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Die effektiwiteit van natuurlike geotekstiele in die beheer van gronderosie gemeet met behulp van reenvalsimulasietoetseOosthuizen, Pieter Hendrik 16 April 2014 (has links)
M.Ing. (Civil Engineering) / The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of a sisal fibre natural geotextile in controlling the rate and extent of soil erosion. The effectiveness of this locally produced material was compared to other natural fibre geotextiles and other methods commonly used for the control of soil erosion. The different materials and methods were tested under the same conditions to compare the relative effectiveness of these products. The various erosion control products were subjected to laboratory tests. A rainfall simulator and an adjustable slope simulator were used to simulate the process of soil erosion. During these tests the effectiveness of the different products in controlling soil erosion was measured and conclusions were made about the effectiveness of the products. Mechanical sieve analysis tests were used to determine the erodibility of the different soil particles. Field trials that made use of the sisal fibre geotextile are also discussed.
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Approaches in the prioritisation of areas for biodiversity conservation: a case study from the Western Cape pf South AfricaSouthey, Phillippa Kate January 2015 (has links)
Historical ad hoc allocations of land for biodiversity conservation have led to a biased representation of habitat within the Cape Floristic Region, with Protected Areas concentrated in upland areas at high altitudes and on steep slopes. The field of Conservation Planning developed to ensure that allocations of areas to Protected status no longer result in such bias and rather promotes the persistence of biodiversity. This study reviewed a recent allocation of land to biodiversity conservation within Western Cape of South Africa, using both a quantitative and qualitative approach, to determine their value to biodiversity conservation. The area was previously used for commercial forestry but now has been allocated to conservation land-uses. The allocation was based on the area’s value to the forestry industry. The qualitative approach in this study engaged with relevant stakeholder groups to map priority areas, while the quantitative approach used available data on biodiversity features to map priority areas. Neither approach determined that the area allocated is in its full extent a priority for biodiversity conservation. This indicated that in the current era of Conservation Planning, Protected Areas are still being allocated in an ad hoc manner, as a result of their limited perceived benefit to anthropocentric needs. The future allocation of land to biodiversity conservation should rather integrate expert knowledge and available quantifiable data to ensure that priority areas for biodiversity conservation are being protected.
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Using social marketing to bridge the gap between systematic conservation planning and implementation at the local government levelWilhelm-Rechmann, Angelika January 2011 (has links)
The study presented here describes an attempt to bridge the gap between systematic conservation assessment and decision-making for land-use planning in the Eastern Cape province, South Africa. The aim was to investigate how to effectively convince officials concerned with land use planning processes in the local municipal sphere to include conservation priorities meaningfully in their processes. The approach used to reach this aim was social marketing, the use of marketing technologies and concepts to effect behavior changes to further societal good. So far social marketing is not commonly used in the conservation domain; I therefore aimed also at proving the usefulness of this approach for conservation. Following the introduction which provides background to the project and a more detailed summary, Chapter 2 provides a detailed and comprehensive review of the considerations and concepts regarding the use of social marketing in a context geared at protecting nature. The research on the primary target group for this study, officials concerned with land use planning processes in the local municipal sphere is described in Chapter 3. The main outcomes were that land use planners perceive few needs with regards to implementing the incorporation of biodiversity conservation issues in the land use planning process, and that the deficiencies in the land use planning process per se, as well as the lack of recognition in the political sphere (the domain of elected councilors), represent the core barriers to adopting the conservation priorities. I conclude that to effect behavior change towards adoption of conservation priorities the land use planning processes need to be supported and the political sphere need to be included in the behavior change process. 6 Chapter 4 therefore focuses on the new target group that emerged as essential in the previous chapter, locally elected councilors. I found that councilors do actually consider land use planning procedures as being important, but also as being dysfunctional. Councilors do value their natural environment for themselves as well as for its tourism value, but most councilors had little understanding of what the term “biodiversity” means and did not connect the term “sustainability” with the natural environment. It became also evident, that councilors do not see conservation in a predominantly positive manner. Chapter 5 therefore yields insight on councilor’s perception that environmental protection and development are mutually exclusive, and the negative frames attached to the conservation endeavor as being socially unjust, disrespectful and utopian. In Chapter 6 I investigated the usefulness of a tractable and well established measure of environmental attitudes or beliefs. I assessed my target audience’s responses to the New Ecological Paradigm scale and the Inclusion of Nature in Self scale. I conclude in Chapter 7 with an account of the difficulties I encountered during the project, an assessment of my project from a social marketing perspective, components of my project that did not yield the results expected, and a proposal for future research.
