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Indigenous knowledges: a genealogy of representations and applications in developing contexts of environmental education and development in southern AfricaShava, Soul January 2009 (has links)
This study was developed around concerns about how indigenous knowledges have been represented and applied in environment and development education. The first phase of the study is a genealogical analysis after Michel Foucault. This probes representations and applications of plant-based indigenous knowledge in selected anthropological, botanical and environmental education texts in southern Africa. The emerging insights were deepened using a Social (Critical) Realism vantage point after Margaret Archer to shed light on agential issues in environmental education and development contexts. Here her morphogenetic/morphostatic analysis of social transformation or reproduction is used to trace changes in indigenous knowledge representations and applications over time (from the pre-colonial into the post-colonial era). The second phase uses the same perspectives and tools to extend the analysis of power/knowledge relationships into the interface of indigenous communities and modern institutions in two case study settings in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. This study reveals colonially-derived hegemonic processes of modern/Western scientific institutional representations/interpretations of the knowledges of indigenous communities. It also tracks a continuing trajectory of their dominating and prescriptive mediating control over local knowledges from the pre-colonial context through into the post-colonial period in southern Africa. The analysis reveals how this hegemony is sustained through the deployment of institutional strategies of representation that transform local knowledges into the disciplinary knowledge discourses of modern scientific institutions. These representational strategies therefore generate/reproduce and validate disciplinary discourses about the other, constructing disciplinary 'regimes of truth'. In this way modern institutions appropriate and displace indigenous/local knowledges, silence the voices of local communities and regulate individual and community agency within a continuing subjugation of indigenous knowledges. This study reveals how working within modern institutions and disciplinary knowledges in participative education and development interactions can serve to implicate indigenous researchers in these institutional hegemonic processes. The study also notes evidence of a continued resistance to hegemonic Western knowledge discourses as indigenous communities have sustained many knowledge practices alongside Western knowledge discourses. There is also evidence of a recent emergence of counter-hegemonic indigenous knowledge discourses in environmental education and development practices in southern Africa. It is noted that these have been contingent upon the changing political terrain in southern Africa as this has opened the way for alternative discourses to the dominant conventional Western knowledges in formal education and development contexts. The counterhegemonic discourses invert power/knowledge relations, decentre hegemonic discourses and reposition indigenous knowledges in formal education and development contexts. This study suggests the need to foreground indigenous knowledges as a process of knowledge decolonisation that gives contextual and epistemic relevance to environmental education and development processes. This calls for a need for new strategies to transform existing institutions by creating enabling spaces for the representational inclusion of indigenous knowledges in formal/conventional knowledge discourses and their application in social contexts. This opens up possibilities for plural knowledge representations and for their integrative and reciprocal co-engagement in situated contexts of environmental education and development in southern Africa.
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Regional trade integration and co-operation in Southern Africa : the case of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)Mathebe, Mpubane Mox 06 1900 (has links)
Mercantile Law / LL. D.
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Learning commercial beekeeping: two cases of social learning in southern African community natural resources management contextsMasara, Christopher January 2011 (has links)
Community Based Natural Resources Management (CBNRM) in southern Africa has gained an important role in alleviating poverty and conserving natural resources. The attention and funding CBNRM is receiving from governments, non-governmental organisations and donors is seen as one way to strengthen civil society‟s involvement in decision-making and participating in activities that contribute to a sustainable livelihood, whilst at the same time learning in their social contexts to adapt and care for the ever changing environment characterised by constraints, challenges, contradictions, new opportunities for learning and change. This study focuses on social learning in commercialisation of natural resource products in two case studies of commercial beekeeping in rural southern African contexts. In this study social learning entails a process of qualitative change taking place in a social context for the purpose of personal and social adaptation. This perspective is useful in this study as learning in the two cases, Hluleka in South Africa and Buhera in Zimbabwe involved the transition beekeeping.from traditional honey harvesting practices and subsistence beekeeping to commercial beekeeping. This study is informed by two