4.8 Article

Spiny plants, mammal browsers, and the origin of African savannas

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1607493113

Keywords

Africa; Bovidae; coevolution; mammalian herbivory; savanna

Funding

  1. International Development Research Centre (Canada)
  2. University of Johannesburg Analytical Facility (South Africa)
  3. South African National Research Foundation
  4. Royal Society (United Kingdom)
  5. Mellon Foundation
  6. Claude Leon Foundation
  7. National Research Foundation
  8. Government of Canada through Genome Canada
  9. Ontario Genomics Institute [2008-OGI-ICI-03]

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Savannas first began to spread across Africa during the Miocene. A major hypothesis for explaining this vegetation change is the increase in C-4 grasses, promoting fire. We investigated whether mammals could also have contributed to savanna expansion by using spinescence as a marker of mammal herbivory. Looking at the present distribution of 1,852 tree species, we established that spinescence is mainly associated with two functional types of mammals: large browsers and medium-sized mixed feeders. Using a dated phylogeny for the same tree species, we found that spinescence evolved at least 55 times. The diversification of spiny plants occurred long after the evolution of Afrotherian proboscideans and hyracoids. However, it is remarkably congruent with diversification of bovids, the lineage including the antelope that predominantly browse these plants today. Our findings suggest that herbivore-adapted savannas evolved several million years before fire-maintained savannas and probably, in different environmental conditions. Spiny savannas with abundant mammal herbivores occur in drier climates and on nutrient-rich soils, whereas fire-maintained savannas occur in wetter climates on nutrient-poor soils.

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