Literature DB >> 17834943

Serengeti migratory wildebeest: facilitation of energy flow by grazing.

S J McNaughton.   

Abstract

Dense concentrations of migratory wildebeest leaving the Serengeti Plains in late May 1974 reduced green plant biomass by almost 400 grams per square meter, 85 percent of the initial standing crop. However, this grazing prevented senescence and stimulated net primary productivity of the grasslands. Thomson's gazelles leaving the plains a month later were significantly associated with areas previously grazed by wildebeest, and this association was still evident at the end of the dry season, 6 months later.

Entities:  

Year:  1976        PMID: 17834943     DOI: 10.1126/science.191.4222.92

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  50 in total

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6.  Ecological conditions that determine when grazing stimulates grass production.

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7.  Evidence for the promotion of aboveground grassland production by native large herbivores in Yellowstone National Park.

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8.  Plasticity and overcompensation in grass responses to herbivory.

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9.  Soil community composition and the regulation of grazed temperate grassland.

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10.  Loss of a large grazer impacts savanna grassland plant communities similarly in North America and South Africa.

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