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Conservation for development : a literature study of the socioeconomic effects of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation AreaPettersson, Rebecka January 2014 (has links)
Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs) are considered a suitable strategy to combine nature conservation and poverty alleviation in southern Africa, usually through ecotourism. There have, however, been critical voices questioning whether this is actually succeeding. Many researchers claim that the conservation and tourism efforts are leaving the local communities at greater risks of impoverishment rather than helping them. This study consults previous research to examine this issue through the examples of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area (GLTFCA), and the communities living close to its National Parks in Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe. The methodology used is a systematic literature study of 26 secondary sources. The study finds that the previous research reveals that the experiences of the communities vary between different areas in the TFCA. The general feeling is that of displacement in different ways, except in those communities that have found ways of empowering and developing themselves; through tourism schemes. Otherwise, the attitude from the authorities in the national parks of the TFCA seems to be that the conservation and tourism efforts in the area are given priority over the local residents’ needs. Theories such as systems ecology, sustainable development and deep ecology may have answers to this issue on paper, however judging from the reality presented in the literature used in this study they are not realistic in practice. What is obvious is that economic interests are prioritized in the GLTFCA just as in the rest of the world.
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Development of a tourism management framework for Mapungubwe National Park / Uwe Peter HermannHermann, Uwe Peter January 2013 (has links)
MNP is one of the smallest and youngest national parks in the portfolio of South African National Parks (SANParks). The park is also a World Heritage Site because it contains the remnants of the ancient Kingdom of Mapungubwe, which was one of the first sophisticated southern African societies. The park currently faces challenges associated with mining in the area, the development of the Greater Mapungubwe Transfrontier Conservation Area, the presence of private and agricultural lands that split the park into two parts as well as management issues.
The management of national parks in South Africa is guided by a number of principles, one of which is strategic adaptive management, which is used by South African National Parks (SANParks) as the foundation of all the organisation’s management plans. In addition, guidelines and legislation set by various international organisations and national government departments provide structures according to which protected areas, World Heritage Sites and national parks should function.
Sustainable tourism is the desired state for tourism. This means that tourism services should be managed towards achieving sustainable tourism. Sustainable tourism is considered a form of tourism that is strategic and that promotes the long-term integrity of natural and cultural resources, so that these resources are maintained as durable, permanent landscapes for future generations. Sustainable tourism strives to achieve economic viability without compromising the integrity of socio-cultural and natural environments. Therefore, sustainable tourism rests on three main pillars, namely socio-cultural integrity, economic integrity and environmental integrity.
The primary objective of this study was to develop a tourism management framework for the Mapungubwe National Park (MNP). It is a young national park that faces a unique set of management challenges. Currently the tourism management plan of the park is contained within the overall management plan of the park and it does not address the major management challenges of the park. For this reason it is imperative to develop a management framework in this regard that takes into account the management challenges that face the park in order to ensure that sustainable tourism is achieved. The research approach used in this study included both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. An explorative research approach was followed through a self-administered online questionnaire with the aim of determining the perceptions of visitors about the importance of various management and sustainable tourism tasks and how effectively they perceived those tasks to be executed at MNP. Fifty-four constructs pertaining to aspects of park management and sustainable tourism were measured on a five-point Likert scale. These constructs were determined through a literature review. The sources consulted included the following: Saayman (2009), Swarbrooke (2002), George (2007), Mancini (2013), SANParks (2010), Keyser, (2002:351), Coetzee (2004:184), Himbira, Saarinen, Atlhopheng and Manwa (2010:278), Borges, Carbone, Bushell, and Jäger (2011:8), Sebele (2010:146), Vanhove, (2011:223), Logar (2010:130) and Pedersen (2002:34).
The questionnaire was distributed electronically to a database of visitors who had stayed at MNP over a period of 12 months. The researcher also distributed questionnaires manually at the park. Data collection took place during March and April 2013. A total of 486 responses were received during the period of data collection. In addition, semi-structured interviews were conducted with the management of MNP and with surrounding land owners in the data-collection period.