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The influence of soil properties on the growth and distribution of Portulacaria Afra in subtropical thicket, South AfricaBecker, Carina Helene January 2013 (has links)
Subtropical Thicket is the dominant vegetation biome in the Eastern Cape, and extends through to parts of the Western Cape. It is dominated by Portulacaria afra (spekboom), a woody succulent plant recognised for its importance as an ecosystem engineer and its carbon sequestration potential. Due to excessive grazing from domestic stock, spekboom has been completely removed from some areas. The Subtropical Thicket Restoration Programme (STRP) initiated a large scale restoration programme of planting spekboom cuttings in these degraded areas. Their efforts have been met with varying levels of success and improvement of the programme relies on continuous monitoring and scientific evaluation. I investigated the influence of selected soil properties on spekboom growth, mortality and landscape distribution, at both restoration sites and natural intact areas, and through experiments. Site or location was the most important factor influencing spekboom success at restoration plots, whereby sites in the eastern end of spekboom distribution perform better. Moving westwards slope orientation emerged as an important factor, whereby north facing slopes are preferred by spekboom. Although high levels of soil salinity (NaCl) restricted spekboom growth and affected its health, it could tolerate the levels it was exposed too. Soil pH, above 7, and phosphorous concentration, above 70 mg.kg-1, were the only limiting factors to spekboom survival found in the restoration sites. This preference for acidic soils was mirrored in intact Thicket. However in general, soil is not a major factor influencing spekboom growth and distribution, and spekboom is tolerant of a wide range of soil conditions. Spekbooms constraint is most likely a function of climate, which varies greatly across the biome. This study answered some vital questions regarding the possible influence of soil in spekboom growth and distribution. It disapproved the theory that a catena effect may be responsible for the lack of spekboom growing in bottomland areas. The study also indicates and supports the versatility of spekboom as a plant for restoring degraded lands across a range of different geologies and soil types. To maximise spekboom survival rates, restoration efforts should be focussed towards the eastern end of its distribution and to avoid planting in soils with pH levels higher than 7.
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Causal determinants of the public's attitudes towards hunting as a basis for strategies to improve the social legitimacy of huntingCoetzer, Wentzel Christoffel January 2014 (has links)
It is widely acknowledged that the organised wildlife and hunting industry in South Africa contributes significantly to the country’s economy, as well as to the effective management and conservation of wildlife on privately owned land. Despite this, hunting has come under increasing attack by anti-hunting proponents who wish to bring a ban on hunting. A number of broad shifts across society at large and lobbying against hunting by anti-hunting proponents have given rise to legitimate concerns regarding the social acceptability of hunting. To maintain the social legitimacy of hunting, it is imperative to put strategies in place to actively broaden the base of public acceptance of hunting. Towards this aim, this study is an empirical investigation of the causal determinants of the public’s attitudes towards hunting and of the implications it holds for improving the social legitimacy of hunting. The study commenced by building a sound theoretical foundation from the available literature on the measurement of attitudes, the structure and formation of attitudes, the instrumental and experiential aspects of attitudes, attitudinal ambivalence, the psychology of strong attitudes, as well as the phenomenon of cognitive dissonance. Thereafter, the study turned to identify an adequate and empirically valid research approach for investigating attitudes and its causal determinants. A popular attitude theory in social psychology, namely the theory of reasoned action, was identified as a suitable conceptual framework for conducting this study. According to the reasoned action model, the salient behavioural beliefs people associate with a particular behaviour form the informational foundation (or cognitive foundation) on which their attitudes towards the behaviour are based. More specifically, the model suggests that peoples’ overall attitude towards a behaviour is a function of their perceived probability that a behaviour will produce certain outcomes (belief strength), as well as the degree to which they judge the perceived outcomes of the behaviour as positive or negative (outcome evaluation). The methodological design of the study’s empirical component was strictly based on the standard procedures prescribed by the theory of reasoned action. Two consecutive and methodologically interrelated surveys were conducted amongst members of the public to collect the study’s primary data. The main salient behavioural beliefs on which different attitudes towards hunting are based were identified and further investigated. The results were analysed from the perspective of the theory of reasoned action and a clear understanding of the causal determinants of different attitudes towards hunting were attained. Based on the findings of the study, a number of conclusions and recommendations were made that may guide the development of future strategies to improve the social legitimacy of hunting. Amongst other things, it was suggested that public education programmes should be developed to address the public’s misconceptions of hunting; that public relation campaigns be undertaken to improve the public’s negative image of hunters; and that hunter education programmes be put in place to make hunters aware of the role they could play at community level to improve the social acceptability of hunting. Detailed guidelines regarding the contents of such education programmes and public relation campaigns were provided.
