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Folkets Hus Farstanäs / People's House FarstanäsMollgren, Emmy January 2021 (has links)
I ett naturreservat intill en camping i utkanten av Järnaområdet skapades en ny typ av Folkets hus. Byggnaden är placerad i sydostlig riktning på toppen av en udde, med ett stort entréplan som starten av huset som sedan klättrar sig ned längs med landskapet mot stranden, där man finner den avslutande badplatsen. Det inrymmer en hosteldel med café och en butik för cykel- och båtuthyrning, samt försäljning av allt som hör friluftsliv till, för att knyta samman platsen och byggnaden med naturreservatet och de motionerare som på olika sätt tar sig till platsen. Här finns även en restaurang, konferenssal, utställning samt öppna gemensamma ytor så som offentliga kontor, mötesrum och ett gemensamt allrum där centrets olika gäster kan möstas. Alla dessa ytor knyts samman av en serie trappor som klättrar med byggnaden ner för berget, med öppna plattformar där man närsomhelst kan kliva av och på byggnaden. Naturreservatets redan befintliga stråk har jobbats in i projektet och passerar genom byggnadens entréplattform och fortsätter vidare från butiksplanet, våningen under. Från byggnaden kommer nya stigar skapas genom besökarnas naturliga rörelse genom och runt alla avsatser. / In a nature reserve next to a campsite on the outskirts of the Järna area, a new type of Folkets hus was created. The building is located in a south-easterly direction on top of a headland, with a large entrance floor as the start of the house which then climbs down along the landscape towards the beach, and ends with a bathing spot. It houses a hostel part with a café and a shop for bicycle- and boat rental, as well as sales of everything that belongs to outdoor life, to connect the place and the building with the nature reserve and the exercisers who pass through the place in different ways. There is also a restaurant, conference hall, exhibition and open common areas such as public offices, meeting rooms and a common living room where the center's various guests can meet. All these surfaces are connected by a series of stairs that climb with the building down the mountain, with open platforms where you can exit and enter the building at any time. The nature reserve's already existing trail have been worked into the project and pass through the building's entrance platform and continue on from the store floor, one floor below. From the building, new paths will be created through the visitors' natural movement through and around all ledges.
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Resource utilisation of the Chacma baboon in different vegetation types in North-Eastern Mountain Sour Veld, Blyde Canyon Nature ReserveMarais, A. J. (Albertus Johannes) 31 May 2005 (has links)
The Blyde Canyon Nature reserve displays its natural beauty for most National and International visitors all over the World.
The region is renowned for its high rainfall and misty weather, which enhances the natural beauty of the area.
Because of the mist belt effect, the area is one of the largest commercial forestry areas in South Africa. Baboons also seek after the topography and vegetation type (Northeastern mountain sourveld) that is typical of this area and numerous baboon troops occur in this region. This combination is often the cause of conflict between baboons and humans.
The need arise for these baboons to be studied and managed as a component of this very important ecosystem.
The main aims of the study were firstly to identify a natural ranging baboon troop, to habituate them and gather data regarding home range sizes, troop sizes, densities and seasonal food selection and secondly to give a detailed habitat description and vegetation map of the troop's home range.
The baboon activity data was collected in 15-minute intervals over a one year period on a troop at Bourke's Luck. This included all activities such as walking, social, foraging, and resting. The food parts selected as well as the species foraged on was identified. Numerous statistical methods were used on the baboon data such as; the Shapiro Wilk test, Spearman rank-order correlation, ANOVA, and the Kolmogarov-Smirnov two sample test.
There was a positive correlation between home range areas and troop sizes and the baboons preferred certain habitats above others during different seasons.
To give a detailed habitat description of the troop's home range, 50 sample plots was stratified-randomly distributed in order to include all the different stratification units. a TWINSPAN classification, refined by Braun-Blanquet procedures was carried out on the Bourke's Luck section that included the baboons home range. 13 Plant communities, which can be grouped into 7 major community types were identified.
This study resulted in the ecological interpretation of baboon activities related to the ecological interpretation of the vegetation in the baboon troop's home range. / Agriculture, Animal Health and Human Ecology / M.Tech. (Nature Conservation)
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Resource utilisation of the Chacma baboon in different vegetation types in North-Eastern Mountain Sour Veld, Blyde Canyon Nature ReserveMarais, A. J. (Albertus Johannes) 31 May 2005 (has links)
The Blyde Canyon Nature reserve displays its natural beauty for most National and International visitors all over the World.
