Woody vegetation change over more than 30 years in the interior duneveld of the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Long-term studies of woody plants in South Africa are scarce. This study, initiated in the late 1970s, therefore aids understanding of vegetation dynamics in the southern Kalahari by investigating woody vegetation change at and away from a watering point. METHODS: At three...

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Published inBothalia Vol. 50; no. 1; pp. 1 - 9
Main Authors van der Merwe, H., van Rooyen, N., Bezuidenhout, H., Bothma, J. du P., van Rooyen, M.W.
Format Journal Article
LanguagePortuguese
Published South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) 2020
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Summary:BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Long-term studies of woody plants in South Africa are scarce. This study, initiated in the late 1970s, therefore aids understanding of vegetation dynamics in the southern Kalahari by investigating woody vegetation change at and away from a watering point. METHODS: At three sites, all woody individuals were counted by species in plots 0.5 or 1 ha in size. Seedlings were noted separately from the >0.2 m group of individuals. RESULTS: Vachellia erioloba and shrub density decreased over time whereas dwarf shrub species' numbers fluctuated markedly. Additionally, no increase in density of known bush encroaching species (e.g. Grewia flava, Rhigozum trichotomum and Senegalia mellifera) was found in this large conservation area. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The changes in density of the woody species seem to point to the importance of particular rainfall patterns or sequences of events over different years that are responsible for these changes in the southern Kalahari, and the evident lack of bush encroachment in this conservation area supports the notion that bush encroachment in arid savannas is driven primarily by land-use practices and not by elevated carbon dioxide levels that are sometimes provided as cause for encroachment.
ISSN:2311-9284
DOI:10.38201/btha.abc.v50.i1.2