Tree-Grass Interactions in Savannas
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
- Vol. 28 (1) , 517-544
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.28.1.517
Abstract
Savannas occur where trees and grasses interact to create a biome that is neither grassland nor forest. Woody and gramineous plants interact by many mechanisms, some negative (competition) and some positive (facilitation). The strength and sign of the interaction varies in both time and space, allowing a rich array of possible outcomes but no universal predictive model. Simple models of coexistence of trees and grasses, based on separation in rooting depth, are theoretically and experimentally inadequate. Explanation of the widely observed increase in tree biomass following introduction of commercial ranching into savannas requires inclusion of interactions among browsers, grazers, and fires, and their effects on tree recruitment. Prediction of the consequences of manipulating tree biomass through clearing further requires an understanding of how trees modify light, water, and nutrient environments of grasses. Understanding the nature of coexistence between trees and grass, which under other circumstances are mutually exclusive or unequal partners, yields theoretical insights and has practical implications.Keywords
This publication has 174 references indexed in Scilit:
- Positive interactions among plantsThe Botanical Review, 1995
- Comparative water relations of seedling and adult Quercus species during gallery forest expansion in tallgrass prairieForest Ecology and Management, 1993
- Comparison of linear and non-linear overstory-understory models for ponderosa pine: A conceptual frameworkForest Ecology and Management, 1992
- Soil-plant interactions in agroforestry systemsForest Ecology and Management, 1991
- Biological Invasion by Myrica Faya in Hawai'i: Plant Demography, Nitrogen Fixation, Ecosystem EffectsEcological Monographs, 1989
- Soil nitrogen mineralization under a Eucalyptus plantation and a natural Acacia forest in SenegalForest Ecology and Management, 1988
- Factors affecting reproductive maturity of redberry juniper (Juniperus pinchotii)Forest Ecology and Management, 1987
- Herbage Standing Crop around Eastern Redcedar TreesJournal of Range Management, 1987
- Soil development under legume tree canopiesForest Ecology and Management, 1986
- Livestock Grazing‐Fire Regime Interactions within Montane Forests of Zion National Park, UtahEcology, 1983