Vegetation structure and spatial heterogeneity in the Granite Supersite, Kruger National Park

Koedoe - African Protected Area Conservation and Science

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Vegetation structure and spatial heterogeneity in the Granite Supersite, Kruger National Park
 
Creator Janecke, Beanelri B.
 
Subject Ecology; Environmental Science; Wildlife Big trees; Drought; Grazers and browsers; Savanna; Sodic grazing lawn
Description Spatial heterogeneity is the unequal distribution of landscape features and consists of diversity in vegetation structure, number and size of woody plants, patchiness in grass cover, sub-canopy habitats, etc. A granite catena (hillslope) comprises of a gradient of soils, hydrology patterns and vegetation composition, creating a spatially heterogeneous area with variety in animal habitats. Objectives were to determine small-scale spatial heterogeneity along a catena near Skukuza, such as vegetation structure, patchiness, size and cover of woody and grass components, to describe certain catenal processes. Tree sizes and canopy cover were measured and the point method used on seven 100 m transects representing different catenal zones. Grasses were categorised according to grazing value, ecological status and percentage shade tolerant grasses. A total of 155 tree canopies were present. Large trees ( 5 m) occurred in riparian zone and upper midslope, but were low in number ( 4 per transect). Woody plants ranged in number from 8 to 32, canopy cover 4.5% – 33.6%, and grass cover from 47% to 69% between zones. A strong correlation was found between canopy cover and shade-tolerant grasses. Size of sub-canopy habitats are mostly determined by size of woody plants and both are important to animals. Various factors related to vegetation contributed to heterogeneity and spatial stratification patterns of the catena ecosystem.Conservation implications: Concerns about the decline in tree numbers inside Kruger National Park are addressed. Mammal habitats and plant communities are impacted by the decline. The research can be linked to the long-term exclosure studies on granites at Nkuhlu.
 
Publisher AOSIS Publishing
 
Contributor UFS Strategic Research Fund NRF Thutuka Grant
Date 2020-10-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Point method, Becvol method
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/koedoe.v62i2.1591
 
Source Koedoe; Vol 62, No 2 (2020); 12 pages 2071-0771 0075-6458
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1591/2506 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1591/2730 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1591/2731 https://koedoe.co.za/index.php/koedoe/article/view/1591/2729
 
Coverage Africa; Savanna biome; Protected areas Chronologic Transect; tree measurement
Rights Copyright (c) 2020 Beanelri B. Janecke https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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