Relationships between vegetation and bird community composition in grasslands of the Serengeti
Authors: Gottschalk, Thomas K.; Ekschmitt, Klemens1; Bairlein, Franz2
Source: African Journal of Ecology, Volume 45, Number 4, December 2007 , pp. 557-565(9)
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Abstract:
The Serengeti-Mara ecosystem holds one of the largest natural grasslands of the world, which is well known for its large herds of mammals. However, the bird community structure of these grasslands has hardly ever been studied. For the first time, a large-scale study on grassland bird communities has been conducted in all typical open grasslands of the Serengeti National Park. We used ten grassland plots representing a gradient of increasing vegetation height and also including shrubs and trees to analyse the influence of vegetation structure on the composition of grassland bird communities. Three communities of breeding birds were identified in relation to (a) short grass, (b) intermediate and long grass and (c) wooded grasslands. The bird communities of intermediate, long and wooded grassland were very similar, because of identical dominant bird species. Our results suggest that breeding birds of East African grasslands exhibit two contrasting habitat relationships: (1) birds that are restricted to short grass, and (2) species that are tolerant to vegetational shifts from intermediate grass via long grass to early stages of woody vegetation. Because the vegetation is often driven beyond this range in managed tropical grasslands through high grazing pressure or through shrub encroachment, we expect that the long-grass bird communities will not generally resist anthropogenic disturbance.Keywords: bird community; East African savanna; grassland; species-habitat relationships; territory mapping
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2028.2007.00769.x
Affiliations: 1: Justus Liebig University, IFZ, Department of Animal Ecology, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26-32, D-35392 Giessen, Germany 2: Institute of Avian Research, `Vogelwarte Helgoland', An der Vogelwarte 21, D-26386 Wilhelmshaven, Germany

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