The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site

Bibliographical references. === Landuse from 1920 to 1981 on the Fynbos Biome Research site at Pella, approximately 40 kilometres north of Cape Town, South Africa, and its immediate environs was studied to investigate possible causal relationships between Landuse and management practices and the res...

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Main Author: Brownlie, Susan F
Other Authors: Grindley, J R
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9938
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-99382020-10-06T05:11:07Z The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site Brownlie, Susan F Grindley, J R Boucher, C Bibliographical references. Landuse from 1920 to 1981 on the Fynbos Biome Research site at Pella, approximately 40 kilometres north of Cape Town, South Africa, and its immediate environs was studied to investigate possible causal relationships between Landuse and management practices and the resultant ecosystem. Fire has constituted the major perturbation in recent history. Prior to 1960 the Fynbos Site was intentionally fired on a 3 to 4 year rotation, possibly effecting net nutrient losses to the system. After 1960, unintentional burning occurred on average every 7 years. The Fynbos Site has been lightly browsed by livestock from 1920 to 1976 and bushcut between 1965 and 1970, with minimal long-term effects. Gravel quarry pits were dug in 1971 and subsequently abandoned, constituting disturbed soils prone to colonisation by invasive acacias. The increase in cultivated land surrounding the site after 1962 served to isolate the fynbos stand from nearby fynbos communities and exacerbate erosion of soils and their subsequent deposition on the Fynbos Site. Extraneous transformation of land has served to facilitate the progressive encroachment of pest plants, principally Acacia Saligna and A. cyclops, on the Fynbos Site. The uncontrolled spread of these plants poses severe threat to the persistence of this fynbos stand. The need to incorporate possible extraneous influences on potential conservation areas into management considerations is discussed, as is the importance of size and shape of a conservation-worthy area and the need to plan viable networks of reserves in the coastal lowlands of the Western Cape. 2014-12-10T08:10:00Z 2014-12-10T08:10:00Z 1982 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9938 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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language English
format Dissertation
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description Bibliographical references. === Landuse from 1920 to 1981 on the Fynbos Biome Research site at Pella, approximately 40 kilometres north of Cape Town, South Africa, and its immediate environs was studied to investigate possible causal relationships between Landuse and management practices and the resultant ecosystem. Fire has constituted the major perturbation in recent history. Prior to 1960 the Fynbos Site was intentionally fired on a 3 to 4 year rotation, possibly effecting net nutrient losses to the system. After 1960, unintentional burning occurred on average every 7 years. The Fynbos Site has been lightly browsed by livestock from 1920 to 1976 and bushcut between 1965 and 1970, with minimal long-term effects. Gravel quarry pits were dug in 1971 and subsequently abandoned, constituting disturbed soils prone to colonisation by invasive acacias. The increase in cultivated land surrounding the site after 1962 served to isolate the fynbos stand from nearby fynbos communities and exacerbate erosion of soils and their subsequent deposition on the Fynbos Site. Extraneous transformation of land has served to facilitate the progressive encroachment of pest plants, principally Acacia Saligna and A. cyclops, on the Fynbos Site. The uncontrolled spread of these plants poses severe threat to the persistence of this fynbos stand. The need to incorporate possible extraneous influences on potential conservation areas into management considerations is discussed, as is the importance of size and shape of a conservation-worthy area and the need to plan viable networks of reserves in the coastal lowlands of the Western Cape.
author2 Grindley, J R
author_facet Grindley, J R
Brownlie, Susan F
author Brownlie, Susan F
spellingShingle Brownlie, Susan F
The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
author_sort Brownlie, Susan F
title The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
title_short The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
title_full The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
title_fullStr The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
title_full_unstemmed The effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
title_sort effects of recent landuse on a fynbos site
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9938
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