related theoretical perspectives namely Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) and Social Learning Theory. CHAT was used as conceptual and methodological framework to inform the first phase of data gathering and analysis processes; as well as second phase data gathering. In the first phase, I gathered data through semistructured interviews, document reviews and observations to identify problems, challenges and critical incidents in learning commercial beekeeping, technically known as tensions and contradictions within the CHAT framework. These tensions and contradictions, surfaced through analysis of first phase data were used as "mirror data‟ in Intervention Workshops within CHAT's process of Developmental Work Research, which supports social learning in response to tensions and contradictions in workplace activity. Use of mirror data provided a basis for dialogue and the modelling of new solutions to identified contradictions. To interpret the social learning processes resulting from these interactions, I drew on Wals' (2007) analytical lenses, through which I was able to monitor social learning processes that emerged from the Intervention Workshop dialogues while beekeepers modelled new solutions to contradictions in learning commercial beekeeping. The findings of the study revealed that social learning in commercial beekeeping is internally and externally influenced by socio-cultural, political and economic complexities. Social learning in Intervention Workshops was supported by different knowledge bases of participants, in this study these are beekeepers, extension officers, trainers and development facilitators. Such knowledge bases were the source of information for learning and constructing model solutions. The study also revealed that learning in CBNRM workplaces can be observed across the development processes, and CHAT as a methodological tool and Wals‟ (2007) analytical tool are complementary and can be used in researching social learning in other CBNRM workplaces. The study contributes in-depth insight into participatory research and learning processes, especially within the context of CBRM in southern Africa. It gives some empirical and explanatory insight into how change-oriented social learning can emerge and be expanded in Education for Sustainable Development. It also provides learning and extension tools to work with contradictions that arise from socio-cultural and historical dimensions of learning commercialisation of natural resources in southern African context. Its other key contribution is that it provides further insight into the mobilisation of human agency and reflexivity in change oriented social learning processes of commercialisation of sustainable natural resources products and poverty alleviation processes that are critical for responding to socioecological issues and risks and development challenges in southern Africa.
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A systematic study of Berkheya and allies (Compositae)Phaliso, Ntombifikile January 2013 (has links)
Berkheya Ehrh. is a genus of daisies in the tribe Arctotideae, subtribe Gorteriinae with over 80 species, most of which occur in southern Africa. This genus has centres of diversity associated with the montane regions of South Africa, including the Drakensberg Alpine Centre and Mpumalanga escarpment regions. Previous molecular and morphological studies indicate that Berkheya is paraphyletic. I present phylogenies based on nrDNA (ITS; Internal Transcribed Spacer) and cpDNA (psbA-trnH) sequence data analysed with Bayesian Inference and Parsimony. A phylogeny of combined cp- and nrDNA is also presented. These phylogenies are used to assess generic limits and to investigate the biogeographic patterns of Berkheya and its allies. The ITS phylogeny shows five well supported clades of Berkheya, two of which (Clades I and 2) are monophyletic summer rainfall region clades. Clades 3 to 5 are all paraphyletic winter rainfall clades with Cullumia occurring in the third clade, Cuspida occurring in the fourth and Didelta in Clade 5. Both psbA-trnH and combined phylogenies show concordance with the clade distribution shown in the ITS phylogeny. The ITS phylogeny was used to analyse correspondence with Roessler’s (1959) Series. It was found that the phylogeny showed considerable agreement with Roessler’s series, but B. bipinnatifida and B. spinosa of Series Speciosae may require some revision as well as taxa of monotypic series Cruciatae and Angustae. It is suggested that the latter series be merged with Cullumia species to form a single series. Some consideration should be taken to include Didelta species into Series Fruticosae as Didelta occurs in subclade 5b of Clade 5 with other Series Fruticosae taxa. Achene morphology was examined from species from each of the five clades to investigate the relationships of Berkheya and its allies, as well as to determine if there were any consistent achene features for each clade. The structure of surface cells on the fruit, the presence, absence and morphology of twin hairs as well as the structure of the pappus scales were found to be most useful in reflecting phylogenetic relationships within the clades. When compared with the clades of the ITS phylogeny, achene morphology showed consistent characters between taxa occurring in the same clades. As the most comprehensive study involving Berkheya, this phylogenenetic investigation was able to confirm that Berkheya is a paraphyletic genus with Didelta, Cullumia and Cuspida needing to be subsumed into Berkheya. An alternative classification is that taxa of Clade 5 could possibly be erected as an expanded Didelta, separate and sister to Berkheya.