The results of the empirical quantitative data were processed at the Statistical Consultation Services at the Potchefstroom Campus of North-West University. The data was analysed using version 21 of SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) software. The statistical methods utilised included descriptive statistics through frequencies and means, exploratory factor analysis and t-tests. The interviews conducted were transcribed using F4 software and analysed by means of the ATLAS.ti software package. Data analysis included the use of data coding in order to identify underlying themes in the data.
The results of the descriptive data indicated that the following five management constructs were seen as most important from a visitor perspective: the cleanliness of ablution facilities, the cleanliness of accommodation facilities, the reintroduction of indigenous game species, the control of domestic animals in the park, and the professionalism of reception staff. In terms of the management effectiveness, the following five constructs were rated the highest: the cleanliness of ablution facilities, the performance of housekeeping staff, hours of operation of park reception, the value for money of accommodation at MNP, and the professional operation of tours to Mapungubwe Hill. The exploratory factor analysis identified 11 factors related to management and sustainable tourism, namely (1) information and accessibility, (2) accommodation and ablution facilities, (3) food and beverages, (4) leisure facilities, (5) professionalism of tours, (6) conservation, (7) concessions, (8) human resources, (9) regulations and marketing, (10) socio-economic impacts and (11) environmental impacts. These factors were compared through a t-test and gaps in management effectiveness were identified in all factors with the exception of concessions.
Qualitative data analysis of the interviews with local land owners revealed a number of themes that highlighted the concerns experienced by these stakeholders. These themes were local land owner issues, mining issues, management issues, transfrontier conservation area issues and world heritage issues. The main themes arising from interviews with management included local land owner issues, mining issues, MNP management issues, transfrontier conservation area issues, tourism issues and world heritage issues.
This research made the following contributions to the field of sustainable tourism management in protected areas: * This study contributed a critical assessment of literature based on park and protected area management frameworks. These frameworks were presented in chronological order and provide a theoretical basis for the future development of management frameworks for parks and protected areas. * This study proved that tourism management frameworks should be park specific and not generic in nature as all national parks have their own unique set of environmental conditions. * This study developed the first integrated framework for the management of tourism services at MNP. * This study has proved that SANParks has to manage all three spheres of management, namely conservation, ecotourism and constituency building, effectively in order to bring about the effective management of national parks in South Africa. In the case of MNP, management does not engage successfully with visitors (tourists) and the local community (local land owners), which has led to a mutual aversion and to misunderstandings between the parties. This highlights the necessity of involving all stakeholders in park management in order to stimulate greater cooperation and mutual understanding between all parties. * This study is the first to analyse the management effectiveness of tourism service provision at MNP and in the northern region of SANParks. This fulfils a gap, which may lead to future linear studies at other national parks in the region. * The results of this research will provide much needed input towards the overall strategic management of tourism services at MNP and SANParks by identifying ten gaps in management effectiveness. * This study is the first study to analyse the perceptions of the management of tourism in a World Heritage Site inside a national park in South Africa. * The findings of this study have been presented at various forums, including The Greater Mapungubwe Network (Musina, 26 July 2013) and the Southern Africa Institute for Management Scientists Conference (Potchefstroom, 15-17 September 2013). * Finally, this study contributed to the database of research concerning national parks, heritage management and protected area management in terms of tourism management. / PhD (Tourism Management)|cNorth-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Development of a tourism management framework for Mapungubwe National Park / Uwe Peter HermannHermann, Uwe Peter January 2013 (has links)
MNP is one of the smallest and youngest national parks in the portfolio of South African National Parks (SANParks). The park is also a World Heritage Site because it contains the remnants of the ancient Kingdom of Mapungubwe, which was one of the first sophisticated southern African societies. The park currently faces challenges associated with mining in the area, the development of the Greater Mapungubwe Transfrontier Conservation Area, the presence of private and agricultural lands that split the park into two parts as well as management issues.
The management of national parks in South Africa is guided by a number of principles, one of which is strategic adaptive management, which is used by South African National Parks (SANParks) as the foundation of all the organisation’s management plans. In addition, guidelines and legislation set by various international organisations and national government departments provide structures according to which protected areas, World Heritage Sites and national parks should function.
