Tree-grass dynamics in aProsopis-thornscrub savanna parkland: Reconstructing the past and predicting the future
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Écoscience
- Vol. 2 (1) , 83-99
- https://doi.org/10.1080/11956860.1995.11682272
Abstract
Although trends toward increased woody plant abundance in grasslands and savannas in recent history have been reported worldwide, our understanding of the processes involved is limited. Here I review and integrate a series of studies which quantify the rates, dynamics, spatial patterns and successional processes involved in tree patch and woody plant community development at a savanna parkland site in southern Texas, U.S.A. Stable carbon isotope ratios of soil organic carbon indicate C3 woody plants currently occupy sites once dominated by C4 grasses. Historical aerial photographs (1941–1990), tree ring analysis and plant growth models all indicate this displacement has occurred over the past 100 to 200 years. Succession from grass– to woody plant–domination occurs when the N2–fixing arborescent, honey mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa (Torr.) var. glandulosa), invades and establishes in herbaceous patches. Over time, this plant modifies soils and microclimate to facilitate the ingress and establishment of additional woody species. The result is a landscape comprised of shrub clusters of varying ages organized around a Prosopis nucleus. As new clusters form and existing clusters enlarge, coalescence occurs. This process appears to be in progress on upland portions of the landscape and has progressed to completion on lowlands. Rates of cluster development and patterns of distribution appear regulated by subsurface variations in clay content and by variations in annual rainfall. Simulation models based on reconstructions and forward projections indicate succession from grassland to woodland steady states would require 400–500 years, with the most dramatic changes occurring over a 200-year period. The shrubs initially facilitated by Prosopis appear to contribute to its demise and prevent its re–establishment. Structure and function of future communities may therefore depend on how remaining woody plants react to changes in microclimate and nitrogen cycling that occur after Prosopis is gone.Keywords
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