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The geographic stock structure of chokka squid, Loligo Reynaudi, and its implications for management of the fisheryVan der Vyver, Johan Samuel Frederik January 2014 (has links)
It is currently hypothesised that the chokka squid (Loligo reynaudi) consist of a single stock. This was tested through a spatial comparison of the morphology of this species. Forty three morphometric characters were measured from 1079 chokka squid collected from three regions: the south coast of South Africa, the west coast of South Africa, and southern Angola. While no significant differences were found for the hard body parts, results from discriminant function analyses showed the soft body morphometric characters from each of the three regions differed, with an overall correct classification rate of 100% for males and 99% for females in all three regions. Due to the existing model being used to assess the resource currently being updated it was not feasible to apply this model to the area-disaggregated data from this study. Rather, the CPUE trends and catches from the area-disaggregated data were compared against those of the area-aggregated data, as a first attempt to discern any appreciable differences which would suggest the use of disaggregated data in future assessments. Both the trawl and jig CPUE trends from the area-disaggregated analysis differed only slightly from those of the area-aggregated data. Similarly, the spring and autumn biomass trends for the main spawning area (east of 22°E) followed the same trends as for the full area. It is therefore concluded that there is currently no need to assess the resource on an area-disaggregated basis.
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Assessing linkages between local ecological knowledge, HIV/AIDS and the commercialisation of natural resources across Southern AfricaWeyer, Dylan James January 2012 (has links)
That natural resources (NRs) are important to those experiencing adversity, and, especially, vulnerability associated with HIV/AIDS, is well documented, particularly with respect to food and energy security. What is unclear is where HIV/AIDS ranks in terms of its significance in comparison to other household shocks, the role local ecological knowledge may (LEK) play in households' response to shock, a propos the types of coping strategies that are employed. Consequently, this research aims to bridge the knowledge gap between HIV/AIDS and the degree to which it is contributing to the expansion of NR commercialisation and to explore the unknowns surrounding the influence of LEK on people's choice of coping strategy. A two phase study was designed to provide quantitative rigour with qualitative depth. Phase one was an extensive, rapid survey of NR traders within urban and rural settings in five southern Africa countries. The principle objective was to profile the trade, the livelihoods of those involved and their reasons for entering the trade, to ultimately establish to what degree HIV/AIDS may have been a catalyst for this. Almost one third of the sample entered the trade in response to illness and/or death in their households, with 80% of deaths being of breadwinners. The findings illustrated considerable dependence on the sale of NRs; for almost 60% of the sample it was their household's only source of income. There was evidently increased blurring of the lines between rural and urban NR use with a greater diversity of products being traded in urban areas. Phase two involved in-depth interviews and work with a smaller sample at two sites selected based on the findings from the first phase. It incorporated three groups of households; non-trading, inexperienced trading and experienced trading households. Key areas of focus were household shocks, coping strategies employed in response to these and the role LEK may be playing in the choice of coping strategies. Within a two year period, 95% of households registered at least one shock, of which 80% recorded AIDS-related proxy shocks. Non-trading households were significantly worse-off in this regard, while in the case of non-AIDS proxy shocks, there was no such difference between groups. The most frequently employed coping strategy was the consumption and sale of NRs and was of particular importance when households were faced with AIDS proxy shocks. Trading households emerged as having superior levels of LEK in comparison to non-trading households, even for non-traded NRs, suggesting that prior LEK of NRs opened up opportunities to trade in NR as a coping strategy. Further inspection of the latter group however revealed that the portion of non-trading households who traded on a very ad hoc basis actually had comparable levels of LEK to the trading households. Despite the ad hoc trading households' vulnerable state and their disproportionately high level of AIDS proxy measures, they had at their disposal, sufficient LEK to unlock certain key coping strategies, namely the NR trade. In this sense there are apparent linkages between LEK, HIV/AIDS and the expansion of the commercialisation of NRs.
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An assessment of the usefulness of spatial agricultural land resource digital data for agritourism and ecotourismMugadza, Precious 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MScAgric (Agricultural Economics))—University of Stellenbosch, 2005. / The study broadly assesses the usefulness of available digital spatial land resource data as a source
for agritourism and ecotourism information by comparing the inventory of available spatial data sets
for South Africa and the SADC region, with the needs for spatial data as derived from a literature
study of travel motivations and demand determinants.
