores (elephants and giraffes). This represents a
rare controlled replicated experimental demonstration of top-down
regulation of irruptions. African elephants and giraffes are often at
greater risk of local extinction than other large mammals, and their
absence appears to destabilize this African savanna ecosystem, providing
additional support for their conservation.