Centro Internacional de Investigaciones para el Desarrollo (IDRC) Canadá     
IDRC.CA > Programas de Investigación > Information (ICTs) > Acacia > Stories >
 Explorador  
Acacia
     About Acacia
    Stories
     Projects
     Contacts
     Conferences
     Interns
 Personas
Morenike Ladikpo

Identificación: 9488
Creado: 2002-09-10 11:44
Modificado: 2002-10-23 10:37
Refreshed: 2010-08-27 05:20

Obtenga la dirección del archivo en formato RSS Archivo en formato RSS


Acacia and Giraffes?
Documento(s) 1 de 4 Siguiente

notavailable.jpg
In January, we received the following e-mail message
through our web-site:
"Good Morning. Could you pls. help us out. We are just
filling in a contest on Kenyan Wildlife. Has the acacia tree
any strategy to protect itself against being eaten by
giraffes?

- Like issuing smelling gases
- Or issuing a poisoned bitter taste
- Or do the leaves move to protect themselves
- Or they do nothing”

I must say, most of us were stumped, as our expertise is limited to bandwidth and teledensity. Luckily, with the help of environmentalist Deryl Weilbach at the Development Bank of Southern Africa, with whom IDRC has a partnership to deliver the Acacia program in Southern Africa, we came up with the following response:

“The Acacia tree has thorns, which protect it against overgrazing, but giraffes don’t seem to mind the thorns too much. As there are many leaves (compound) on Acacia trees and also many trees in the savannah (relative to the numbers of giraffe), and the giraffe usually browse the top (at level with their height), overgrazing is not usually a problem unless the carrying capacity of the savannah is greatly exceeded.”





Documento(s) 1 de 4 Siguiente



   guest (Leer)(Ottawa) DST   Login Inicio|Empleos|Derechos de autor y uso|Información general|Contáctenos|Ancho de banda bajo