Spatial land resource data have been collected, processed and stored for agricultural planning
purposes, like land suitability assessment, agricultural production and infrastructural planning.
Given a) the growth in agritourism and ecotourism, b) the more detailed information required by
tourists to aid them during decision making processes like destination selection and c) the progress
in information technology rendering access of information via the internet easier; the question arose
whether the available land resource digital data can be processed to provide relevant tourism
information on internet websites. Four tasks had to be done, namely: a) identifying tourists’ needs
by means of a literature study on travel motivations and demand determinants; b) identifying the
land resource data sets that could be processed into information to meet these identified needs; c)
determining the accessibility of spatial information on internet tourism websites to potential
agritourists and ecotourists, and d) exploring opportunities for adding value by looking at what
information existing websites are offering in comparison with what can be obtained from
repackaging the land resource data.
Common ground was found between the spatial tourist information needs and the available spatial
land resource data. This, coupled with the ability of combining meteorological and other humanmade
environmental data in GIS modelling, suggests that repackaging land resource data seems to
have the potential to offer useful tourism information in correspondence with confirmed tourist
information needs.
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Avian diversity in Southern Africa : patterns, processes and conservationJanse Van Rensburg, Berndt 30 June 2005 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Thesis (DPhil (Zoology))--University of Pretoria, 2005. / Zoology and Entomology / unrestricted
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Systematic significance of bulb morphology of the Southern African members of Oxalis L. (Oxalidaceae)Gebregziabher, Awot Kiflu 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The systematics of the southern African members of the genus Oxalis L. (Oxalidaceae) is in a
state of flux. The bulbs of these species contain potential taxonomically important characters
and therefore require detailed study (Salter, 1944). A pilot study assessed the homology of
bulbs among southern African Oxalis species (Gebregziabher, 2001), and found that they are
all homologous structures. This pilot study also emphasized the range of potentially
informative characters from different bulb parts.
The aim of the present study was to assess the taxonomic significance of bulb morphology in
selected southern African Oxalis species. As far as possible, efforts were made to represent
both the taxonomic (Salter, 1944) and palynological diversity (Dreyer, 1996) present in the
genus.
Detailed bulb morphological studies of 30 species of southern African Oxalis species revealed
41 potentially informative characters. Different bulb-types were identified based on these
characters. Bulb-type affinities of taxa included in this study, as well as bulb descriptions
from the pilot study (Gebregziabher, 2001), were discussed. Comparison with the current
taxonomic classification (Salter, 1944), palynological classification (Dreyer, 1996) and a
preliminary phylogeny based on the non-coding plastid trnL-trnF DNA region (Oberlander,
2003), were also made. Bulb morphology conflicted with the current taxonomic classification
(Salter, 1944), but showed greater congruence with both the palynological groupings and the
trnL-trnF based phylogeny.
Based on this study, bulb morphology is found to be taxonomically significant. Further
studies on the bulb morphology and anatomy of southern African Oxalis species are merited.
Key words: bulb morphology, Oxalis, informative characters, basal plates, fleshy leaves,
tunics / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die sistematiek van die suider Afrikaanse lede van Oxalis L. (Oxalidaceae) is labiel. Die bolle
van hierdie spesies sluit potensieel taksonomies belangrike kenmerke in, en behoort daarom in
detail bestudeer te word (Salter, 1944). In Loodsstudie het die homologie van die bolle van die
suider Afrikaanse Oxalis spesies ge-evalueer (Gebregziabher, 2001), en gevind dat hulle
homoloë strukture is. Resultate van hierdie loodsstudie het ook die reeks van potensieel
informatiewe kenmerke van verskillende boldele beklemtoon.
Die doel van hierdie studie was om die taksonomiese belang van boImorfologie in
geselekteerde suider Afrikaanse Oxalis spesies te ondersoek. Pogings is aangewend om, sover
moontlik, beide die taksonomiese (Salter, 1944) en die palinologiese (Dreyer, 1996)
diversiteit van die genus in die studie in te sluit.