Sustainable tourism is the desired state for tourism. This means that tourism services should be managed towards achieving sustainable tourism. Sustainable tourism is considered a form of tourism that is strategic and that promotes the long-term integrity of natural and cultural resources, so that these resources are maintained as durable, permanent landscapes for future generations. Sustainable tourism strives to achieve economic viability without compromising the integrity of socio-cultural and natural environments. Therefore, sustainable tourism rests on three main pillars, namely socio-cultural integrity, economic integrity and environmental integrity.
The primary objective of this study was to develop a tourism management framework for the Mapungubwe National Park (MNP). It is a young national park that faces a unique set of management challenges. Currently the tourism management plan of the park is contained within the overall management plan of the park and it does not address the major management challenges of the park. For this reason it is imperative to develop a management framework in this regard that takes into account the management challenges that face the park in order to ensure that sustainable tourism is achieved. The research approach used in this study included both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. An explorative research approach was followed through a self-administered online questionnaire with the aim of determining the perceptions of visitors about the importance of various management and sustainable tourism tasks and how effectively they perceived those tasks to be executed at MNP. Fifty-four constructs pertaining to aspects of park management and sustainable tourism were measured on a five-point Likert scale. These constructs were determined through a literature review. The sources consulted included the following: Saayman (2009), Swarbrooke (2002), George (2007), Mancini (2013), SANParks (2010), Keyser, (2002:351), Coetzee (2004:184), Himbira, Saarinen, Atlhopheng and Manwa (2010:278), Borges, Carbone, Bushell, and Jäger (2011:8), Sebele (2010:146), Vanhove, (2011:223), Logar (2010:130) and Pedersen (2002:34).
The questionnaire was distributed electronically to a database of visitors who had stayed at MNP over a period of 12 months. The researcher also distributed questionnaires manually at the park. Data collection took place during March and April 2013. A total of 486 responses were received during the period of data collection. In addition, semi-structured interviews were conducted with the management of MNP and with surrounding land owners in the data-collection period.
The results of the empirical quantitative data were processed at the Statistical Consultation Services at the Potchefstroom Campus of North-West University. The data was analysed using version 21 of SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) software. The statistical methods utilised included descriptive statistics through frequencies and means, exploratory factor analysis and t-tests. The interviews conducted were transcribed using F4 software and analysed by means of the ATLAS.ti software package. Data analysis included the use of data coding in order to identify underlying themes in the data.
The results of the descriptive data indicated that the following five management constructs were seen as most important from a visitor perspective: the cleanliness of ablution facilities, the cleanliness of accommodation facilities, the reintroduction of indigenous game species, the control of domestic animals in the park, and the professionalism of reception staff. In terms of the management effectiveness, the following five constructs were rated the highest: the cleanliness of ablution facilities, the performance of housekeeping staff, hours of operation of park reception, the value for money of accommodation at MNP, and the professional operation of tours to Mapungubwe Hill. The exploratory factor analysis identified 11 factors related to management and sustainable tourism, namely (1) information and accessibility, (2) accommodation and ablution facilities, (3) food and beverages, (4) leisure facilities, (5) professionalism of tours, (6) conservation, (7) concessions, (8) human resources, (9) regulations and marketing, (10) socio-economic impacts and (11) environmental impacts. These factors were compared through a t-test and gaps in management effectiveness were identified in all factors with the exception of concessions.
Qualitative data analysis of the interviews with local land owners revealed a number of themes that highlighted the concerns experienced by these stakeholders. These themes were local land owner issues, mining issues, management issues, transfrontier conservation area issues and world heritage issues. The main themes arising from interviews with management included local land owner issues, mining issues, MNP management issues, transfrontier conservation area issues, tourism issues and world heritage issues.
