4.7 Article

Linking abundances of the dung fungus Sporormiella to the density of bison: implications for assessing grazing by megaherbivores in palaeorecords

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 5, Pages 1125-1136

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12130

Keywords

coprophilous fungi; extinction; grasslands; non-pollen palynomorphs; palaeoecology and land use history; palynology; plant-herbivore interactions; Pleistocene megafauna

Funding

  1. NSF [DEB-0716471]
  2. NSF LTER Program at Konza
  3. University of Wisconsin Geography's Department Whitbeck Fellowship
  4. Bryson Professorship of Climate, People, and the Environment
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [823341, 1020485] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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1. Megaherbivores likely had important influences on past vegetation dynamics, just as they do in modern ecosystems. The exact nature of megaherbivores' role can be studied using a relatively new suite of palaeoecological techniques, including the quantification of fossil spores from Sporormiella and other coprophilous fungi as indicators of megafaunal biomass in sediment records. However, a quantitative linkage of spore abundance with megaherbivore biomass or grazing intensity has been lacking. 2. Konza Prairie Biological Station (Kansas,USA), located in the midcontinent of North America, contains native tallgrass prairie grazed by a herd of bison (Bison bison) in a 1000-ha enclosure, providing an excellent opportunity to test the effects of megaherbivores on grassland community composition and their potential signature in the palynological record. We collected pollen and spores during 2009 and 2010 from a network of 28 modified Tauber traps. The precise locations of the bison herd were recorded usingGPS collars; we calculated bison grazing intensity (kgm(-2)year(-1)) to high spatial precision within concentric circles around each trap (radii from 25 to 500m). 3. Both relative (per cent) and absolute (concentration) abundances of Sporormiella were significantly higher in traps inside the enclosure and were positively correlated with bison grazing intensity. The cut-off for distinguishing between bison-grazed and ungrazed traps was determined to be 2.8% Sporormiella of the total pollen and spore sum, consistent with previous palaeoecological reconstructions. The relationship between Sporormiella abundances and available grazing area around each trap was strongest at short radii (25-100m), suggesting that spores do not disperse far from their source. Sporormiella should thus be considered a local-scale indicator of megaherbivore presence. 4. Traps in the grazed area had significantly higher percentages of Ambrosia and lower percentages of Poaceae pollen than traps from ungrazed areas. This suggests that the pollen record has the potential to detect the ecological effects of bison grazing on grassland community composition. 5. Synthesis. This study refines the use of Sporormiella as a proxy for local megaherbivore presence, especially in grassland systems. Multiproxy Sporormiella and pollen analyses may help elucidate the past drivers of grassland dynamics, including the possible role of bison in mediating grass-forb interactions during the variable moisture regimes of the last 12,000years.

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