Gedetailleerde bol-morfologiese studies van 30 suider Afrikaanse Oxalis spesies het 41
potensieel informatiewe kenmerke uitgewys. Gebaseer op hierdie kenmerke, is verskillende
bol-tipes geïdentifiseer. Verwantskappe tussen die bol-tipes van die spesies ingesluit in
hierdie studie, sowel as beskrywings van bolle volgens die loodsstudie (Gebregziabher, 2001),
word bespreek. Vergelykings met die huidige taksonomiese klassifikasie (Salter, 1944),
palinologiese klassifikasie (Dreyer, 1996) en In voorlopige filogenie gebaseer op die niekoderende
plastied trnL-F DNA-streek (Oberlander, 2003) is ook getref. BoImorfologie
weerspreek die huidige taksonomiese klassifikasie (Salter, 1944), maar toon groter
ooreenstemming met beide die palinologiese groeperings en die trnL-F gebaseerde filogenie.
Hierdie studie het bevind dat bolmorfologie van taksonomiese waarde is. Verdere studies op
die bolmorfologie en -anatomie van die suider Afrikaanse Oxalis spesies word aanbeveel.
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The evolutionary history and taxonomy of the Kobus leche species complex of South-Central Africa in the context of palaeo-drainage dynamicsCotterill, Fenton P. D. 12 1900 (has links)
Dissertation (PhD)--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This multi-disciplinary study compiled taxonomic and biogeographical data to elucidate the
extant diversity of lechwe antelopes (Kobus leche complex), and reconstruct their evolutionary
history. Their diversification has been confined to wetlands across the south-central Africa
plateaux. Lechwes are specialist grazers in water meadow floodplains; these stenotopic habitat
requirements are invoked to explain why their evolution is atypical of terrestrial large mammals.
Combined analyses of morphological (171 adult males), genetic (208 genotyped individuals)
and palaeo-environmental datasets, revealed a recent (Middle Pleistocene) pulse of speciation in
the K. leche complex. Multivariate morphometric analyses revealed the presence of five distinct
groups that could be tied to the geography of the region. Furthermore, the genetic analyses
supported the existence of at least four of these lineages, which show significant population
separation at the level of the mtDNA control region. Most of the differences among populations
were confined to frequency differences among populations and Bayesian analyses strongly
suggest that the pattern obtained is the result of the retention of ancestral haplotypes with
limited female geneflow among the extant populations. Evolution of the five lineages identified
by the morphological and population genetic analyses were further investigated by making use
of additional genetic data (mtDNA cyt b, SPTNB, SRY, Protamine 1, and b-Fibrinogen) and a
subset of the samples. Topologies were largely unresolved due to the recent common ancestry
of the lineages. Following the Evolutionary Species Concept, which was motivated by a
philosophical review, five allopatric species could be recognized (anselli, kafuensis, leche,
robertsi and smithemani). A model of drainage evolution compiled disparate facets of biological
and geological evidence to detail interlinked histories of wetlands and their biota across the
south-central Africa plateaux. This wetland archipelago is recognized as a distinct
biogeographical unit in its own right - the Katanga-Chambeshi region. Evolutionary
diversification of lechwes represents a dominant biogeographical signal reflecting how the
aquatic biota have evolved in tandem with palaeo-drainage dynamics across this evolutionary
theatre. Delimitation of key events in lechwe and drainage evolution was refined by
archaeological dating of the Victoria Falls Formation, to decipher when the Zambezi river
eroded the Batoka gorge. Demographic expansion in K. leche s.s (early Middle Pleistocene)
corresponds to dessication of Palaeo-Lake Makakgadikgadi while more recent phylogeographic
signals correspond to the tenure of Palaeo-Lake Bulozi. These speciation events in the Middle
Pleistocene preceded peripatric speciation of K. kafuensis that accompanied the morphosis of
the Kafue Flats (from palaeo-lake to floodplain), when the Kafue River attained its modern
topology. The present study highlights that Lechwes represent a biota of evolutionary vibrant
clades, rich in endemic species. As ecologically-dominant species in wetlands, lechwes deserve priority conservation attention, which is challenged to perpetuate evolutionary and ecological
processes across an archipelago straddling five countries. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die multidisiplinêre studie bring saam taksonomiese en biogeografiese data om die evolusionêre
geskiedenis en huidige diversitiet van basterwaterbokke (Kobus leche kompleks) te verklaar.