This research made the following contributions to the field of sustainable tourism management in protected areas: * This study contributed a critical assessment of literature based on park and protected area management frameworks. These frameworks were presented in chronological order and provide a theoretical basis for the future development of management frameworks for parks and protected areas. * This study proved that tourism management frameworks should be park specific and not generic in nature as all national parks have their own unique set of environmental conditions. * This study developed the first integrated framework for the management of tourism services at MNP. * This study has proved that SANParks has to manage all three spheres of management, namely conservation, ecotourism and constituency building, effectively in order to bring about the effective management of national parks in South Africa. In the case of MNP, management does not engage successfully with visitors (tourists) and the local community (local land owners), which has led to a mutual aversion and to misunderstandings between the parties. This highlights the necessity of involving all stakeholders in park management in order to stimulate greater cooperation and mutual understanding between all parties. * This study is the first to analyse the management effectiveness of tourism service provision at MNP and in the northern region of SANParks. This fulfils a gap, which may lead to future linear studies at other national parks in the region. * The results of this research will provide much needed input towards the overall strategic management of tourism services at MNP and SANParks by identifying ten gaps in management effectiveness. * This study is the first study to analyse the perceptions of the management of tourism in a World Heritage Site inside a national park in South Africa. * The findings of this study have been presented at various forums, including The Greater Mapungubwe Network (Musina, 26 July 2013) and the Southern Africa Institute for Management Scientists Conference (Potchefstroom, 15-17 September 2013). * Finally, this study contributed to the database of research concerning national parks, heritage management and protected area management in terms of tourism management. / PhD (Tourism Management)|cNorth-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Factors affecting ecoagriculture for integrated farming and biodiversity conservation in a transfrontier conservation area inSouthern AfricaChitakira, Munyaradzi January 2013 (has links)
The transfrontier conservation areas (TFCAs) concept appears well-timed and appropriate to
Southern Africa but the role of local communities in these enterprises is not defined. A
framework that fully integrates agriculture, biodiversity conservation and livelihoods, known as
ecoagriculture, provides opportunities for achieving TFCA goals through bottom-up means. The
aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of planning and managing ecoagriculture in the
Lubombo TFCA spanning across the borders of South Africa, Mozambique and Swaziland. The
study area is a biodiversity hotspot and is inhabited by poor people who need to meet their
livelihood needs through utilising local natural resources. There is thus a need for initiatives that
balance biodiversity protection and utilisation. Methodological triangulation including transect
surveys, participant observation, key informant interviews, household questionnaire surveys and
participatory approaches is employed. The study involves stakeholder identification and
consultation, participatory landscape performance assessment, evaluation of the community’s
future visioning and the analysis of policy and governance mechanisms impacting on
ecoagriculture implementation.
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The study revealed a unique combination of stakeholders with varying degrees of
importance and influence in the TFCA communities under focus, a situation which cannot be
expected in an ordinary communal farming area. Potential conflicts of interest were evident
among certain stakeholder groups but the stakeholder roles and interests were largely
complementary. Key informant interviews pointed towards a high feasibility of planned
ecoagriculture implementation in the area. The questionnaire survey showed an overwhelming
willingness to plan the integration of biodiversity and farming. According to the participatory
evaluation of the landscape’s performance the area’s overall performance score was 2.97 out of a
possible score of 5, which implied a performance in the middle of the range. There were
significant differences in the scores for the landscape dimensions (p-value < 0.01) but there were
no significant differences in scores across the landscape (p-value = 0.37). The area is a mosaic of
unplanned ecoagriculture with a good potential for transformation into systematically managed
agriculture-biodiversity integrated approaches. Biodiversity-agriculture integration elements are
evident in the Mathenjwa community vision, reflecting the community’s consciousness of its
future in the TFCA. None of the Lubombo TFCA countries has an explicit ecoagriculture policy
but ecoagriculture aspects are implied in existing legislation. Weak transboundary collaboration
makes the Lubombo TFCA to exist as a treaty on paper rather than on the ground. Conflicts
between customary norms and public legislation create policy enforcement challenges and pose a
barrier to ecoagriculture implementation. Existing conditions could be improved to allow
stakeholder-driven integrated landscape management. Innovative efforts (like policy
harmonisation, capacity building and campaigns to raise awareness of the benefits of agriculturebiodiversity
integration) are recommended for ecoagriculture to become a systematic landscape
management practice in the area. The contributions of this study include: (i) a suggested
framework for local community involvement in TFCAs which improves their resilience to
climate change impacts, (ii) a suggested ecoagriculture feasibility index (EFI) for a specific
landscape, (iii) a proposed landscape evaluation tool that practitioners and researchers can adopt,
(iv) a methodological contribution to landscape studies involving the use of participatory
processes and (v) contribution to the literature on the subject and practice of ecoagriculture. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2013 / Geography, Geoinformatics and Meteorology / Unrestricted
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Game viewing potential in a multi-use conservation area: a case study of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, Southern AfricaPride, Roxanne S 04 February 2015 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science. / Three key objectives of transfrontier conservation are biodiversity conservation, local economic
development and the promotion of peace and cooperation across international borders
(Ramutsindela, 2004). Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCA’s) may incorporate a variety of
conservation land uses, and comprise of both consumptive and non-consumptive uses of
wildlife (Hanks, 2003). It is critical that this mosaic of land uses is well managed and integrated
in order to meet the conservation and socio-economic goals of TFCA’s. One challenge is that
different conservation land use areas may have varying effects on wildlife. This study aims to
further our understanding of these effects in the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park of South
Africa and Mozambique.
