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A survey of conservation attitudes of the rural communities around Thathe forest, Northern Province.Sikhitha, Mbengeni Eric. January 1999 (has links)
Indigenous forests are an integral part of rural communities in Africa, and they are socio-ecologically
managed and conserved by customary laws. Most of these forests are
important reserves of cultural and ecological values, although they are threatened by
modern economic and political developments and often by foreign religious intrusion.
Based on this background the Thathe sacred forest in the Zoutpansberg mountains of
the Northern Province, in South Africa, was chosen for investigation. The perceptions
and conservation attitudes of the rural communities living around the forest were
investigated. In addition, the contribution of the traditional ethics of the local people to
forest biodiversity management were also assessed. The extent to which the rural
communities attach consumptive and/or non-consumptive values to the Thathe forest
was examined for insight to the survival of the forest into the future.
Data collection included a field survey, interviews with key informants, structured and
semi-structured interviews, and a documentary survey (documents or records such as
monthly or annual reports of an institution like the Department of Water Affairs and
Forestry (DWAF) about its activities, and government gazettes). Responses of 201
interviewees from around the Thathe forest were analysed. Data was arranged by age,
sex, educational background and area of residence. The majority of the respondents
(76.6%) across the gender categories regarded the forest as sacred, while 20.4% felt
it is an area of conservation importance. A strong cultural link between the local people and the forest is inferred from these positive attitudes! in spite of a history of forced
removals of the surrounding communities from the Thathe-Vondo forest area. The
attitudes of the people around the forest are wide-spread and consistent across the
tribal areas. Nevertheless, cultural usage of the forest has waned in recent years (a
consequence of restrictions on access to the forest) and few people (13.4%) actively use
it for cultural rituals.
Based on the research findings it is imperative that an attempt is made to reconcile the
local people and the government institution managing indigenous forests and policing
forestry in general (DWAF). The relevance of conventional conservation principles must
be brought to the attention of the local people! and these ought to be integrated with
cultural methods of forest resource management and conservation. This will serve as
a foundation for sustainable indigenous forest resource management in Thathe forest. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1999.
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The invertebrates of indigenous forests in Limpopo province South Africa : diversity, biogeography and conservation.Horn, Johanna Lynn. January 2004 (has links)
In this study I investigated patterns of invertebrate diversity in Limpopo Province indigenous forests, in order to highlight forests and taxa of special conservation significance. Invertebrates from seven target taxa were sampled in 11 patches of indigenous forest in Limpopo Province from February 2001 to January 2002, including six forests in the Soutpansberg and five forests in the northern Drakensberg. Selected forests comprise three distinct vegetation subtypes and the target taxa selected were millipedes, centipedes, earthworms, terrestrial molluscs, spiders, scorpions and amphipods. Invertebrates were sampled by active searching of quadrats and line transects and pitfall traps. A total of 11 969 indigenous target group individuals were sampled, comprising 14 orders, 50 families, 86 genera and 142 species (including at least nine new).
There was a significant difference in the total invertebrate species richness and diversity of forest patches but results varied considerably when different target group figures were analyzed. With the exception of spiders, the factors influencing total and individual target group richness in forests could not be determined. Introduced invertebrates comprised a large proportion of the species and individuals sampled, but were not shown to affect indigenous fauna.
Invertebrate species assemblages were most similar between forests sharing the same vegetation subtype and between forests in the same mountain region. However, each forest patch had unique species and some even had unique families. Limpopo Province forests support high numbers of endemic invertebrates. A total of 47 endemic invertebrate species were sampled, including six site endemics, eight local endemics, nine regional endemics and 24 national endemics. The numbers and scales of endemism varied by target group. Invertebrate species’ distributions in Limpopo Province forests generally support the biogeographic theories of Pleistocene forest refugia and the Limpopo River valley as a radiation barrier, although some important contradictions were found. Local endemism in Limpopo Province forests is likely the product of historical processes.
Although some significant relationships were found between surrogate and true measures, single taxon biodiversity indicators, the higher taxon method, morphospecies and land classes could not accurately predict patterns of target invertebrate species richness in
Limpopo Province forests. Results show that formal species identification should be used if accurate richness estimates are desired; the use of surrogates is not supported by this study.
Conservation of Limpopo Province forests is vital for the preservation of valuable invertebrate communities. No forest sampled in this study can be considered unimportant. Effective forest conservation and management is dependent upon the protection of forests of varying patch size, careful evaluation and control of utilization and the establishment and maintenance of corridors linking isolated forest patches. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2004.
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