Showing posts with label Evolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evolution. Show all posts

Monday, 26 March 2012

Why do savanna trees have flat tops?


Umbrella Thorn, Serengeti: An icon of the savanna?
From sunsets behind a silhouetted acacia (properly Vachellia), to photos of rolling grasslands studded with isolated trees, a savanna landscape is immediately identifiable thanks to the flat-topped tree. But why is this? Why do so many Vachellia and other savanna trees have such a distinctive structure that they have become a virtual icon of the African savanna?

It's an interesting question that was given some answers in a nice paper by Sally Archibald and William Bond who studied one species called the Sweet Thorn (Vachellia karroo) that, rather like some of our Vachellia species in East Africa exhibits a range of different growth forms in different habitats. In the semi-desert of the Karroo, it grows as a medium-sized ball of thorns, whereas in the savanna it has a fairly typical medium-tall  flat-topped acacia look to it and in a forest it's a tall, thin tree. These differences are meditated mainly by genetic differences within the species, but equally could be caused in other species by a variable response to the environment - it's not really important to this discussion and, in fact, much of our discussion could focus on different species if we wanted. As always when we're thinking about what makes the savanna species, we'd be well advised to start with the savanna big four: nutrients, water availability, fire and herbivory.Now, the first two processes have impacts in all biomes, whereas it's the second two that are most distinctive about savanna and where we'll start our discussion.