The research uses the behavioural responses of wildlife as a way of determining the tolerance of
wildlife to potentially disturbing activities. Four different conservation land use areas, namely
trophy hunting, communal land, photographic tourism and exclusive photographic tourism were
studied and compared in and around the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, southern Africa. The
aim of this study was to firstly establish the diversity of mammals and the frequency of mammal
sightings within each conservation land use area, and secondly, assess the response behaviour
of five mammal species to an approaching vehicle. K-means cluster analysis was used on both
the mammal sightings data and the response behaviour data in order to determine key
influencing variables.
Throughout the study period, the mammal diversity and frequency of mammal sightings were
the highest in the private ecotourism concession, followed by the national park, and then the
trophy hunting reserve and lastly communal land. The behavioural responses displayed by the
five study mammals (African elephant, African buffalo, impala, chacma baboon and Burchell’s
zebra) also varied considerably between the four conservation land use areas. The lowest
response indexes and least number of flight responses occurred in the national park, followed
by the private ecotourism concession, and conversely, a higher average initial response index
and a greater occurrence of flight responses occurring in the trophy hunting reserve and
communal land. According to the findings from the cluster analyses, the type of conservation
land use impacts on the sighting potential and sighting quality of mammals, but so do
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topographical differences and seasons. These results can help in the management of each
conservation land use area on its own and as an integrated part of a TFCA.
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The implications of transfrontier conservation areas : a comparative policy analysis study of sustainable development in South Africa between the great Limpopo transfrontier conservation area and Lubombo transfrontier resource areaShongwe, Lucas B. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (MA.(Political science))-University of Pretoria, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Framing Transfrontier Nature Conservation : The Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park and the Vision of 'Peace Parks' in Southern AfricaBerglund, Kristina January 2015 (has links)
Within the broad field of global environmental history this master thesis analyses transfrontier conservation areas (TFCAs) also known as 'peace parks', and explores how the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park (GLTP) has been envisioned, described, motivated and implemented. Using Actor-Network Theory and Framing Analysis, the thesis analyses how the idea of the GLTP and the critique against it has been framed over time through the analysis of official reports and academic research in combination with in-depth interviews with key actors. By approaching the topic of transfrontier conservation in a broad manner, and by incorporating a wide variety of sources, the thesis attempts to go beyond single explanations of the phenomenon and, instead, provide a more comprehensive and nuanced understanding of the transfrontier conservation idea linked to the GLTP and its history. The thesis shows that the rise of transfrontier conservation involves a complex network of actors, spanning over local-global and public-private scales. Integrated networks are formed between key actors including national governments and conservation authorities, donor agencies, NGOs – in particular the Peace Parks Foundation, and civil society. The GLTP has been framed as a way to achieve three main goals: biodiversity conservation, community development through ecotourism and public-private partnerships, and regional peace and security. The thesis shows that the framing has shifted over time, from a strict conservation focus to more inclusive approaches where social aspects are seen as increasingly important for the long term sustainability of TFCAs. But the idea that transfrontier conservation can resolve all regional problems, from political cooperation to wildlife management to local socio-economic development, is also contested in this study. The thesis illuminates a gap between official policy/management reports and academic studies related primarily to the role of community development in the framing and implementation of the GLTP. Despite various challenges that hinder the effective implementation of the goals and visions of the park such as wildlife crime, insufficient community involvement and problematic legal and policy arrangements, the thesis concludes that the GLTP represents an important contribution to global conservation commitments and needs to be viewed as a complex, long-term and constantly evolving project.
