A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa

Given limited time, staffing and specialist expertise, management of wetlands within biodiversity-rich protected areas of developing countries is often held back by a lack of information on the extent and nature of wetland resources. Rapid, realistic and effective wetland ecosystem assessment method...

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Main Authors: Nancy Job, D. J. Roux, H. Bezuidenhout, N. S. Cole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.00049/full
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spelling doaj-ad0bb045eefd4add89a70b706c208e4f2020-11-25T02:37:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2020-05-01810.3389/fenvs.2020.00049502760A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South AfricaNancy Job0D. J. Roux1D. J. Roux2H. Bezuidenhout3H. Bezuidenhout4N. S. Cole5Freshwater Biodiversity Unit, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Cape Town, South AfricaScientific Services, South African National Parks, George, South AfricaSustainability Research Unit, Nelson Mandela University, George, South AfricaScientific Services, South African National Parks, Kimberley, South AfricaApplied Behavioral Ecology and Ecosystem Research Unit, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of South Africa, Florida Campus, Florida, South AfricaBiodiversity Social Projects, South African National Parks, George, South AfricaGiven limited time, staffing and specialist expertise, management of wetlands within biodiversity-rich protected areas of developing countries is often held back by a lack of information on the extent and nature of wetland resources. Rapid, realistic and effective wetland ecosystem assessment methods are needed to develop a baseline for monitoring that detects trends and guides management. For our case study national park, lack of available in-house wetland expertise stimulated a novel team approach to harness wide-ranging complementary and, ultimately, indispensable expertise, spanning several branches of the national park agency: park management and rangers, scientific services, and a unit responsible for invasive alien plant control and landscape restoration. Within a year, the team developed a sufficiently comprehensive inventory which captured the variation of wetlands present in Mountain Zebra National Park, South Africa. A total of 267 features were mapped, while 62 were visited in the field and assessed through rapid verification. Careful collation of existing data and imagery informed a catchment approach, an emphasis on wetland-landscape connectivity, and strategic targeting of a sub-set of important and representative sites deserving of targeted field assessment. The remaining wetlands not visited in the field were subject to geographic information system image interpretation. Overall, this resulted in a comprehensive overview assessment of the entire Park at multiple scales. The participatory approach followed here promotes integration of the findings of the study into park planning, management and rehabilitation. The process provides a potential template for scaling and adapting to similar work in other parks and other areas that have limited funding and capacity.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.00049/fullwetland inventoryMountain Zebra National Parkprotected areasparticipatory assessmentcatchment and landscape approachwetland management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Job
D. J. Roux
D. J. Roux
H. Bezuidenhout
H. Bezuidenhout
N. S. Cole
spellingShingle Nancy Job
D. J. Roux
D. J. Roux
H. Bezuidenhout
H. Bezuidenhout
N. S. Cole
A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
Frontiers in Environmental Science
wetland inventory
Mountain Zebra National Park
protected areas
participatory assessment
catchment and landscape approach
wetland management
author_facet Nancy Job
D. J. Roux
D. J. Roux
H. Bezuidenhout
H. Bezuidenhout
N. S. Cole
author_sort Nancy Job
title A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
title_short A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
title_full A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
title_fullStr A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed A Multi-Scale, Participatory Approach to Developing a Protected Area Wetland Inventory in South Africa
title_sort multi-scale, participatory approach to developing a protected area wetland inventory in south africa
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Given limited time, staffing and specialist expertise, management of wetlands within biodiversity-rich protected areas of developing countries is often held back by a lack of information on the extent and nature of wetland resources. Rapid, realistic and effective wetland ecosystem assessment methods are needed to develop a baseline for monitoring that detects trends and guides management. For our case study national park, lack of available in-house wetland expertise stimulated a novel team approach to harness wide-ranging complementary and, ultimately, indispensable expertise, spanning several branches of the national park agency: park management and rangers, scientific services, and a unit responsible for invasive alien plant control and landscape restoration. Within a year, the team developed a sufficiently comprehensive inventory which captured the variation of wetlands present in Mountain Zebra National Park, South Africa. A total of 267 features were mapped, while 62 were visited in the field and assessed through rapid verification. Careful collation of existing data and imagery informed a catchment approach, an emphasis on wetland-landscape connectivity, and strategic targeting of a sub-set of important and representative sites deserving of targeted field assessment. The remaining wetlands not visited in the field were subject to geographic information system image interpretation. Overall, this resulted in a comprehensive overview assessment of the entire Park at multiple scales. The participatory approach followed here promotes integration of the findings of the study into park planning, management and rehabilitation. The process provides a potential template for scaling and adapting to similar work in other parks and other areas that have limited funding and capacity.
topic wetland inventory
Mountain Zebra National Park
protected areas
participatory assessment
catchment and landscape approach
wetland management
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.00049/full
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