Elephants may explain Mount Kilimanjaro's bamboo enigma
Jeremy Hance, mongabay.com
June 25, 2008




At nearly 6,000 meters in height, Mount Kilimanjaro is both Africa's tallest mountain and the world's highest solitary peak, home to a diverse range of habitats that support a large variety of plant species. Yet, unlike any other mountain in Africa, Mount Kilimanjaro contains no bamboo.

Scientists have pondered Mount Kilimanjaro's missing bamboo for over a century. Some have come to the conclusion that it is a result of dry conditions, but Dr. Andreas Hemp believes he has found another explanation. Speaking at the annual meeting of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) in Paramaribo, Suriname, Hemp said that Mount Kilimanjaro had similar rainfall to other tall East African mountains and that the mystery of the missing bamboo is due to a long interplay between elephant and human populations.


Hemp said that large herbivores, like elephants, are essential to bamboo forests on other mountains: "On one hand buffaloes and elephants destroy the forest, creating clearings on openings, which favours bamboo as a light demanding pioneer species. On the other hand these animals bend and pull up old bamboo shoots and dig the soil. This propagates bamboo from fallen culms and fragmentized parts of the rhizomes, enhancing vegetative propagation."

Elephants are not entirely absent from Mount Kilimanjaro: they live on the northern slope, but it is too dry there for bamboo to develop. However on the southern slope, where the climate is wet enough, there are no elephants. Deep gorges, which the herbivores are unable to traverse, make up parts of this slope, while humans have cultivated the remaining areas. Hemp believes when humans settled the arable land at least 2,000 years ago they also drove the elephants and, by proxy, the bamboo out.

In order to prove that the absense of bamboo on Kilimanjaro is not due to climate, but rather topography, human-influence, and the lack of large herbivores, Hemp plans to conduct pollen analyses to determine if bamboo existed on the southern slope. Discovery of bamboo pollen before human arrival would indicate that Kilimanjaro's mysterious absence of bamboo is due to human impact on Kilimanjaro's environment.




News index | RSS | News Feed


Advertisements:


Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing


MONGABAY.COM
Mongabay.com seeks to raise interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics, and finance on conservation and development (more)

CONTENTS
Rainforests
Tropical Fish
News
Madagascar
Pictures
Kids' Site
Languages
XML | RSS Feeds
T-shirts
Newsletter
About
Contact
Archives
Interns
Help


SUPPORT
Help support mongabay.com when you buy from Amazon.com



POPULAR PAGES
Rainforests
Rain forests
Amazon deforestation
Deforestation
Deforestation stats
Why rainforests matter
Saving rainforests
Deforestation stats
Rainforest canopy

News
Most popular articles
Worth saving?
Forest conservation
Earth Day
Poverty alleviation
Cell phones in Africa
Seniors helping Africa
Saving orangutans in Borneo
Palm oil
Amazon palm oil
Future of the Amazon
Cane toads
Dubai environment
Investing to save rainforests
Visiting the rainforest
Defaunation
Blue lizard
Amazon fires
Extinction debate
Extinction crisis
Malaysian palm oil
Borneo

News topics
Amazon
Biofuels
Brazil
Carbon Finance
Climate Change
Deforestation
Energy
Happy-upbeat
Interviews
Oceans
Palm oil
Rainforests
Solutions
Wildlife
MORE TOPICS

Advertising by





T-SHIRTS

  • Madagascar Wildlife
  • Dancing lemurs
  • Don't fall asleep the sloths will eat you
  • Sucking on this frog may make you insane


    CALENDARS

  • Mount Kenya
  • East Africa Safari Wildlife
  • Kenya's Turkana People
  • Peru
  • African Wildlife
  • Alaska
  • China
  • Madagascar Chameleons


    CANVAS BAGS

  • Hallucinogenic frog bag
  • Madagascar wildlife bag





  • Copyright mongabay 2007