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An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province

Land degradation and invasion by alien plants are interconnecting issues that span both natural and socio-economic systems. As a result, addressing the complexity and severity of these pressures requires the use of a multidisciplinary approach. This study aims to assess land degradation and invasive...

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Main Author: Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
Other Authors: Meadows, Michael, Jonas, Zuziwe
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
author2 Meadows, Michael, Jonas, Zuziwe
author_browse Meadows, Michael, Jonas, Zuziwe
Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
author_facet Meadows, Michael, Jonas, Zuziwe
Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
author_sort Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
collection Thesis
description Land degradation and invasion by alien plants are interconnecting issues that span both natural and socio-economic systems. As a result, addressing the complexity and severity of these pressures requires the use of a multidisciplinary approach. This study aims to assess land degradation and invasive alien plants distribution and their impacts on the ecosystem services within the WBR. An area outside the reserve was designated as a control to compare how degradation processes have evolved over the last few decades. Landsat images captured in 1989, 2000, 2013, and 2017 were used to analyse and map the land use/cover change. The images were classified into the following classes: water bodies, woody vegetation, grasslands, cultivated fields, bare lands, and settlements. Change detection performed between the years showed that the area outside the WBR has been losing grasslands and woody vegetation and gained more bare lands, cultivated fields, and settlements. On the contrary, the area within the WBR lost a significant amount of bare land and gained grasslands, woody vegetation, and a small amount of cultivated fields and settlements. The roadside survey was used to assess the distribution of invasive alien plants along the main roads in the selected areas. A single observer drive-by method was used to record the alien plants present at an interval of 5 km. To understand how the communities are being influenced by land degradation and alien plants invasion, focus group discussions were held to understand how their livelihoods are affected. Four important indicators, namely vegetation loss, land-use intensity, alien plants distribution, and population pressure, were overlaid using ArcMap 10.1 to determine the land degradation severity in both study areas. The results revealed that land degradation was severe outside the WBR, where most human activities occur, regardless of population pressure and alien plant distribution. These issues were intensifying with profound, severe implications for people's livelihoods, as land is the leading resource from which communities, both within and outside the WBR, eke their living. The WBR experienced land recovery following the proclamation of the area as a formal biosphere reserve by UNESCO, which has constrained the harmful impact of human activities. Reversing degradation and invasion by alien plant species requires sustainable land use and planning based on the current land-use practices and landscape attributes. Therefore, integrating local and scientific knowledge is helpful in the planning of sustainable and efficient land management.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36604
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:07.214Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36604 An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba Meadows, Michael, Jonas, Zuziwe Rahlao, Sebataolo environmental and geographical science Land degradation and invasion by alien plants are interconnecting issues that span both natural and socio-economic systems. As a result, addressing the complexity and severity of these pressures requires the use of a multidisciplinary approach. This study aims to assess land degradation and invasive alien plants distribution and their impacts on the ecosystem services within the WBR. An area outside the reserve was designated as a control to compare how degradation processes have evolved over the last few decades. Landsat images captured in 1989, 2000, 2013, and 2017 were used to analyse and map the land use/cover change. The images were classified into the following classes: water bodies, woody vegetation, grasslands, cultivated fields, bare lands, and settlements. Change detection performed between the years showed that the area outside the WBR has been losing grasslands and woody vegetation and gained more bare lands, cultivated fields, and settlements. On the contrary, the area within the WBR lost a significant amount of bare land and gained grasslands, woody vegetation, and a small amount of cultivated fields and settlements. The roadside survey was used to assess the distribution of invasive alien plants along the main roads in the selected areas. A single observer drive-by method was used to record the alien plants present at an interval of 5 km. To understand how the communities are being influenced by land degradation and alien plants invasion, focus group discussions were held to understand how their livelihoods are affected. Four important indicators, namely vegetation loss, land-use intensity, alien plants distribution, and population pressure, were overlaid using ArcMap 10.1 to determine the land degradation severity in both study areas. The results revealed that land degradation was severe outside the WBR, where most human activities occur, regardless of population pressure and alien plant distribution. These issues were intensifying with profound, severe implications for people's livelihoods, as land is the leading resource from which communities, both within and outside the WBR, eke their living. The WBR experienced land recovery following the proclamation of the area as a formal biosphere reserve by UNESCO, which has constrained the harmful impact of human activities. Reversing degradation and invasion by alien plant species requires sustainable land use and planning based on the current land-use practices and landscape attributes. Therefore, integrating local and scientific knowledge is helpful in the planning of sustainable and efficient land management. 2022-07-04T07:41:54Z 2022-07-04T07:41:54Z 2022 2022-07-04T07:41:25Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36604 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle environmental and geographical science
Mokubedi, Lucia Macheba
An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
title_full An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
title_fullStr An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
title_short An assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province
title_sort assessment of land degradation and alien plants invasion in the waterberg biosphere reserve limpopo province
topic environmental and geographical science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36604
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