Hulle diversifikasie is beperk to vleilande regoor die suid-sentraal Afrika plato.
Basterwaterbokke is gespesialiseerde grasvreters in grasvloedvlaktes; hierdie stenotipiese
habitatsvereiste word voorgehou om te verduidelik hoekom die evolusie van hierdie diere atipies
is vir terrestriële groot soogdiere. Gekombineerde analise van morfologie (171 volwasse
manlike diere), geneties (208 genotipes) en plaeo-omgewings datstelle toon aan dat daar ‘n
onlangse (middel Pleistoseen) pols van spesiasie plaasgevind het in die K. lechwe kompleks.
Multivariate morfometriese analyses het aangetoon dat vyf verskillende groepe diere bestaan
wat ook sin gemaak het op grond van geografiese ligging. Verdermeer, die genetiese analise het
die bestaan van ten minste vier van hierdie lyne geondersteun wat betekenisvolle bevolkings
isolasie vertoon het op die vlak van die mtDNA kontrole gebied. Meeste van die verskille tussen
bevolkings was beperk to frekwensieverkille tussen die bevolkings en Bayesian analise het sterk
aanduidings getoon dat die patroon wat gekry is die gevolg was van die behoud van
voorvaderlike haplotiepes met beperkte vroulike geenvloei tussen die huidige bevolkings.
Evolusie van die vyf lyne wat deur die morfologie en bevolkingsgenetika studies geidentifiseer
is was verder ondersoek deur gebruik te maak van addisionele genetiese data (mtDNA cytb,
SPTBN, SRY, Protamien 1, en b-Fibrinogeen) en ‘n subset van die monsters. Topologieë was
hoofsaaklik onopgelos as gevolg van die kort tyd tot die onlangse gemeenskaplike voorouer van
lyne. Deur die Evolusionêre Spesies Konsep aan te hang, wat gemotiveer is deur ‘n filosofiese
oorsig, is vyf allopatriese spesies herken (anselli, kafuensis, leche, robertsi and smithemani). ‘n
Model wat dreinerings evolusie voorstel het verskeie fasette van biologiese en geologiese
bewyse saamgvat om die verbindingsgeskiedenis van vleilande en hulle biota oor die suidsentraal
Afrika plato te beskryf. Die vleiland argipelago word herken as ‘n onafhanklike
biogeografiese eenheid in sy eie reg – die Katanga-Chambeshi streek. Evolusionêre
diversifikasie van basterwaterbokke verteenwoordig ‘n dominante biogeografiese sein wat
voortsel hoe die akwatiese biota ontwikkel het in tandem met die palaeo-dreinerings dinamika
in hierdie evolusionêre konsert. Die afbakening van sleutelgebeure in basterwaterbok en
dreinerigsevolusie is beter toegelig deur argeologiese datering wat gebasseer was op die
vorming van die Victoria Valle om te bepaal waneer die Zambezi rivier die Batoka skeurgroef gevorm het. Demografiese uitbreiding binne K. leche s.s (gedurende die vroë Middel
Pleistoseen) stem ooreen met die uitdroging van Palaeo-Meer Makakgadikgadi terwyl meer
onlangse filogeografiese syne ooreenstem met die ontstaan van Palaeo-Meer Bulozi. Hierdie
spesiasie gebeure in die Middel Pleistoseen het die peripatriese spesiasie van K. kafuensis
voorafgegaan wat die morfose van die Kafue Vlaktes vergesel het (van palaeo-meer na
vloedvlakte), toe die Kafue Rivier sy huidige vorm aangeneem het. Die huidige studie het
uitgelig dat basterwaterbokke verteenwoordig ‘n biota van evolusionêre energieke eenhede, ryk
aan endemiese spesies. As ‘n ekologiese dominante spesie in vleilande, moet basterwaterbokke
as ‘n prioriteit gesien word in bewaring, waar dit dan die geleentheid sal hê om voort te bou op
die evolusionêre en ekologiese prossese van die archipelago wat oor vyf lande strek.
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