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Elephants,termites and mound thermoregulation in a progressively warmer world
Authors:Grant S Joseph  Colleen L Seymour  Bernard W T Coetzee  Mduduzi Ndlovu  Luana Deng  Kelly Fowler  James Hagan  Brian J Brooks  Jackson A Seminara  Stefan H Foord
Institution:1.Department of Biological Sciences,DST/NRF Centre of Excellence at the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town,Rondebosch,South Africa;2.South African National Biodiversity Institute, Kirstenbosch Research Centre,Claremont,South Africa;3.Organisation for Tropical Studies,Skukuza,South Africa;4.Global Change, University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;5.Department of Zoology and Entomology,University of the Free State,Bloemfontein,South Africa;6.Department of Zoology and South African Research Chair for Biodiversity Value and Change,University of Venda,Thohoyandou,South Africa
Abstract:

Context

With global change, microclimates become important refuges for temperature-sensitive, range-restricted organisms. In African savannas, woody vegetation on Macrotermes mounds create widely-dispersed microclimates significantly cooler than the surrounding matrix, which buffer against elevated temperatures at the finer scale of mounds, allowing species to persist at the landscape scale. Termite colonies cultivate symbiotic fungi to digest lignin, but the fungi require temperatures between 29 and 32 °C, which termites strive to maintain. Mound-associated vegetation is a hot-spot for elephant herbivory, so removal of woody species cover by elephants could influence mound-associated microclimates, impacting temperature regulation by termites.

Objectives

We explored the interaction between two prominent ecosystem engineers (termites and elephants) to ascertain whether elephant removal of mound woody cover affects (1) external mound-associated microclimate and (2) internal mound temperature.

Methods

We surveyed 44 mounds from three sites in Kruger National Park, South Africa, during an El Niño/Southern Oscillation-induced drought and heatwave, recording whether sub-canopy, external, mound-surface and internal mound temperatures varied with vegetation removal by elephant.

Results

Elephant damage to mound-associated vegetation reduces the fine-scale microclimate effect provided by vegetation on Macrotermes mounds. Despite this, termites were able to regulate internal mound temperatures, whereas internal temperatures of abandoned mounds increased with elevated surface temperatures.

Conclusions

Termites can persist despite loss of mound-associated microclimates, but the loss likely increases energetic costs of mound thermoregulation. Since mound vegetation buffers against drought, loss of widely-dispersed, fine-scale microclimates could increase as megaherbivores remain constrained to protected areas, impacting climate-sensitive organisms and ecosystem function at a range of scales.
Keywords:
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