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Contrasting biodiversity values in four states of Eastern Province thornveldDuncan, Imogen May January 2010 (has links)
Land use and land transformation are major threats to biodiversity. Only a small percentage of land and thus biodiversity is protected within reserves. The majority of biodiversity lies in the hands of private and communal farmers and in order to protect biodiversity they must perceive it as having some value and have the means and incentive to conserve it. This study examined two things: (i) the relationship between biodiversity and measures of ecosystem health, range condition, primary production and presence of useful plants that would be expected to be of relevant use to land users, (ii) the perceptions of farmers of vegetation states that differ in the abovementioned attributes. Within the Eastern Province Thornveld of the Smaldeel area, four different vegetation states were selected for the study, namely park-like grassland with scattered Acacia karroo (“savanna”), heavily infested Acacia karroo grassland (“acacia”), thicket-grassland mosaic (“thicket”) and heavily utilised thicketgrassland in communal lands (“communal”). The four states are a consequence of different patterns of browsing and fire, in both pre-colonial and recent times. Different ecological attributes were assessed and compared for each state and the relationships between the different attributes determined. Ecosystem health, in terms of stability or resistance to erosion, infiltration/water-holding capacity, and nutrient cycling were compared using Landscape Function Analysis. The agricultural value of the different landscapes was measured using range condition assessment techniques. Plant species richness and other measures of diversity, along with their conservation and usefulness values, were compared between states. Plant productivity and biomass were compared using satellite data. The thicket state was found to be the most functional due to the added habitat complexity provided by the vegetation. It was the most biodiverse, the most useful and contained many, but not all of the important conservation species. The communal state had high biodiversity and was be fairly resilient to heavy usage, not showing the expected signs of land degradation. The savanna state, although thought of as the optimum state for cattle production, was not significantly different from the other states in terms of agricultural potential, but had the lowest values for plant diversity, browse potential, abundance of useful plant species and biomass. The acacia state had the highest and least stable values in terms of biomass production, however it was found to contain species of conservation importance. The preference that four groups of land users, namely men and women from commercial and communal farming areas, expressed for the four vegetation states was assessed using semi-structured interviews in conjunction with A3 colour photographs. The men and women from the communal areas and the men from the commercial areas valued the thicket state highly for its farming potential. The male commercial farmers also valued the savanna state highly as they perceived it as being most productive for cattle farming. Both the thicket state and the savanna state were found aesthetically pleasing by all the user groups, in line with theories of preference for modified savannas and for familiar environments. There appears to be potential for preserving biodiversity on farmland. The farmers in this study, with their very utilitarian perspective, were found to intuitively gauge the health of the landscape and recognise biodiversity as indicating good farming land. The commercial farmers were strongly influenced by economic motives and thus attracted to the savanna state, but also recognised the opportunity for a wider variety of farming activities in the thicket state. The communal farmers have a high dependence on the land for their livelihoods and preferred the thicket state for its overall usefulness. The views of the farmers indicate that the opportunity for conservation is good, however much of the thicket state lies in the communal land, where the openaccess land use system makes managing for biodiversity difficult.
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The design, implementation and assessing of an agroecological cropping system by rural KwaZulu-Natal households : its effect on their diet and food securityStrachan, Brian Douglas 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis(MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2014 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis documents a Participatory Action Research (PAR) project conducted from 2011 to 2013 in a rural communal area in southern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. The area is a microcosm of the global environmental and socio-economic polycrisis; with adult unemployment at 50 percent, 73 percent female-headed households, heavy dependence on government social grants and a food system reliant on purchased food.
Eight, mainly female-headed households (the co-researchers), assisted by the student researcher, implemented and assessed a cropping system, designed on agroecological principles, on their abandoned garden plots. The objective was to grow culturally acceptable food crops to supplement their household diets and positively affect their food security. The student researcher provided the necessary infrastructure, including goat-proof plot fences, hand tools, a grain hammermill, seed, and fertiliser.
The literature review, which also used early 1900’s photographs and contemporary isiZulu language as evidence, revealed the agroecological basis of pre-colonial agriculture. However, colonial and apartheid influences destroyed this knowledge base. The cropping system design utilized practices from this pre-colonial era combined with current agroecological techniques. The agroecological techniques employed on the plots included non-inversion tillage of planting pits using garden forks, precision placement of phosphate fertiliser and animal manures, open pollinated seeds, east-west orientated strip cropping, soil surface mulches, crop rotations including legumes and the use of chickens to control pests.
Dryland crops included maize, beans, sweet potatoes, and butternuts, with small trial vegetable patches on some plots. The research identified a method to calculate the planting frequency of these vegetables to ensure a constant annual supply, however further research is needed. The dryland crops supplemented household diets between harvests.
