A systematic review of the impacts of woody encroachment ...

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Contents A systematic review of the impacts of woody encroachment on ecosystem services in African and North American savannas and grasslands. Felix V. Skhosana PhD Candidate

Transcript of A systematic review of the impacts of woody encroachment ...

ContentsA systematic review of the impacts of woody encroachment on ecosystem services in African and North American

savannas and grasslands.

Felix V. Skhosana

PhD Candidate

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Woody encroachment (WE)

Photo By Vision2030 - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,

• WE – The directional increase of indigenous woody plants in savannas and the

‘invasion’ of the formerly grassland biomes by indigenous woody plants (O’Connor et al.

2014).

• Eg. WE at the Waterberg Plateau Park in Namibia

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Woody Encroachment (WE) across the world

Stevens et al. 2018

• WE occurs mostly in savannas and grasslands worldwide.

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Drivers of Woody encroachment (WE)

Luvuno et al. 2018

• Substantial knowledge on drivers and encroachers of WE.

• A combination of local and global drivers causing WE.

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Encroaching species

Photo By Vision2030 - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,

• Mostly N-fixing legumes to search and review.

S. melifera P. glandulosa

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Gap in literature

• Impacts of WE on ecosystem services (ES) and ecosystem

disservices (EDS) warrants a clear synthesis.

– AIM: Systematically reviewing the impacts of WE on ES & EDS.

– Objective: Use online databases to search and review literature.

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Ecosystem services (ES) and disservices (EDS)

• ES: Benefits and services humans obtain from ecosystems (MA, 2005).

– Provisioning, Regulating and Cultural

• EDS: goods and services that harm human well-being (Lyytimäki, 2014).

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Methods

• Searching electronic databases for literature

• Using MA, TEEB & CICES categories as guidelines.

Provisioning ES & EDS Regulating ES and EDS Cultural ES & EDS

Grass forage availability Carbon sequestration Tourism & view obstruction

Water availability Drought regulation Herding obstruction

Woody fuels Erosion regulation Cultural heritage

Woody materials Flood regulation Cultural standing

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Preliminary Results

• 313 published cases from 186 publications documented the impacts of WE on ES & EDS.

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Distribution of the studies

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Impacts on provisioning ES

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Impacts on provisioning ESN

. Am

eric

aA

fric

a

Canada: Decline in grass cover from 50% to 0% from open to 80% shrub cover (Bork et al. 2009).

E.g. Decrease provisioning E.g. Increase provisioning

Namibia: 60% reduction in cattle carrying capacity (de

Klerk 2004); decline in cattle from 2,5milllion in 1958 to 800 000 in 2001 resulting to a 64% decline in meat production (Jones et al. 2009; Demas et al., 2012)

Namibia: Use 0.5mil to 1mil tons of firewood per yr. and exports 60 000 – 158 000 tons/yr. of charcoal (Rothauge

2014; Trede and Patt, 2015).

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Impacts on regulating ES

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Impacts on regulating ES

Eg. Increase regulation Eg. Decrease regulating Eg. EDS

RSA: Increase of 12100 kg/ha in AGC (Coetsee et al., 2013).

WE facilitates weed invasion (e.g. Chromolaena), causing bloating or even death (Solomon et al. 2007; Wigley

et al. 2009).

WE causing diseases (e.g. Trypansomiasis) in animals spread by Glossima fly (Bollig and Osterle

2008).

Afr

ica

Eg. Increase regulating Eg. Decrease regulating Eg. EDS

USA : Increase in AGC ranged from 1200 to 80958kg/ha (Collins et al. 1998; Asner et al.

2003; Campbell et al. 2012).

USA: Increase in SOC ranging from 300 to 61200 kg/ha (Hibbard et al., 2003; Liao et

al., 2006; Neff et al., 2009).

USA: Decrease in SOC ranging from -50 000 to -30kg/ha from grass-dominated to tree-dominated areas(McCulley and Jackson 2012; Shifa 2017).

N. A

me

rica

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Impacts on cultural ES

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Conclusion

• Review presents both the benefits and negative impacts of WE on ES.

• At local scale, whether benefits outweigh negative impacts depends on the type of

landuse and the ES of interest.

• At wider scale WE is largely a problem than a benefit.

– WE beneficial in C sequestration but huge negative impact on livestock production.

– 50% to 80% of savannas and grasslands are used as rangelands & > 70% of these rangelands are degraded due to WE (Lukomska et al., 2014; Belayneh a.nd Tessema, 2017; Stevens et

al. 2017).

– > 1bil. people earn their livelihood from livestock farming in these impacted areas (Lukomska et al., 2014; MA, 2005).

• Control measures are essential to reduce WE.

Acknowledgements

Graham von Maltitza, Malebajoa Anicia Maoelaa, Gregor T. Feigac and Guy Midgleyb

• aCouncil for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria, South Africa

• bDepartment of Botany and Zoology, Stellenbosch University, Matieland, South Africa

• cDepartment of Geography, Geoinformatics and Meteorology, University of Pretoria, South Africa

Thank you