The region is renowned for its high rainfall and misty weather, which enhances the natural beauty of the area.
Because of the mist belt effect, the area is one of the largest commercial forestry areas in South Africa. Baboons also seek after the topography and vegetation type (Northeastern mountain sourveld) that is typical of this area and numerous baboon troops occur in this region. This combination is often the cause of conflict between baboons and humans.
The need arise for these baboons to be studied and managed as a component of this very important ecosystem.
The main aims of the study were firstly to identify a natural ranging baboon troop, to habituate them and gather data regarding home range sizes, troop sizes, densities and seasonal food selection and secondly to give a detailed habitat description and vegetation map of the troop's home range.
The baboon activity data was collected in 15-minute intervals over a one year period on a troop at Bourke's Luck. This included all activities such as walking, social, foraging, and resting. The food parts selected as well as the species foraged on was identified. Numerous statistical methods were used on the baboon data such as; the Shapiro Wilk test, Spearman rank-order correlation, ANOVA, and the Kolmogarov-Smirnov two sample test.
There was a positive correlation between home range areas and troop sizes and the baboons preferred certain habitats above others during different seasons.
To give a detailed habitat description of the troop's home range, 50 sample plots was stratified-randomly distributed in order to include all the different stratification units. a TWINSPAN classification, refined by Braun-Blanquet procedures was carried out on the Bourke's Luck section that included the baboons home range. 13 Plant communities, which can be grouped into 7 major community types were identified.
This study resulted in the ecological interpretation of baboon activities related to the ecological interpretation of the vegetation in the baboon troop's home range. / Agriculture, Animal Health and Human Ecology / M.Tech. (Nature Conservation)
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Die ekologie van die swartwitpens in die Sandveld Natuurreservaat, Vrystaat Provinsie (Afrikaans)Jooste, Madaleinn Heleen 03 April 2006 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Dissertation (MSc Wildlife Management)--University of Pretoria, 2006. / Animal and Wildlife Sciences / unrestricted
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A vegetation classification and management plan for the Nooitgedacht section of the Loskop Dam Nature ReserveNkosi, Sellina Ennie 11 1900 (has links)
The vegetation of the Nooitgedacht section of the Loskop Dam Nature Reserve resembles
Bankenveld vegetation and differs from the other areas of the reserve. This study was
undertaken to identify, classify, and describe the plant communities present on this section,
and to determine their veld condition. The Braun-Blanquet approach was followed to classify
the different plant communities. A total number of 170 sample plots (100m2) were placed in
all homogeneous vegetation units in a randomly stratified basis. The Ecological Index
Method (EIM) was used to determine the veld condition. Data were collected using the steppoint
method and incorporated into the GRAZE model from where the veld condition was
calculated. A minimum of 400 step points were surveyed in each community with more
points in the larger communities. Plant community data was analysed using the JUICE
software program. A total of 11 plant communities were identified. The overall veld condition
score indicates the vegetation to be in a good condition, resulting in a high grazing capacity. / Environmental Sciences / M. Sc. (Nature Conservation)
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A synfloristic comparison of Oribi Gorge and Umtamvuna Nature Reserves.Meter, Edna Beatrice. January 1998 (has links)
Climatic oscillation during the Quaternary resulted in fragmentation of
once more continuous ancient floras and a series of invasions of different
floras into the Pondoland Centre in response to climatic change, with some
elements invading more than once. This implies both a temporally complex
and a floristically complex origin for the extant flora of the Centre. Data
derived from analysis of the melange of extant floristic elements in the
Pondoland Centre is presented in support of this hypothesis. A synfloristic
comparison of Oribi Gorge (OGNR) and Umtamvuna Nature Reserves (UNR)
is the basis for this study.
A comparison of the species lists generated for OGNR and UNR
reveals that 24% of the 1514 angiosperm species are shared. The familial
composition of the reserves is similar, with eight of the ten most diverse
families contributing a similar proportion of species to the respective floras,
with the exception of Acanthaceae. The ten most diverse families comprise a
comparatively small proportion of the respective floras; this is indicative of
high diversity over long geological periods, i.e. of refugia. Analysis at the
generic level revealed similar consistancy between the two gorge floras.
Approximately 4% of the UNR species and 2.3% of OGNR species are
Pondoland Centre endemics. Approximately 40% of the endemic species are
shared by the gorges. Data reveals that both palaeoendemic (predominantly
woody, forest taxa) and neoendemic (predominantly herbaceous or
suffrutescent, grassland taxa) species occur. The Pondoland Centre is thus a
refugium for species trapped on the Msikaba Group sandstones as a result of
climatic oscillation during the Quaternary, and a centre of neoendemism.
