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An African Savanna
Synthesis of the Nylsvley Study

This book develops a unified vision of the ecology of dry savannas, a little studied ecosystem.

R. J. Scholes (Author), B. H. Walker (Author)

9780521612104, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 11 November 2004

320 pages, 74 b/w illus. 44 tables
24.6 x 18.9 x 1.7 cm, 0.57 kg

Savannas cover approximately half of the African land surface and one fifth of the land surface of the world. They are one of the most important, but least understood terrestrial ecosystems. They are the basis of the African livestock industry and the wildlife they support is of key importance in bringing in tourists. The Nylsvley area in South Africa is one of the most intensively studied savanna regions in the world and as such it is a key source of data and theory relating to this important tropical biome. The South African Savanna Biome Programme was set up to develop the understanding necessary to predict changes in the ecosystem stability induced by both natural and man-made stresses. This book provides a synthesis of the programme's sixteen years of research at Nylsvley and aims to develop a unified vision of the ecology of the dry savanna.

Preface
Part I. Nylsvley: An African Savanna: 1. African savannas
2. The people of Nylsvley
3. The climate of Nylsvley
4. Geology, landform and soils
5. The Nylsvley biota
Part II. The Key Determinants: Water, Nutrients, Fire, and Herbivory: 6. Water
7. Nutrients
8. Fire
9. Herbivory
Part III. The Carbon Cycle: 10. Primary production
11. Decomposition
Part IV. Community and Landscape Pattern and Change: 12. Rich savanna, poor savanna
13. Community structure, composition and dynamics
14. Tree-grass interactions
15. Plant-animal interactions
Part V. Lessons From Nylsvley: 16. An overview of savanna ecology
17. Managing savannas
18. Reflections on ecosystem studies
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Applied ecology [RNC]

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