Vegetation of the eastern communal conservancies in Namibia: II. Environmental drivers

Koedoe - African Protected Area Conservation and Science

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Vegetation of the eastern communal conservancies in Namibia: II. Environmental drivers
 
Creator Strohbach, Ben J. Kutuahuripa, Josephat T.
 
Subject Vegetation Ecology, Namibia; Kalahari; soil moisture; psammophyll plants; microphyll savanna; mesophyll savanna
Description The eastern communal conservancies are situated along the western fringe of the Kalahari basin. Under a very short rainfall gradient, the vegetation abruptly changes from microphyllous Acacia-dominated savannas to mesophyll savannas, dominated by Terminalia sericea and Combretum spp. We hypothesise that this is caused by changes in soil moisture availability brought about by changes in soil texture from loamy soils to deep sands (the ‘inverse texture effect’). For this analysis, we used vegetation and soils data derived from a recognisance survey of the natural resources of the study area. As the sites in the soil and vegetation surveys did not overlap, it was decided to use only synoptic data for the plant associations in the analysis. Non-metric multidimesional scaling ordination was utilised as ordination technique of the vegetation data and various environmental parameters, including soil texture, soil hydraulic parameters, climatic and fire regime parameters, were overlaid as biplots onto the resulting graph, as were various plant functional attributes particularly related to climatic conditions. The main environmental gradient identified within the study area is the rainfall gradient. This relatively short gradient, however, does not explain the marked change in vegetation observed within the study area. This change is attributed to the change in soil type, in particular, the soil texture and the associated soil hydraulic parameters of the soil. This gradient is closely correlated to leaf size, explaining the change from microphyll savannas to mesophyll savannas along the change from loamy to sandy soils. One of the lesser understood mechanisms for the survival of these mesophyll plants on sandy soils seems to be a deep root system, which is actively involved in water redistribution within the soil profile – by hydraulic lift, inverse hydraulic lift and stem flow.Conservation implications: Understanding these mechanisms will greatly assist in understanding savanna dynamics. With the threat of global climate change, we postulate that the vegetation will gradually change from the present mesophyll to a microphyll savanna, but that the grass sward will probably not develop very well. Shrub and tree removal (‘bush harvesting’) is likely to speed up the desertification process within this area.
 
Publisher AOSIS Publishing
 
Contributor Global Environment Facility through the Desert Margins Programme and the Government of Namibia
Date 2014-11-28
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — ordinations, indirect gradient analysis
Format text/html application/octet-stream text/xml application/pdf application/vnd.ms-excel application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/koedoe.v56i1.1117
 
Source Koedoe; Vol 56, No 1 (2014); 12 pages 2071-0771 0075-6458
 
Language eng
 
Relation
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https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1696 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1698 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1697 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1687 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1688 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1117/1695
 
Coverage Central Kalahari; Namibia recent Braun-Blanquet survey, soil profiles
Rights Copyright (c) 2014 Ben J. Strohbach, Josephat T. Kutuahuripa https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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