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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Wood, money and habitat to burn: environmental issues and the role of the educator

Treweek, Allison, n/a January 2002 (has links)
n/a
2

Renosterveld restoration : the role of competition, herbivory and other disturbances

Midoko-Iponga, Donald 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--University of Stellenbosch, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: West Coast Renosterveld is one of the most threatened vegetation types in South Africa. Less than 5% of the original extent of this vegetation type remains, of which 80% is on private land. In addition to fragmentation, much of the vegetation has been ploughed for crop production and then abandoned and invaded by alien plants. Restoration of transformed areas may improve the conservation status of this vegetation type. Indigenous species do not return to abandoned agricultural fields for decades even if these are adjacent to natural areas since their return is limited either by seed dispersal or seedling establishment. The aim of this study was to examine the recovery of indigenous vegetation on abandoned fields. Renosterveld, as we know it today, is an asteraceous shrubland, dominated mainly by renosterbos (Eytropappus rhinocerotis), but might have been a grassland or a grassland-shrubland mosaic. Historical records indicate that species of large game were common in the Western Cape when the early settlers arrived, but most of these have since disappeared. It is thus impossible to reconstruct exactly the ecological processes and functioning of Renosterveld. The first part of the study was designed to examine the effects of grass competition, grazing by indigenous large herbivores, and interaction of these two factors on the establishment, growth and survival of transplanted Renosterveld seedlings on an abandoned agricultural field. Experimental transplanting of indigenous shrubs into an old field showed that most of the plants investigated competed for resources with lawn grasses on the field, and competition affected the seedlings throughout the experiment. Mortality was higher, and growth was reduced for seedlings exposed to grass competition. With the exception of wild olive (Olea europaea spp.africana), herbivory alone had no significant impact on the target species. Herbivory was at a low intensity (20 ha/large animal unit); higher grazing pressures might have given different results. No interaction between competition and herbivory was found for the species investigated; competition and grazing therefore seem to influence the seedlings independently. The second part of this study was conducted to examine the effects of different management strategies, viz: brush cutting, burning and herbicide application on plant species recruitment and community composition and to ascertain their applicability by farmers for large scale restoration of Renosterveld. My comparison of the different strategies for controlling annual alien grasses indicated that these did not differ significantly in their effects on species richness. Burning reduced shrub cover and increased overall species richness and diversity. Burning also reduced grass biomass, and increased recruitment of indigenous seedlings. The use of herbicide resolved the problem of grass biomass invasion and increased shrub species richness. The herbicide application did not appear to have long-term negative effects on the soil quality. Brush cutting did not remove grass biomass on the old field. Experimental re-seeding with an indigenous grass and shrub species into treated plots resulted in low recruitment. My conclusion is that grass can reduce recruitment and growth of many indigenous shrub species. My recommendation for the restoration of old fields in West Coast Renosterveld is to apply herbicide to remove grass competition, and then, after the herbicide has degraded, to oversow the field with seeds of indigenous shrub and grass species of early successional stages to increase overall species diversity. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Weskus Renosterveld is een van die mees bedreigde plantegroei soorte in Suid Afrika. Minder as 5% van die oorspronklike omvang van hierdie plantegroei tipe is oor, en dit hoofsaaklik (80%) op privaatlande. Saam met fragmentasie, is baie Renosterveld areas ook omgeploeg vir boerdery en dan net so gelos, met die gevolg dat uitheemse plante hierdie areas ingedring het. Restorasie of herstelling van sulke bewerkte lande kan dalk die bewaringsstatus van hierdie plantegroei tipe verbeter. Natuurlike vestiging van Renosterveld spesies op sulke ou bewerkte lande gebeur nie, selfs al is daar Renosterveld direk langs so ‘n ou veld. Die hervestiging van inheemse spesies is dus tot saadverspreiding or saailingbevestiging beperk. Die doel van hierdie studie is om die stadige terugkoms van inheemse plantegroei na verlate bewerkte velde te verduidelik. Renosterveld is ‘n struikveld waarin die renosterbos (Eytropappus rhinocerotis) domineer, maar kan ook ‘n grasveld of ‘n grasveld-struikland mengsel wees. Groot herbivore was algemeen in die Wes Kaap toe die eerste settelaars gearriveer het, maar intussen het omtrent al die groot wild spesies verdwyn. Dit is dus ontmoontlik om die ekologiese prosesse en funksionering van Renosterveld presies so te herstel. Die eerste deel van hierdie studie bestudeer die effek van graskompetisie, weiding deur inheemse groot herbivore, en die interaksie tussen hierdie twee faktore op die vestiging, groei en oorlewing van oorgeplante Renosterveld saailinge in ‘n verlate ou veld. Die eksperimentele oorplanting van inheemse struike in ‘n ou land het gewys dat die meeste van hierdie plante kompeteer vir hulpbronne met kweekgras wat op die ou veld groei. Kompetisie het die saailinge deur die hele eksperiment geaffekteer. ‘n Hoër mortaliteit en verminderede groei in saailinge wat aan gras kompetisie blootgestel was, is waargeneem. Met die uitsondering van Olea europaea spp. africana, het herbivorie alleen geen betekenisvolle impak op plant spesies gehad nie. Weidingsdruk was laag (20 ha/groot vee eenheid); ‘n groter weidingsdruk sou miskien ‘n ander uitkoms gehad het. Geen interaksie tussen kompetisie en herbivorie is waargeneem in die bestudeerde plantspesies nie. Dit wil dus voorkom of kompetisie en weiding die saailinge onafhanklik van mekaar beïnvloed. Die tweede deel van hierdie studie was onderneem om die effek van verskillende behandelings (kontrole, sny, brand en herbisied toediening) op plantspesie vestiging en samestelling te bestudeer asook om bestuurmetodes te toets was deur boere op groot skaal gebruik kan word om Renosterveld te herstel. In ‘n vergelyking van verskillende bestuur metodes (kontrole, besnoeiing, brand en herbisied) om eenjarige uitheemse gras te beheer, is gewys dat die behandlings nie betekenisvol van mekaar verskil in hulle effek op spesierykheid nie. Vuur het struikbedekking verminder en totale spesies rykheid en diversitiet verhoog. Die gebruik van ‘n herbisied het die probleem van grasindringing opgelos en het ook struikspesiesrykheid verhoog. Die herbisied het nie lang termyn negatiewe effekte op grond kwaliteit gehad nie. Sny het nie gras biomassa verlaag op die ou land nie. Eksperimentele plant van inheemse grasse en struike in die behandelde areas, het lae vestiging tot gevolg gehad. My algemene afleiding is dus dat gras die hervestinging en groei van baie inheemse struikspesies verminder. Ek stel voor dat herbisied gebruik moet word om gras kompetisie te verminder. Nadat herbisied residue in die grond afgebreek is, moet die ou land met inheemse struik en grasspesies, wat in vroeë suksessie stadiums is, beplant word om sodoende totale spesiediversiteit te verhoog en uiteindelik ou bewerkte lande in Weskus Renosterveld te herstel.
3

