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Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa

Arid and semi-arid systems comprise one third of the earth's surfaces. The succulent karoo alone comprises approximately 1660 endemic species and is one of the world's hotspots in terms of diversity. Although these areas are of high ecological value less than 10% of arid systems are conserved. This...

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Main Author: Monakisi, Charlotte
Other Authors: Allsopp, Nicky
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Monakisi, Charlotte
author2 Allsopp, Nicky
author_browse Allsopp, Nicky
Monakisi, Charlotte
author_facet Allsopp, Nicky
Monakisi, Charlotte
author_sort Monakisi, Charlotte
collection Thesis
description Arid and semi-arid systems comprise one third of the earth's surfaces. The succulent karoo alone comprises approximately 1660 endemic species and is one of the world's hotspots in terms of diversity. Although these areas are of high ecological value less than 10% of arid systems are conserved. This study was conducted in Paulshoek a remote village in the Leliefontein area of the Namaqualand. Historically Paulshoek has been under continuous selective grazing since the 18th century. A fence line contrast is investigated in an area that was fenced three years ago and in one that has been exposed to heavy, continuous, selective grazing over the past century (both areas were fenced prior to fencing). The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of short-term rest on key vegetation demographic parameters as well as the physical characteristics of communal river systems. No significant differences in plant species richness were observed across the fence line. However, the numbers of plants of each species within the plots were significantly different, depending on presence or absence of grazing. The grazed sites had more species tolerant of grazing such as geophytes, annuals and toxic species such as Galenia africana. Heavy grazing in this ecosystem has resulted in increased proportions of unpalatable species with a slow reduction in the number of palatable species. Species cover was significantly reduced on the grazed sites; however, these reductions were insignificant for Lyceum cinereum species due to large standard deviations. Heavy grazing of palatable sedge species (Scirpus nodosus) resulted in significant reductions in the number of flowers of plants, in the grazed sites. Grazing not only reduced the size of the plants, it also reduced flowering, fruit set and recruitment rate. There was no significant difference in the physical and geomorphologic characteristics of the river across the fence-line. This study indicates that short-term rest has major implications for plant recovery. Educating communal farmers to use a farming system that insures temporary rest on certain areas of the rangelands at certain times of the year will go a long way in improving species richness in Namaqualand.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:56.645Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25927 Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa Monakisi, Charlotte Allsopp, Nicky Hoffmann, Timm Conservation Biology Botany Arid and semi-arid systems comprise one third of the earth's surfaces. The succulent karoo alone comprises approximately 1660 endemic species and is one of the world's hotspots in terms of diversity. Although these areas are of high ecological value less than 10% of arid systems are conserved. This study was conducted in Paulshoek a remote village in the Leliefontein area of the Namaqualand. Historically Paulshoek has been under continuous selective grazing since the 18th century. A fence line contrast is investigated in an area that was fenced three years ago and in one that has been exposed to heavy, continuous, selective grazing over the past century (both areas were fenced prior to fencing). The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of short-term rest on key vegetation demographic parameters as well as the physical characteristics of communal river systems. No significant differences in plant species richness were observed across the fence line. However, the numbers of plants of each species within the plots were significantly different, depending on presence or absence of grazing. The grazed sites had more species tolerant of grazing such as geophytes, annuals and toxic species such as Galenia africana. Heavy grazing in this ecosystem has resulted in increased proportions of unpalatable species with a slow reduction in the number of palatable species. Species cover was significantly reduced on the grazed sites; however, these reductions were insignificant for Lyceum cinereum species due to large standard deviations. Heavy grazing of palatable sedge species (Scirpus nodosus) resulted in significant reductions in the number of flowers of plants, in the grazed sites. Grazing not only reduced the size of the plants, it also reduced flowering, fruit set and recruitment rate. There was no significant difference in the physical and geomorphologic characteristics of the river across the fence-line. This study indicates that short-term rest has major implications for plant recovery. Educating communal farmers to use a farming system that insures temporary rest on certain areas of the rangelands at certain times of the year will go a long way in improving species richness in Namaqualand. 2017-10-30T14:00:25Z 2017-10-30T14:00:25Z 2002 2017-03-10T10:10:29Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25927 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Botany
Monakisi, Charlotte
Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
title_full Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
title_fullStr Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
title_short Effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in Paulshoek, Namaqualand, South Africa
title_sort effect of short term rest on riverine systems associated with heavy grazing in paulshoek namaqualand south africa
topic Conservation Biology
Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25927
work_keys_str_mv AT monakisicharlotte effectofshorttermrestonriverinesystemsassociatedwithheavygrazinginpaulshoeknamaqualandsouthafrica