OGNR and UNR floras include Cape, Afromontane and tropical
elements (11.3%, 2.8% and 19.1% respectively for OGNR and 16%,3.4%
and 15.3% respectively for UNR). Seventy - two percent of Afromontane
species are shared, indicating a relatively recent invasion(s) and lor the
relative proximity of the gorges to the Afromontane flora. The lower species
overlap in the Cape element (39.2%) of the two gorges implies that the
invasion of the element is ancient, with subsequent extinction of many of the
taxa from OGNR in response to climatic change. It is also possible that this
invasion was initally less successful; fewer species found refuge in OGNR.
The tropical element comprises the largest proportion of the flora in both
gorges and many (ca. 50%) of the species are shared. The degree of species
overlap indicates that the invasive flora was either initially more similar or that it is tess prone to extinction. The level of overlap could also suggest that the
invasion was more recent than that of the Cape taxa. The tropical element is
larger in OGNR and the Cape element is larger in UNR. This is partly due to
the gorges' respective proximities to the tropical and Cape floras. This trend
is echoed in the endemic data.
iv
The conservation status of the endemics and of the Pondoland
vegetation types is established and recommendations for further research are
made. The data support the establishment of a larger UNR, the maintenance
of both Umtamvuna and Oribi Gorge as formal nature reserves and the
establishment of a new reserve (or reserves) within the Pondoland Centre. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermarizburg, 1998.
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The conservation of coastal wetlands, especially the Mai Po marshes, in Hong Kong : problems and prospects /Leung, Wai-hung. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 71-73).
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A vegetation classification and management plan for the Nooitgedacht section of the Loskop Dam Nature ReserveNkosi, Sellina Ennie 11 1900 (has links)
The vegetation of the Nooitgedacht section of the Loskop Dam Nature Reserve resembles
Bankenveld vegetation and differs from the other areas of the reserve. This study was
undertaken to identify, classify, and describe the plant communities present on this section,
and to determine their veld condition. The Braun-Blanquet approach was followed to classify
the different plant communities. A total number of 170 sample plots (100m2) were placed in
all homogeneous vegetation units in a randomly stratified basis. The Ecological Index
Method (EIM) was used to determine the veld condition. Data were collected using the steppoint
method and incorporated into the GRAZE model from where the veld condition was
calculated. A minimum of 400 step points were surveyed in each community with more
points in the larger communities. Plant community data was analysed using the JUICE
software program. A total of 11 plant communities were identified. The overall veld condition
score indicates the vegetation to be in a good condition, resulting in a high grazing capacity. / Environmental Sciences / M. Sc. (Nature Conservation)
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Elephant impact on marula trees, and African honeybees as a mitigation methodCook, Robin Michael January 2017 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science,
University of the Witwatersrand,
in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Science,
Johannesburg, South Africa
2017 / Concerns exist over the continual decline of marula trees (Sclerocarya birrea subsp. caffra) as a result of African elephant (Loxodonta africana) impact and a lack of recruitment and regeneration. One strategy of protecting adult marula trees is the usage of elephant mitigation methods. This study took place in Jejane Private Nature Reserve (JPNR), a protected area which recently opened up to the Greater Kruger National Park and had not had elephants in over 100 years. The aim of the study was to investigate the changes to the marula population structure in JPNR three years after the migration of elephants to the area due to fence removal, and to test whether African honeybees (Apis mellifera subsp. scutellata) could be used as a mitigation method for elephant impact on marula trees.
A previous size-class survey had been done on a sample of JPNR’s marula population in 2009, prior to the fence removal in 2013. A resurvey of these trees was used to assess the elephant-induced impact and mortality levels on the marula trees and to compare these levels to previously recorded impact and mortality levels on marula trees in the Kruger National Park (KNP). Marula seed predation levels and seedling recruitment were also assessed to address recruitment concerns. The resurveyed marula population had declined by 23.8% post-elephant migration, with the highest annual mortality rates (AMR) and impact scores recorded for trees in the 5 - 11 m height classes. Impact scores on marula trees in JPNR were higher than impact scores recorded on KNP marula trees. Only two marula seedlings were found across all transects, with evidence of high seed predation on marula endocarps. JPNR displayed an adult-dominated marula population with a lack of regeneration, possibly due to a lack of fire which has increased available shelter for seed predators such as small mammals.
