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Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration

Due to the unprecedented changes and fragmentation of ecosystems caused by human land uses and exploitation, ecological restoration is an increasingly essential topic in the field of conservation. In South Africa, a predominantly semi-arid country, invasive tree species negatively impact the limited...

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Main Author: Visagie, Marizanne
Other Authors: Janion-Scheepers, Charlene
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Visagie, Marizanne
author2 Janion-Scheepers, Charlene
author_browse Janion-Scheepers, Charlene
Visagie, Marizanne
author_facet Janion-Scheepers, Charlene
Visagie, Marizanne
author_sort Visagie, Marizanne
collection Thesis
description Due to the unprecedented changes and fragmentation of ecosystems caused by human land uses and exploitation, ecological restoration is an increasingly essential topic in the field of conservation. In South Africa, a predominantly semi-arid country, invasive tree species negatively impact the limited water resources by reducing runoff and disrupting water related ecosystem services. Private organizations, as well as the Western Cape government, have been clearing riparian areas of alien invasive trees along rivers in the Western Cape since 1995. Areas investigated in this study included three riparian sites along the Berg River in the Western Cape, habitats that are also vulnerable to environmental changes. The study focussed on monitoring restoration efforts by the Berg and Breede River Rehabilitation Programme, which involved clearing of alien invasive trees along the Berg River, followed by either active restoration (follow-up clearing and monitoring) or passive restoration (no treatment after alien plant removal). Despite soils being so vital in the field of restoration, most studies to date have investigated the aboveground impacts of restoration, with few studies on invertebrate taxa, especially belowground soil fauna. This study assessed Collembola (springtail) communities between active and passive restoration sites in comparison to invaded, non-restored sites as reference sites. Sampling was conducted during winter (2020) and winter and spring (2021) to consider the seasonal effects. From a total of 250 samples, 77,880 individual specimens and 34 morphospecies were collected and identified. Results showed that Collembola assemblages differed significantly among the different restoration treatments, especially between actively restored and invaded sites. Results from the study further suggested that active restoration may be the most effective method for bringing these communities closer to their natural state, since active restoration was found to be the most significantly different from invaded sites in terms of Collembola community composition (Kruskal-Wallis, p< 0.005) during spring 2020 and spring 2021 (p
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:50.330Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
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:11427/41356 Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration Visagie, Marizanne Janion-Scheepers, Charlene Esler, Karen belowground ecosystems Due to the unprecedented changes and fragmentation of ecosystems caused by human land uses and exploitation, ecological restoration is an increasingly essential topic in the field of conservation. In South Africa, a predominantly semi-arid country, invasive tree species negatively impact the limited water resources by reducing runoff and disrupting water related ecosystem services. Private organizations, as well as the Western Cape government, have been clearing riparian areas of alien invasive trees along rivers in the Western Cape since 1995. Areas investigated in this study included three riparian sites along the Berg River in the Western Cape, habitats that are also vulnerable to environmental changes. The study focussed on monitoring restoration efforts by the Berg and Breede River Rehabilitation Programme, which involved clearing of alien invasive trees along the Berg River, followed by either active restoration (follow-up clearing and monitoring) or passive restoration (no treatment after alien plant removal). Despite soils being so vital in the field of restoration, most studies to date have investigated the aboveground impacts of restoration, with few studies on invertebrate taxa, especially belowground soil fauna. This study assessed Collembola (springtail) communities between active and passive restoration sites in comparison to invaded, non-restored sites as reference sites. Sampling was conducted during winter (2020) and winter and spring (2021) to consider the seasonal effects. From a total of 250 samples, 77,880 individual specimens and 34 morphospecies were collected and identified. Results showed that Collembola assemblages differed significantly among the different restoration treatments, especially between actively restored and invaded sites. Results from the study further suggested that active restoration may be the most effective method for bringing these communities closer to their natural state, since active restoration was found to be the most significantly different from invaded sites in terms of Collembola community composition (Kruskal-Wallis, p< 0.005) during spring 2020 and spring 2021 (p 2025-04-03T13:00:04Z 2025-04-03T13:00:04Z 2024 2025-04-03T12:58:44Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41356 en eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle belowground ecosystems
Visagie, Marizanne
Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
title_full Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
title_fullStr Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
title_full_unstemmed Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
title_short Belowground success: Collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
title_sort belowground success collembola as indicators of restoration progress following active and passive restoration
topic belowground ecosystems
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41356
work_keys_str_mv AT visagiemarizanne belowgroundsuccesscollembolaasindicatorsofrestorationprogressfollowingactiveandpassiverestoration