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Vegetation, ungulate and grasshopper interactions inside vs. outside an African savanna game park

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Abstract

The human impact on the African savanna is parcelling large native mammals into game reserves, with cattle and other livestock replacing these native mammals in the matrix surrounding these reserves. Concordant with this are other landscape changes such as fire maintenance within the reserve but no longer outside. How does this composite landscape change affect biodiversity, as represented by small animals such as grasshoppers? This question was addressed against the premise that grasshoppers have evolved in the context of native mammal ecology. One of the most significant aspects of this ecology is grazing and trampling by the large number of ungulates congregating at waterholes. The results clearly show that the grasshopper fauna is only marginally impoverished outside the reserve, and that cattle trampling and grazing (along with less fire) is a simulation of these impacts by native ungulates. As greatest grasshopper diversity is encouraged by some trampling and grazing, the presence of cattle in place of native mammals is not entirely adverse to biodiversity, as represented by grasshoppers.

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Samways, M.J., Kreuzinger, K. Vegetation, ungulate and grasshopper interactions inside vs. outside an African savanna game park. Biodiversity and Conservation 10, 1963–1981 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1013199621649

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