The formation of structured groups amongst the households proved vital to the success of the cropping system, providing mutual labour assistance, shared decision-making, building knowledge and moral support. The importance of dialogue and trust, reinforced by the student researcher’s ability to communicate in isiZulu with the co-researchers, formed the basis of both the PAR, and Focus Group Discussions(FGD), used to qualitative assess the cropping system. During these, the households reported a good understanding of the agroecological principles of the cropping system, a willingness to continue with it post research, and positive benefits, including better health, and money saved on food purchases, redirected to improve their asset base.
The World Food Programme (2008) Food Consumption Score Analysis Method (FCS), modified to show the percentage contribution of homegrown food to the FCS, provided the quantitative assessment of the cropping system. The FCS scores rose during the research, with homegrown food contributing over a third of the FCS at times. The co-researchers suggested instituting group ‘stokvels’1to finance inputs and maintain infrastructure post research. The financial implications of these ‘stokvels’ was calculated. Due to the initial success of the PAR, the research recommends a method to extend the cropping system to more households, utilizing state finance to provide the infrastructure, and the co-researchers imparting technical knowledge through farmer-to-farmer extension. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In hierdie tesis word verslag gedoen van ’n deelnemende aksienavorsingsprojek wat van 2011 tot 2013 in ’n landelike dorpsgebied in die suide van KwaZulu-Natal, Suid-Afrika, uitgevoer is. Die gebied is ’n mikrokosmos van die wêreldwye omgewings- en sosio-ekonomiese polikrisis, met volwasse werkloosheid op 50%, 73% huishoudings met vroue aan die hoof, swaar afhanklikheid van die staat se maatskaplike toelae en ’n voedselstelsel wat van gekoopte kos afhanklik is.
In die studie het agt huishoudings, wat hoofsaaklik vroue aan die hoof het (die medenavorsers), met behulp van die studentenavorser, ’n verbouingstelsel, wat op agro-ekologiese beginsels gegrond is, op hul verlate tuingrond geïmplementeer en geassesseer. Die doel was om kultureel aanvaarbare gewasse te verbou om hul huishoudelike dieet aan te vul en hul voedselsekerheid positief te beïnvloed. Die studentenavorser het die nodige infrastruktuur verskaf, met inbegrip van bokbestande omheining, handgereedskap, ’n graanhamermeul, saad en kunsmis.
Die literatuurstudie, waarin foto’s uit die 1900’s en moderne Zoeloe as bewyse gebruik is, toon die agro-ekologiese grondslag van prekoloniale landbou. Koloniale en apartheidsinvloede het egter hierdie kennisbasis vernietig. Die verbouingstelselontwerp was gegrond op praktyke uit hierdie prekoloniale era gekombineer met moderne agro-ekologiese tegnieke. Hierdie tegnieke het ingesluit nie-inversie-grondbewerking van plantgate met gebruik van tuinvurke, presisieplasing van fosfaatkunsmis en dieremis, oop bestuifde sade, oos–wes-georiënteerde strookverbouing, grondoppervlak-deklae, wisselbou met onder andere peulgewasse en die gebruik van hoenders om peste te beheer.
Droëland-gewasse het ingesluit mielies, bone, soetpatats en botterskorsies, met klein toetsgroenteakkers op sommige stukke grond. ’n Metode is in die navorsing geïdentifiseer om te bepaal hoe gereeld hierdie groente geplant moet word om ’n konstante jaarlikse voorraad te verseker. Verdere navorsing is egter nodig. Die droëland-gewasse het huishoudelike diëte tussen oeste aangevul.
Die vorming van gestruktureerde groepe onder die huishoudings het noodsaaklik geblyk te wees vir die sukses van die verbouingstelsel, waardeur wedersydse hulp met arbeid, gedeelde besluitneming, die bou van kennis en morele ondersteuning gebied is. Die belangrikheid van dialoog en vertroue, wat versterk is deur die studentenavorser se vermoë om in Zoeloe met die medenavorsers te kommunikeer, het die grondslag gevorm van die deelnemende aksienavorsingsprojek asook die fokusgroeponderhoude, wat gebruik is om die verbouingstelsel kwalitatief te assesseer. In hierdie onderhoude het die huishoudings verslag gedoen van hul grondige begrip van die agro-ekologiese beginsels van die verbouingstelsel, hul gewilligheid om ná die navorsing daarmee voort te gaan, asook die voordele wat dit bied, soos beter gesondheid en geld wat op voedselaankope gespaar is, wat heraangewend is om hul batebasis te verbeter.
Die Wêreldvoedingsprogram (2008) se Food Consumption Score- (FCS-)ontledingsmetode, wat aangepas is om die persentasie bydrae van selfgekweekte voedsel tot die FCS aan te toon, is gebruik vir die kwantitatiewe assessering van die verbouingstelsel. Die FCS-tellings het tydens die navorsing toegeneem, met selfgekweekte voedsel wat by tye tot meer as ’n derde tot die FCS bygedra het.
