The balance between trees and grasses is a key aspect of savanna ecosystem functioning, and so far, believed to be regulated by resource availability, fire frequency, and consumption by mammalian herbivores. Herbivores, however, also impact plant communities through the deposition of growth-limiting nutrients in their dung and urine. Little attention has been paid to the fact that savanna herbivores produce dung containing different concentrations of nutrients and it remains unknown what the effect of this variation is on tree-grass interactions. Here, we investigate if stoichiometric differences in dung from browsers and grazers from an African savanna are large enough to influence competitive interactions between N2-fixing trees and gras...
We measured browsing-induced responses of Acacia trees to investigate browsing lawns as an analogy...
Feedbacks between soil nutrients, plant communities, and large mammalian herbivores were studied at ...
This research article published by Elsevier, 2015The structure and composition of woody and grassy v...
Ungulate herbivores play a prominent role in maintaining the tree–grass balance in African savannas....
In savannas, the tree-grass balance is governed by water, nutrients, fire and herbivory, and their i...
1. Although dung of mammalian herbivores is an important pathway for nutrient return in savanna ecos...
1. Territorial or resting behaviour of large herbivores can cause strong local deposits of dung, in ...
We studied the composition of a savanna woody plant community across a natural herbivory gradient ma...
The scale of resource heterogeneity may influence how resources are locally partitioned between co-e...
In savannas, trees and grasses co-exist and share resources such as water and nutrients. The ratio ...
This research article published by Elsevier B.V., 2010The cover of large trees in African savannahs ...
The tree-grass interactions of African savannas are mainly determined by varying rainfall patterns a...
We hypothesised that exclusion of long-term browsing leads to decreased nutrient concentrations, inc...
In savanna ecosystems, fire and herbivory alter the competitive relationship between trees and grass...
The co-existence of trees and grasses in savannas in general can be the result of processes involvin...
We measured browsing-induced responses of Acacia trees to investigate browsing lawns as an analogy...
Feedbacks between soil nutrients, plant communities, and large mammalian herbivores were studied at ...
This research article published by Elsevier, 2015The structure and composition of woody and grassy v...
Ungulate herbivores play a prominent role in maintaining the tree–grass balance in African savannas....
In savannas, the tree-grass balance is governed by water, nutrients, fire and herbivory, and their i...
1. Although dung of mammalian herbivores is an important pathway for nutrient return in savanna ecos...
1. Territorial or resting behaviour of large herbivores can cause strong local deposits of dung, in ...
We studied the composition of a savanna woody plant community across a natural herbivory gradient ma...
The scale of resource heterogeneity may influence how resources are locally partitioned between co-e...
In savannas, trees and grasses co-exist and share resources such as water and nutrients. The ratio ...
This research article published by Elsevier B.V., 2010The cover of large trees in African savannahs ...
The tree-grass interactions of African savannas are mainly determined by varying rainfall patterns a...
We hypothesised that exclusion of long-term browsing leads to decreased nutrient concentrations, inc...
In savanna ecosystems, fire and herbivory alter the competitive relationship between trees and grass...
The co-existence of trees and grasses in savannas in general can be the result of processes involvin...
We measured browsing-induced responses of Acacia trees to investigate browsing lawns as an analogy...
Feedbacks between soil nutrients, plant communities, and large mammalian herbivores were studied at ...
This research article published by Elsevier, 2015The structure and composition of woody and grassy v...