Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4685236 Geomorphology 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Modern African elephants affect habitats and ecosystems in significant ways. They push over trees to feed on upper branches and often peel large sections of bark to eat. These destructive habits sometimes transform woody vegetation into grasslands. Systems of elephant trails may be used and re-used for centuries, and create incised features that extend for many kilometers on migration routes. Elephants, digging in search of water or mineral sediments, may remove several cubic meters of sediments in each excavation. Wallowing elephants may remove up to a cubic meter of pond sediments each time they visit water sources. Accumulations of elephant dung on frequented land surfaces may be over 2 kg per square meter. Elephant trampling, digging, and dust-bathing may reverse stratigraphy at archeological localities. This paper summarizes these types of effects on biotic, geomorphic, and paleontological features in modern-day landscapes, and also describes several fossil sites that indicate extinct proboscideans had very similar effects, such as major sediment disturbances.

► Elephants are major sculptors of local land surfaces in Africa ► Elephants may transform woodlands into open mosaics or grasslands ► Elephant dung may accumulate up to 2 kg per square meter in frequented areas ► Fossil sites preserve similar evidence of mammoth behavior

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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