Die medenavorsers het voorstel dat ’n stokvel gestig word om insette te finansier en die infrastruktuur ná die navorsing in stand te hou. Die finansiële implikasies van hierdie stokvel is bereken. Op grond van die aanvanklike sukses van die deelnemende aksienavorsingsprojek stel die navorser ’n metode voor om die verbouingstelsel na meer huishoudings uit te brei met behulp van staatsfinansiering om die infrastruktuur te verskaf asook die oordrag van die medenavorsers se tegniese kennis na ander boere.
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Ecological characterisation and effects of fire and grazing on Cyrtanthus nutans (R.A.Dyer) in North-Western Kwazulu-Natal, South AfricaRuddle, Lynne Michelle 05 1900 (has links)
Cyrtanthus nutans (RA Dyer) is a KwaZulu-Natal Province near-endemic species,
classified as vulnerable in South Africa (IUCN Red Data categories). Literature
references suggest that no recent ecological research has been conducted on
Cyrtanthus nutans. Last assessed in 2007, the current study determined the
demographics and the abiotic and biotic factors that influenced the distribution and
range of Cyrtanthus nutans.
Key determinants influencing the autecology, distribution and population dynamics of
Cyrtanthus nutans were investigated. Anthropological factors influencing the decline
of populations were addressed. Two investigations were undertaken for the current
study on Cyrtanthus nutans in Dundee in North-western KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
namely a survey to determine the population dynamics and autecology of the species
and the effect key determinants have on the recruitment and survival. Sites of
occurrence and the ecological and anthropological factors that influence the existence
of plants were documented. Experimental plots were conducted to determine the
influence of climatological factors, fire and defoliation on the emergence and survival
of Cyrtanthus nutans plants.
A preference was found for soils with high nitrogen and organic carbon, low
phosphorus and acidity levels situated on slopes of < 10% on mid to lower terrain
slopes within an altitude range of between 1 100 and 1 300 m (a.m.s.l.) in the Sour
Sandveld and Moist Tall Grassveld Bioresource Groups.
The influence that climatological factors, fire and defoliation had on the emergence
and seed recruitment of Cyrtanthus nutans were determined through a small plot
experiment in the Dundee area. Mean relative humidity (%) and mean rainfall two
weeks before emergence in conjunction with treatments were highly significant
(P<0.001). Burning treatments B (fire inclusion and defoliation inclusion) and BC (fire
inclusion and defoliation exclusion) were more highly significant on the emergence of
Cyrtanthus nutans plants than any other treatments.
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Increasing fragmentation of thriving populations of Cyrtanthus nutans populations is
occurring through landuse change, mismanagement of veld and non-compliance of
legislation. Continued monitoring and awareness is essential in the survival of this
species. / Environmental Sciences / M. Sc. (Environmental Sciences)
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Animal traction and small-scale farming : a Stellenbosch case studyManjengwa, George Munyaradzi 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The main aim of this case study was to research the impact of the introduction of oxen for
draught power on Eric Swarts’ Stellenbosch farm. The research objectives were designed to find
out if the oxen helped to improve the quality of the soil, to determine their cost-effectiveness
(compared to a tractor) and other social and managerial constraints and benefits associated with
using them and also to make recommendations for small-scale farmers in developing countries.
The literature review revealed that human society faces many serious sustainability challenges
from ecosystem degradation and global warming, to massive poverty and social inequality. The
global population is growing against a background of decreasing agricultural productivity due to
degraded soils and the increased costs of farming. The adoption of farming methods that enhance
ecosystem services and depend less on external inputs is therefore essential. Animal traction is
still widely used among small-scale farmers in developing countries, but lacks policy and
investment support to make it more efficient. There are currently widespread negative opinions
about animal traction which regard it as a backward or old-fashioned technology. This research
investigated the possibility of animal traction emerging as an affordable, environmentallyfriendly and appropriate technology for small-scale farming.
The research is a case study with a qualitative, ethnographic research design in which participant
observation was key in gathering research data. A cost-benefit analysis (CBA) was carried out to
compare the cost-effectiveness of using oxen to either hiring or buying a tractor.