Vegetation patterns and dynamics of Renosterveld at Agter-Groeneberg Conservancy, Western Cape, South Africa

Walton, Benjamin Alan 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc (Conservation Ecology and Entomology)--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / Swartland Shale Renosterveld is restricted to fertile fine-grained soils in the winter rainfall region of the Western Cape. Between 91% and 97% of this vegetation type is transformed, mostly due to agriculture. Remaining fragments have an irreplaceable conservation value due to a high richness of endemic geophytes. Information on renosterveld vegetation composition and response to disturbance is sparse. Research occurred at three sites near Wellington: Voëlvlei Provincial Nature Reserve (CapeNature), Elandsberg Private Nature Reserve (Elandsberg Farms (Pty.) Ltd.), and Krantzkop munitions factory (Armscor/Somchem) forming a contiguous fragment in the Agter- Groeneberg Conservancy. The primary research aim was to identify or ascertain patterns of plant succession in Swartland Shale Renosterveld and associated different-aged old fields (previously ploughed), with the interaction of grazing. The key research questions are: (1) What are the plant communities of unploughed renosterveld and different-aged old fields which originated in habitats of ploughed renosterveld? (2) What are the most characteristic features of the floristic and ecological relationship between the described plant communities in terms of ecological factors operating within the studied system? (3) Does total species and life-form group richness differ between natural vegetation and old fields? (4) Is life-form richness influenced by ploughing and grazing or the interaction between these disturbances? (5) Is life-form cover-abundance influenced by ploughing and grazing or the interaction between these disturbances? (6) Does alien plant species richness differ amongst seres, and with different levels of grazing intensity? A comparison of life-form richness and cover-abundance of old field vegetation was made with adjacent natural unploughed “controls”. The effects of ploughing on community structure, with the inclusion of grazing was established. These life-form richness comparisons also occur across a gradient of increasing large mammalian herbivore grazing intensity. Sampling was conducted in winter and spring using nested 1000m2 relevés. A hierarchical classification, description and floristic interpretation of renosterveld and old field vegetation were made using TWINSPAN, SYN-TAX 2000 and CANOCO. The samples were classified with TWINSPAN and two communities were described at the association level, namely: Ursinia anthemoides–Cynodon dactylon Grassland Community (with two variants) and the Pterygodio catholici–Elytropappetum rhinocerotis Shrubland Community (with two subassociations), respectively. The vegetation data were further hierachically classified using SYNTAX 2000 which revealed similar clustering of sample objects to that resulting from classification and ordination. Following ordination of sample objects with CANOCO, select groups of species were used to depict their response curves in relation to seral development. Briefly it was found that the effects of grazing vs. non-grazing was more pronounced on old fields than in unploughed vegetation. Overall total species and life-form richness was reduced by ploughing with old fields requiring a recovery period of 30 years to resemble unploughed vegetation. Keywords: Swartland Shale Renosterveld, phytosociology, vegetation patterns, life-forms, succession, disturbance, ploughing, grazing, old fields.

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