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Towards a spatial framework for transfrontier conservation planning in die SADC regionVan der Merwe, Nadia 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) was established in 1997 to facilitate Transfrontier
Conservation (TFCA) initiatives in the SADC region and thereby support economic development,
conservation of biodiversity, as well as the promotion of regional peace and stability. To this
effect, their regional planners require a thorough knowledge of the condition of areas in which the
estimated actions will be carried out. To date, the PPF have used base datasets, such as land cover
and population densities, in their GIS projects to support their decision making processes.
However, they have realised the importance of developing rigorous methods for the extraction and
generalization of biodiversity information for informed conservation decisions. The main aim of
this study was, therefore, to develop a spatial framework for the generalisation and integration of
data to become meaningful information that may be readily interpreted. The resultant framework
represents a methodology for, firstly, identifying and, secondly, prioritizing core natural areas or
units (CNU). CNUs were modelled to represent large blocks (minimum 100 km') of contiguous
natural vegetation that are far from major roads and densely populated places. They were, then,
ranked into three classes of importance (low, medium and high) according to an ecological value
derived for each. This made the framework comprehensive in its considerations of regional
biodiversity and robust enough to be used for planning at the SADC scale. By organising data and
quantitative approaches logically in a robust, but rigorous, way, spatial frameworks provide the
structure for combining specialized knowledge as well as scientific analysis and pragmatic politics
in an effective planning process. This could guide plans which are proactive instead of reactive,
visionary as well as pragmatic and well founded in research and understanding. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) was gestig in 1997 om oorgrens bewarings-initiatiewe in die
SADC streek te fasiliteer en daardeur steun te verleen aan ekonomiese ontwikkeling, die bewaring
van biodiversiteit asook die bevordering van vrede en stabiliteit in die streek. Om dit te behaal
benodig die betrokke streeksbeplanners 'n grondige kennis van die toestand van die areas waarin
die beoogdede aksies uitgevoer sal word. Tot op hede het die PPF basis datastelle, van
byvoorbeeld landgebruik en populasie-digtheid, ingespan m hul GIS projekte om
besluitnemingsprossese te ondersteun. Daar is egter besef dat dit van hoogste belang is om
deeglike metodes te onwikkel vir die onttrekking van biodiversiteits-informasie sodat ingeligte
besluitneming moontlik gemaak kan word. Gevolglik was die hoof oogmerk van hierdie studie om
'n ruimtelike verwysingsraamwerk te ontwikkel wat data kan veralgemeen en integreer tot
betekenisvolle inligting wat geredelik interpreteerbaar is. Die daaruit-vloeiende raamwerk stel 'n
metodologie voor wat Kern Natuurlike Areas (KNA) eerstens kan identifiseer en tweedens kan
prioritiseer. Hierdie KNA is gemodelleer om groot blokke (minstens 100km2
) van aaneenlopende
natuurlike plantegroei, ver van hoofpaaie en dig bevolkte gebiede, voor te stel. Hulle is
hieropvolgend gesorteer in drie range van belangrikheid (laag, medium en hoog) na gelang van 'n
ekologiese waarde wat vir elk afgelei is. Hierdeur is die raamwerk, in terme van voldoende
oorwegings teenoor streeks-biodiversiteit, omvattend gemaak en terselfdertyd robuus vir
beplanning op die SADC skaal. Deur data en kwalitatiewe benaderings logies en in 'n deeglike en
robuuste wyse te organiseer, bied ruimtelike verwysingsraamwerke die struktuur om
gespesialiseerde kennis met wetenskaplike analise en pragmatiese politiek te kombineer in 'n
effektiewe beplanningsproses. Hierdeur kan planne geformuleer word wat proaktief is instede van
reaktief, visionêr sowel as pragmaties, en terselfdertyd goed gefundeer bly op navorsing en begrip.