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The conflict between economic and conservation imperatives in the proposed exploration of shale gas in the South Western Karoo basinMkhacane, Nkateko January 2012 (has links)
In this research the conflict between economic and conservation imperatives in the proposed exploration of shale gas in the South Western Karoo Basin was investigated. The primary aim of this study was to come to a theoretical understanding of the situation through a critical analysis of existing documents which allowed me to outline in detail the two opposing perspectives that either promote or resist a shale gas exploration project. The second objective of this research was to present empirical data from both a questionnaire completed by 20 respondents and two interviews, that helps amplify and verify arguments for or against a shale gas exploration project. The theoretical and empirical components of the research offer the basis for a balanced assessment of the viability of shell gas exploration in the Karoo. Using three fundamental assessment criteria (social, economic and environmental) for what constitutes a sustainable development project the gathered data was analysed in order to help ascertain whether or not the shale gas exploration project is a worthwhile development project. The question answered was whether a shale gas exploration project meets its social, economic and environmental mandates. From this, the final objective of this research was to make recommendations concerning what a responsible policy would be concerning land use in the Karoo.
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With and without them: thinking through binaries in Serengeti conservation scienceStith, Mary Mildred Boutin 13 December 2020 (has links)
This dissertation critiques the nature-culture divide by examining the relationships between binaries in postcolonial wildlife research in Tanzania. I focus on the work of wildlife scientists, particularly scientists from Tanzania, who work in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park (SNP). Tanzanian scientists and their foreign counterparts are addressing the theoretical challenges of incorporating park neighbors into ecosystems shaped by the colonial inheritance of national parks as non-human places. I make three broad analytical moves in this endeavor. First, I develop a multi-dimensional method to compare the development of a people-park binary in the Serengeti context by analyzing ethnography, conservation science, and recent scientific debate on a proposed road through the northern part of SNP. Second, I explore connections between the people-park binary and other binaries in the broader Serengeti context using text analysis and ethnographic methods based on eighteen months of fieldwork. Last, I develop a future plan for theoretical and applied research that explores how and why binaries may or may not change concurrently. I conclude that the people-park binary is weakening through the process of “dilation:” a multi-dimensional and reversible process of change during which the borders, substance, and connectivity of dichotomized categories become less rigid. In the broader effort to understand how the people-park binary is dilating, I explore the preliminary conclusion that other binaries (visual-verbal, Tanzanian-foreign, women-men, Kiswahili-English, insect-charismatic wildlife) are also shifting as conservation science becomes more diverse. I propose future research to investigate inter-binary relationships as linked through thematic meaning, conceptual processes, and structural context. This research demonstrates that scientists are using multiple binaries and contexts to conceptually reimagine the colonial legacy of conservation. In essence, their work asks: can the park boundary be maintained as the detrimental social boundaries (national, gender, language, and, perhaps, discipline) that have been historically embedded in the park boundary are transformed? Through intellectual confrontations with dichotomies, knowledge production and reality-making in Africa can be understood as both universally and locally applicable.
