Field research at the Mara River in Kenia.
The scientists investigated the effects of nutrient and carbon inputs from dung on aquatic ecosystems.

Cattle vs. hippo­pota­mus: Dung in rivers of the sa­vannah

In many regions of the world, populations of large mammalian herbivores have been displaced by cattle breeding—for example, in Kenya, hippos by large herds of cattle. This can change aquatic ecosystems due to significant differences in the amount and type of dung input. Researchers led by Gabriel Singer have therefore taken a closer look at the dung of hippopotamus and cattle.

Animal dung can pollute water bodies with nutrients and impact water quality and the ecological functions of water bodies. For many aquatic ecosystems, however, the input of organic matter from the surrounding land is part of the natural matter cycling. In temperate latitudes, it is the leaf fall that brings nutrients into water bodies. In the rivers of the African savannah, it is hippos with their dung. The increasing displacement of hippopotami by herds of cattle is changing the nutrient inputs into water bodies.

The team led by Gabriel Singer and Frank O. Masese from the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) in Berlin, the University of Eldoret in Kenya and the Department of Ecology at the University of Innsbruck investigated the effects of nutrient and carbon inputs from dung on aquatic ecosystems. The researchers also developed a mathematical model to compare dung inputs from cattle and hippos into the Mara River in Kenya. According to the mathematical simulation, despite lower manure introduction by the individual cattle compared to a hippopotamus, the large number of cattle gives this animal group overwhelming influence.

Credit: Clara Romero
Credit: Frank Masese


Cattle dung is more nutritious and stimulates the growth of plants, bacteria and algae

With cattle dung, higher amounts of nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus and dissolved organic carbon enter the Mara River. In the experiments, the researchers were able to show that, as a result, more plant biomass is formed with cattle dung. The biomass of bacteria and algae was also higher than with hippopotamus dung. This can change food webs in the river.

"Just the exchange of an animal species that lives on the edge of the river changes the ecological status of the river. Our results show the high species-specific importance of the various large herbivores; they also show how changes in land use or the composition of the species lead to unintended consequences that are not initially the focus of management measures, but which must always be taken into account. Especially with such crucial ecosystems as the waters of the savannah," Gabriel Singer says.

Links

Nach oben scrollen