Influence of Myrmecophytic Acacia drepanolobium on the Composition and Growth of Surrounding Herbaceous Vegetation
Julius C. Karugu, Duncan M. Kimuyu, David Kenfack, Moshe Inbar

TL;DR
This study explores how a spiny acacia tree protects nearby plants from herbivores, creating microhabitats that support plant diversity in East Africa's arid highlands.
Contribution
The paper reveals that A. drepanolobium trees act as nurse plants, offering herbivore protection and promoting herbaceous vegetation diversity in overgrazed ecosystems.
Findings
Herbaceous vegetation height and biomass were higher under tree canopies in unfenced areas but not in fenced exclosures.
Species richness was consistently higher under tree canopies in both fenced and unfenced areas.
Herbivore presence intensified differences in herbaceous vegetation composition between tree and non-tree areas.
Abstract
Whistling thorn acacia (Acacia (Vachellia) drepanolobium) forms nearly monospecific stands among woody species in black cotton soils in East Africa arid highlands. The tree defends itself against large mammal herbivores with spinescence and symbiotic ants. While these defenses have been extensively studied, little is known about the extent to which A. drepanolobium defense may benefit other plants growing in close association. We examined variation in herbaceous vegetation height, biomass, and composition between areas underneath A. drepanolobium canopies and the adjacent matrix in both fenced herbivore exclosures and unfenced areas. In unfenced areas, there was more tall herbaceous vegetation and biomass underneath tree canopies than away from tree canopies, while these differences were not significant in fenced exclosures. Both height and biomass of understory vegetation were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation · Plant and animal studies