African honeybees were then used to investigate their effectiveness as an elephant mitigation method and to compare this method against wire-netting (a method experimentally used to prevent ring-barking by elephants). Fifty active beehives were hung from 50 marula trees, with another 50 dummy (inactive) beehives hung from branches on the opposite ends of each beehive tree’s main stem. Fifty additional marula trees were wire-netted and a further 50 were used as control trees. Elephant impact on all 150 trees was measured prior to the addition of treatments and post-treatment addition for nine months. 54% of the control trees received some form of elephant impact, in comparison to 28% of the wire-netted trees and only 2% of the beehive trees. Wire-netting protected marula trees against bark-stripping, but did not prevent elephants from breaking branches. Beehives proved highly efficient at mitigating all forms of elephant impact. The financial cost and maintenance required for the beehive mitigation method is greater than that of wire-
netting, but the beehives can provide honey and pollination services as an additional benefit. The results of this study illustrate that African honeybees can be used as an effective non-lethal mitigation method for elephant impact on marula trees and are a viable strategy to reduce human-elephant conflict in South Africa’s protected areas. / MT 2017
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Ekosystemansatsen på landskapsnivåWalter, Martina January 2008 (has links)
<p>The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) promotes the Ecosystem Approach (EA). In this thesis it is analyzed how the EA approach could be applied to regional management of coastal areas in Sweden. The aim of this report is to compare management for preserving biodiversity on a landscape level in two regional coastal areas in Uppsala and Västra Götaland respectively. In Uppsala, one of the plans consists of a previous nature reserve and in Västra Götaland, a Regional landscape strategy has been established. The ecosystem approach is used as a theoretical framework in this thesis. More precisely, five EA operational guidelines have been used as analytical tools in the comparative approach adopted.</p><p>The results show that the Västra Götaland Regional landscape strategy has been most consistent with the EA framework, since it fulfills three of the five operational guidelines while Gårdsskärskusten only accomplish two of the criteria. The social aspects are more central in the landscape strategy than in Gårdskärskusten, which is the main difference between the two plans. One area of inadequacy detected in the landscape strategy was the few identified aspects on maintenance of landscape connectivity features. The Regional landscape strategy could, if established in every county in Sweden, be a way to prevent the loss of biodiversity. However the plan needs to be supported by actions where preservation and utilization are integrated in an economic context. By considering nature protection as a development opportunity in strategic planning rather than as only a cost, important steps towards a sustainable future can be taken.</p> / <p>För att implementera målsättningarna i FN:s Konvention om Biologisk Mångfald har en ekosystemansats (EA) antagits och en viktig ekosystemtyp i Sverige där EA kan appliceras är kuster. Syftet med examensarbetet är att, med ekosystemansatsen som analysverktyg, studera hur och varför två planer för att bevara biologisk mångfald på landskapsnivå i två regionala kustområden i Uppsala län respektive Västra Götalands län skiljer sig åt. Planen består i Uppsala län av ett tilltänkt naturreservat och i Västra Götalands län av en Regional landskapsstrategi. Uppsatsens teoretiska förankring sker i ekosystemansatsen, med fokus på dess fem vägledande punkter och metodvalet är en jämförande design. Inom ramen för den jämförande designen har sedan en innehållsanalys samt kompletterande semistrukturerade intervjuer utförts.</p><p>Resultatet visar att den Regionala landskapsstrategin i dagsläget är mer i linje med ekosystemansatsen, eftersom den uppfyller tre av fem vägledande punkter medan processen med Gårdsskärskusten enbart uppfyller två av fem vägledande punkter. I landskapsstrategin är sociala aspekter centrala och det är en förklaring till varför de olika planerna skiljer sig åt. Intressant är dock att betoningen på aktörsinvolvering verkar leda till att vissa ekologiska grundprinciper som konnektivitet i landskapet tonas ned, vilka är framträdande i processen med Gårdskärskusten. Regionala landskapsstrategier kan enligt min mening innebära ett stort steg mot att hindra förlusten av biologisk mångfald i Sverige om de uppförs i varje län. Inom landskapsstrategierna är det vidare essentiellt att skyddade områden, som exempelvis Gårdsskärskusten, också inkorporerar ett landskapsstrategitänk och i många fall innebär det att skötselåtgärder fortsätter att utföras. Svårigheten kan dock vara hur finansieringen av skötseln skall ske men där finns alternativa inkomstmöjligheter, från exempelvis naturturism och stresshantering på företag, som behöver utvecklas ytterligare.</p>
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