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Infuence of stream order on compositional and structural riparian biodiversity in South-Western Kruger National ParkTye, Nicholas David 02 February 2012 (has links)
MSc., Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, 2011 / Riparian zones harbour different species pools from the surrounding landscape and are thus important to biodiversity conservation. However, riparian zones are highly variable. Network characteristics, morphology, flow-sediment interactions, biophysical connectivity and biological characteristics all vary along the length of a river. It could therefore be expected that the biodiversity characteristics of different riparian zones may also be variable. To investigate this, this study quantified compositional and structural diversity in 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 7th stream order rivers in south-western Kruger National Park (KNP). A suite of measures, chosen to encompass the variety, balance, and disparity properties of diversity, was used to quantify woody vegetation and bird compositional and structural diversity within each stream order.
Woody plant species richness and species diversity was highest in the 7th order river and similar in the 1st through 5th order rivers. Likewise the woody vegetation community composition of the 7th order river was distinct from those in the other stream order rivers. Bird species diversity was similar in all five stream orders considered. Bird community composition of the 7th order river was distinct from the bird community composition of the 4th and 5th order rivers, which in turn was distinct from the bird community composition of the 2nd and 1st order rivers. Woody vegetation height, canopy width and diameter diversity tended to be highest in the 4th and 5th order rivers, while number of stem (NoS) diversity was generally highest in the 1st order rivers and decreased along the stream order sequence to the 7th order river. Bird body mass diversity was highest in the middle of the stream order sequence, while bird wing length/body
length (WL/BL) and leg length diversity was similar along the entire stream order sequence. Overall, a variety of patterns of change in biodiversity along the stream order sequence were observed
The lack of a consistent pattern along the stream order sequence among the different elements of compositional and structural diversity illustrates that no single measure can properly characterise the biodiversity of an area, and thus researchers and managers need to be explicit about which aspect of biodiversity they are aiming to study/conserve. Additionally, the unique combination of biodiversity found in each of the stream orders illustrates that each contributes importantly to overall regional biodiversity, and thus there is need to consider the role of entire drainage networks in the landscape, rather than simply focusing on perennial rivers. Finally, this study illustrates the need to consider the heterogeneous nature of biodiversity itself.
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Biodiversity value of grassland ecological networks in afforested areas, KwaZulu-Natal, South AfricaJoubert, Lize 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The current biodiversity crisis requires creative initiatives for mitigating further
biodiversity loss. The use of ecological networks (ENs) is such an initiative. The South
African forestry industry recognizes that there is loss of biodiversity at the smaller patch
scale, while attempting to mitigate this loss at the landscape scale by implementing largescale
ENs.
The aim of this study was to determine how representative grassland biodiversity in
ENs are of similar habitat in a nature reserves (NR). The study was conducted in the northeast
of the KwaZulu-Natal Province, adjacent iSimangaliso Wetland Park, which is a natural
World Heritage site. A systematic approach compared a wide range of taxa, namely plants,
decomposition macrofungi, vertebrates (birds and large mammals) and faunal manifestations
(e.g. molehills, dung and ant nests) between the EN and nature reserve, while controlling for
differences in disturbance regime. Species richness was compared using Mann-Whitney U
tests, while differences in species composition were determined using Correspondence
Analyses, Multi-Dimensional Scaling and Analyses of Similarity.
Grassland ENs had significantly less plant species. In addition, there were differences
in plant and fungi species composition. Differences were probably caused by (1) degree of
isolation i.e. proximity to source habitat patches in the surrounding matrix, and (2) habitat
quality. Habitat quality was determined by local disturbance regimes (e.g. grazing and fire)
and plantation-induced drought for plants, and size and amount of coarse woody debris for
fungi. In addition, significant differences in abundances of mole hills (NR>EN) and small
mammal burrows (EN>NR) might have had an effect on succession and regeneration of plant
communities.
There were differences in plant species composition between grassland EN and that at
the adjacent nature reserve. However, differences between EN and NR were small when
compared to differences between habitat types at the landscape spatial scale. It is concluded
that grassland ENs among forestry plantations contribute to biodiversity conservation in the
commercially-productive landscape. This approach to land use planning should be explored
for other commercial land uses. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die huidige biodiversiteitskrisis vereis kreatiewe strategieë om ‘n verdere verlies in
biodiversiteit te bekamp. Ekologiese Netwerke (EN’e) is een voorbeeld van sulke kreatiewe
strategieë. Die Suid Afrikaanse bosbou-industrie erken die verlies in biodiversiteit wat
kenmerkend in plantasies gevind word. Implementering van grootskaalse EN’e kan egter die
verlies aan biodiversiteit, wat in plantasies ondervind word, temper.
