Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach

South African National Parks (SANParks) has a history of formal and informal natural resource use that is characterised by polarised views on national conservation interests and benefits to communities. Current efforts aim to determine the sustainability of existing resource use in parks and to form...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kelly Scheepers, Louise Swemmer, Wessel J. Vermeulen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-05-01
Series:Koedoe: African Protected Area Conservation and Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/999
id doaj-57510b33c4de44679679438f38297155
record_format Article
spelling doaj-57510b33c4de44679679438f382971552020-11-24T23:37:45ZengAOSISKoedoe: African Protected Area Conservation and Science0075-64582071-07712011-05-01532e1e1410.4102/koedoe.v53i2.999942Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approachKelly Scheepers0Louise Swemmer1Wessel J. Vermeulen2CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, WinnellieSavanna and Arid Parks, South African National ParksScientific Services (Knysna), South African National ParksSouth African National Parks (SANParks) has a history of formal and informal natural resource use that is characterised by polarised views on national conservation interests and benefits to communities. Current efforts aim to determine the sustainability of existing resource use in parks and to formalise these activities through the development of resource use protocols. The resource use policy of SANParks outlines principles for sustainable resource use, including greater involvement of local communities in management of protected areas and an adaptive management approach to determining sustainable use levels. This paper examines three case studies on plant use in national parks with regard to the development of criteria and indicators for monitoring resource use, and the role of thresholds of potential concern in measuring effectiveness of managing for sustainable use levels. Opportunities and challenges for resource use management are identified. Findings show that platforms for discussion and knowledge sharing, including research committees and community associations, are critical to building relationships, trust and a shared vision of sustainable resource use between stakeholders. However, additional capacity building is needed to enable local community structures to manage internal social conflicts and jealousy, and to participate fully in monitoring efforts. Long-term monitoring is essential for developing flexible harvest prescriptions for plant use, but this is a time-consuming and resource-intensive exercise. Flexible management strategies are difficult to implement and sometimes command-and-control measures are necessary to protect rare or endangered species. A holistic approach that considers resource use in national parks as a complement to broader community development initiatives offers a way forward. Conservation implications: There is no blueprint for the development of sustainable resource use systems and resource use is often addressed according to multiple approaches in national parks. However, the SANParks resource use policy provides a necessary set of guiding principles for resource use management across the national park system that allows for monitoring progress.https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/999consumptive use, harvesting protocols, Seven-week fern, Pepper-bark tree, sour figs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelly Scheepers
Louise Swemmer
Wessel J. Vermeulen
spellingShingle Kelly Scheepers
Louise Swemmer
Wessel J. Vermeulen
Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
Koedoe: African Protected Area Conservation and Science
consumptive use, harvesting protocols, Seven-week fern, Pepper-bark tree, sour figs
author_facet Kelly Scheepers
Louise Swemmer
Wessel J. Vermeulen
author_sort Kelly Scheepers
title Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
title_short Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
title_full Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
title_fullStr Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
title_full_unstemmed Applying adaptive management in resource use in South African National Parks: A case study approach
title_sort applying adaptive management in resource use in south african national parks: a case study approach
publisher AOSIS
series Koedoe: African Protected Area Conservation and Science
issn 0075-6458
2071-0771
publishDate 2011-05-01
description South African National Parks (SANParks) has a history of formal and informal natural resource use that is characterised by polarised views on national conservation interests and benefits to communities. Current efforts aim to determine the sustainability of existing resource use in parks and to formalise these activities through the development of resource use protocols. The resource use policy of SANParks outlines principles for sustainable resource use, including greater involvement of local communities in management of protected areas and an adaptive management approach to determining sustainable use levels. This paper examines three case studies on plant use in national parks with regard to the development of criteria and indicators for monitoring resource use, and the role of thresholds of potential concern in measuring effectiveness of managing for sustainable use levels. Opportunities and challenges for resource use management are identified. Findings show that platforms for discussion and knowledge sharing, including research committees and community associations, are critical to building relationships, trust and a shared vision of sustainable resource use between stakeholders. However, additional capacity building is needed to enable local community structures to manage internal social conflicts and jealousy, and to participate fully in monitoring efforts. Long-term monitoring is essential for developing flexible harvest prescriptions for plant use, but this is a time-consuming and resource-intensive exercise. Flexible management strategies are difficult to implement and sometimes command-and-control measures are necessary to protect rare or endangered species. A holistic approach that considers resource use in national parks as a complement to broader community development initiatives offers a way forward. Conservation implications: There is no blueprint for the development of sustainable resource use systems and resource use is often addressed according to multiple approaches in national parks. However, the SANParks resource use policy provides a necessary set of guiding principles for resource use management across the national park system that allows for monitoring progress.
topic consumptive use, harvesting protocols, Seven-week fern, Pepper-bark tree, sour figs
url https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/999
work_keys_str_mv AT kellyscheepers applyingadaptivemanagementinresourceuseinsouthafricannationalparksacasestudyapproach
AT louiseswemmer applyingadaptivemanagementinresourceuseinsouthafricannationalparksacasestudyapproach
AT wesseljvermeulen applyingadaptivemanagementinresourceuseinsouthafricannationalparksacasestudyapproach
_version_ 1725519330447196160