The findings showed that oxen were a more cost-effective means of draught power than a tractor,
not only in terms of capital costs but also maintenance and operational costs. The manure from
the oxen was both an effective way of supplying crops with essential nutrients and improving
soil biodiversity. The introduction of the oxen presented some challenges to the farmer
concerning knowledge about how animals work and other managerial challenges, but these were
overcome by learning through practice. It was found that the farmer will be able to make
significant savings in soil-amendment costs and he can control the quality of the manure to suit his needs. It was concluded that small-scale farmers who choose animal traction over tractors as
a means of draught power will realise many advantages in return. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die hoof doelwit van dié gevallestudie was om die impak van die ingebruikneming van osse as
trekkrag op Eric Swarts se plaas te Stellenbosch na te vors. Die navorsingsteikens was ontwerp
om uit te vind of die beeste gehelp het om die kwaliteit van die grond te verbeter, om hul
lonendheid vas te stel (in vergelyking met ’n trekker) asook ander sosiale en bestuursbeperkings
en -voordele wat met hul gebruik geassosieer word en ook met voorstelle vir kleinskaalboere in
ontwikkelende lande voorendag te kom.
Die literatuuroorsig navorsing het ontbloot dat die menslike samelewing met vele
volhoubaarheidsuitdagings vanaf ekosistemiese agteruitgang en aardverhitting, tot swaar
armoedigheid en sosiale ongelykhede gekonfronteer word. Die wêreld bevolking groei steeds ten
spyte van die afname in landboukundige produktiwiteit as gevolg van verlaagde grondkwaliteit
en die toenemende landboukoste. Die ingebruikneming van landboumetodes wat ekosistemiese
dienste verhoog en minder staatmaak op eksterne insette is dus noodsaaklik. Dieretrekking word
steeds algemeen in ontwikkelende landebenut, maar dit ontbreek beleids- en
beggingsondersteuning om dit meer doeltreffend te maak. Daar is tans algemeen verbreide
negatiewe sienswyse oor dieretrekksag wat dit as agterlike en oudmodiese tegnologie beskou.
Dié navorsing het ondersoek ingestel om die moontlikheid van dieretrekking as ’n bekostigbare,
omgewingsvriendelike en passende tegnologie vir kleinskaalboerdery vas te stel.
Die navorsing is’n gevallestudie met kwalitatiwe, etnografiese navorsingsontwerp waarin
deelnemerwaarneming kern is tot die insameling van data. ’n Kostewinsteanalise (KWA) was
uitgevoer om die lonenheid van beeste te vergelyk met dié van of die huur of die koop van ’n
trekker.
Die bevindings het getoon dat beeste ’n lonender wyse van trekkrag as trekkers is, nie net in
terme van kapitale koste nie, maar ook onderhouds en bedryfskoste. Die beesmis was beide ’n
doeltreffende manier om die gevasse van nodige voedingstowwe te voorsien asook om
grondbiodiversiteit te verbeter. Die ingebruikneming van beeste het sekere uitdagings vir die
boere ingehou in verband met die kennis van hoe diere werk en ander bestuursuitdagings, maar dié was oorkom deur onderrig uit ondervinding. Daar was bevind dat die boer beduidende
besparings kan maak aan grondaanvullingskoste hierdie jaar en dat hy die kwaliteit van die
beesmis kan beheer om sy behoeftes dien. Die slotsom is dat kleinskaalboere wat kies om
dieretrekking eerder as trekkers as trekkrag te gebruik, sal vele voordele hê.
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Biodiversity of predatory beetle groups, carabidae and coccinellidae and their role as bioindicators in wheat agroecosystemsMakwela, Maria Mammolawa 11 1900 (has links)
Predatory Ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) and Lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) are two of the most diverse groups found in wheat agroecosystems, globally. These groups are important from both an economic and ecological perspective due to their natural services provision. The effect of wheat agroecosystem management on species diversity, abundance, biomass and composition in South Africa is not yet documented, and there is no existing data indicating which predatory carabid and coccinellid species provides essential ecosystem services and bioindicator roles. Therefore, we examined the effects of organic, conventional and intercropped agroecosystems on ground beetle and lady beetle abundance, dried weight (biomass), composition and diversity. Sampling of wheat agroecosystems was conducted in three systems i.e. organic, conventional and organic intercropped. Post-hoc Tukey test indicated a statistically significant difference between species diversity, biomass and abundance in organic and intercropped systems compared to the conventional systems. Regression analysis indicated significant positive correlation between aphid’s density and predatory carabid and coccinellid beetles in the intercropped systems. Amongst the weather factors temperature influenced aphid density and carabid and coccinellid beetles’ abundance. PCA (Principal Component Analysis) revealed significant positive correlation between individual biomass and cropping system. Conventional system showed a negative correlations with carabid and coccinellid individual biomass. We found that some carabid and coccinellid species can be used to measure the quality of agroecosystems. This study provides a fundamental basis for identification and monitoring of carabid and coccinellid species and their role as bioindicators of ecological disturbance. The identified bioindicator species in this study can assist in developing conservation and biomonitoring strategies within agroecosystems. / Agriculture and Animal Health / M. Sc. (Agriculture)
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