Die doel van hierdie studie was om vas te stel hoe goed biodiversiteit in grasveld EN’e
soortgelyke habitat in ‘n nabygeleë natuurreservaat verteenwoordig. Die studie was uitgevoer
in die noordooste van KwaZulu-Natal, langs iSimangaliso Wetland Park wat ‘n
wêrelderfenisgebied is. Ons het ‘n stelselmatige benadering gevolg waartydens ‘n wye
verskeidenheid taksa, naamlik plante, makro-fungi, vertebrate (groot soogdiere en voëls) en
tekens van diere-aktiwiteit (bv. miersneste, dieremis en molshope), in die EN vergelyk is met
die van ‘n natuurreservaat terwyl ons vir verskillende versteuringe gekontrolleer het.
Spesiesrykheid is vergelyk met Mann-Whitney U toetse terwyl verskille in
spesiessamestelling vasgestel is met Correspondence Analyses, Multi-Dimensional Scaling en
Analyses of Similarity.
Daar was ‘n statisties beduidende verskil in die hoeveelheid spesies tussen grasveld
EN’e en die natuurreservaat. Grasveld EN’e het minder plant spesies gehad. Boonop was daar
verskille in die samestelling van plant en fungi gemeenskappe. Verskille was waarskynlik
veroorsaak deur (1) isolasie of die hoeveelheid nabygeleë habitatbronne in die omliggende
omgewing, en (2) habitat kwaliteit. Habitat kwaliteit word bepaal deur versteuringe (bv. brand
en beweiding) en die uitdrogingseffek van plantasies vir plante, en die hoeveelheid en grootte
van growwe houtagtige puin vir fungi. Daar was ook beduidende verskille in die hoeveelheid
molshope (NR>EN) en klein soogdier gate (EN>NR), wat moontlik ‘n effek kon hê op
suksessie en herstel van plantgemeenskappe.
Daar was verskille in plantspesiessamestelling tussen grasveld EN’e en die van die
langsliggende natuurreservaat. Hierdie verskille was egter klein wanneer dit vergelyk word
met die verskille tussen verskillende soorte habitatte in die landskap. Daarom kom ons tot die
gevolgtrekking dat grasveld EN’e tussen bosbouplantasies bydra tot die bewaring van
biodiversiteit in kommersiële landskappe. Hierdie benadering tot grondgebruik behoort verder
verken te word vir ander kommersiële bosbou en boerderypraktyke.
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Modelling amenity landscape plant water use in South AfricaHoy, Leslie Higham 12 1900 (has links)
South Africa is classified as a semi-arid environment with limited natural water sources. Amenity landscapes provide broad ranging benefits for society. Amenity landscapes account for between 31% - 50% of water supplied for domestic and urban use. To reduce water use and water conservation in amenity landscapes, strategies, regulations and interventions are required. Every landscape is a unique complex system with a large number of variables that differ from each other. The variability can be summarized into management/design, irrigation, climatological, edaphic and plant related aspects. Several amenity landscape water use models have been developed around the world and two in South Africa.
This study developed a comprehensive South African hydrozone based plant database and an Amenity Landscape Water Use Model South Africa (ALWUMSA). This will improve hydrozoning of amaneity landscapes and ultimately also improve water conserbvation for these sites. It allows users/owners to determine water use requirements through an extensive data gathering, from aspects such as design, management, microclimate, environmental, edaphic, irrigation and plant related factors. Comparisons of results from ALWUMSA to three test sites, selected existing models and a range of scenarios produced results demonstrating that ALWUMSA consistently projected lower water requirements. The model also allows for site aspects to be changed thus encouraging end users to implement specific water saving intiatives with the amenity landscape to reduce water use. These savings will be translated into both water-use savings as well as financial savings for users of the amenity landscape water use model. / Environmental Sciences / Ph. D. (Environmental Science)
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