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Environmental sustainability through participatory approaches : socio-geographic assessment of the Mathenjwa tribal authority landscape, Northern KwaZulu-NatalAlexander, Patrick James 21 June 2013 (has links)
Development, environmental sustainability, agriculture and livelihoods are dimensions
that are often considered antagonistic. By thinking at the landscape level however,
innovative opportunities arise for simultaneity as these entities manifest spatially and
require communication across disciplines. Trans-frontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs)
embrace this thinking. These are large areas that cut across two or more international
boundaries, include within them at least one Protected Area (PA) and other multiple
resource use areas, including human dwellings and cultivated areas. Similarly,
ecoagriculture is an innovative approach to land use management as it seeks to spatially
synergise agriculture, livelihoods and biodiversity conservation across space and
requires an awareness of landscape-level issues by land users, a condition which is not
necessarily met. Such landscape thinking stems from the fact that if a piece of land is
subject to rigorous conservation, it will fail if the surrounding areas are degraded.
Additionally, it has been shown that agriculture often benefits from the nearby presence
of natural areas for ecosystem services such as pollination, pest management, and
erosion control. As such, multifunctional landscape mosaics together with small scale
farmers, not large scale monocultures, are the key to global food security, as the former
more effectively links agricultural intensification to hunger reduction. In order to
ascertain an integrated understanding of the landscape concept, necessary for the
formalisation of ecoagriculture, this study assessed the landscape perceptions and
understandings held by local people residing within a TFCA. We employed
participatory methods within the Mathenjwa Tribal Area (MTA), an area falling within
the Lubombo TFCA and identified as holding ecoagriculture potential. Results revealed
that local people perceive landscape as a function of subsistence utility. Local people
perceive land-use multifunctionality, necessary for the formalisation of ecoagriculture, but at a smaller scale than expected depending on both social and biophysical
interpretations. Landscape scale projects should incorporate local landscape
understandings. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / Geography, Geoinformatics and Meteorology / MA / Unrestricted
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Genetic structure of the savannah elephant population (Loxodonta africana (Blumenbach 1797)) in the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation AreaDe Flamingh, Alida January 2013 (has links)
Earlier studies investigated the genetic structure of fragmented or isolated elephant populations
by comparing the genetic characteristics of pre-defined populations. This study aimed to
determine if there was genetic evidence for spatial structuring in a continuous elephant
population in the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA-TFCA).
I sequenced one mtDNA gene region for 88 individuals and genotyped 100 individuals for 10
nuclear microsatellite loci. Bayesian Clustering Algorithms incorporated in the program
Geneland were used to identify groups of genetically similar individuals. An Analysis of
Molecular Variance (AMOVA) determined if these groups (henceforth referred to as subpopulations)
were significantly differentiated. I used a Geographic Information System (GIS) landscape genetic toolbox to identify areas in the landscape with high genetic divergence
between individual samples to determine if there were identifiable genetic barriers in the
landscape.
There were three significantly differentiated mtDNA sub-populations (Fst = 0.787), and two
nDNA sub-populations that were not significantly differentiated (Fst = -0.02; Rst = -0.045),
implying obstructed mtDNA, but high nDNA gene flow across the study region. Also, gene flow
was apparent between Chobe and Kafue National Parks, where telemetry data has as of yet not
recorded inter-population movements between these parks.
The three mtDNA sub-populations were geographically differentiated and followed political
boundaries as apparent sub-populations in Botswana, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The differences
between mtDNA and nDNA genetic structuring may be explained by i) historical events that
shaped the current genetic structure (e.g. through founder-effects and persistent poaching
hotspots) and ii) intrinsic variables that influence genetic structure at a local scale (e.g. through
resource dependencies and social behaviour). The KAZA elephant population has a genetic
diversity (mtDNA diversity as the pairwise number of differences (π) = 2.59; nDNA diversity as
the mean alleles/locus and He = 7.5, 0.71) higher than other southern African populations, and
inter-population movements may be responsible for maintaining this genetic diversity.
I recommend continued support for conservation initiatives that aim at maintaining and restoring
connectivity between populations through landscape linkages, which in so doing may ensure
inter-population gene flow and uphold the current genetic state of the KAZA-TFCA elephant population. / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Zoology and Entomology / unrestricted
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