that outside the canopy spread of the plant. (5) Plants of different life forms
were associated with one another in three zonal patterns underneath and around a
blackthron plant. (6) The relative transpiration of blackthorn and Anthephora
pubescens exceeded that of other woody and grass plants. Investigations into
the eradication of blackthorn included the use of various herbicides, mechanical
implements and fire. (1) The ester of 2, 4, 5-T mixed with diesel oil was most
effective when applied as basal spray, stump-spray, stem-notch and chemical
girdle treatments. (2) The use of mineral oils (diesel oil or power paraffin)
only, proved effective in killing juvenile blackthorn plants. (3) Effective
root kills of blackthorn were obtained with the use of fenuron pellets or
monuron dissolved in water and applied as basal soil applications. (4)
Disappointing results were obtained from the use of a Holt machine and from a
tractor-operated saw. (5) Burning the basal stems of the thicket growing
blackthorn plant with dung, sawdust or wood fires proved to be highly effective
in producing total kills of the root and top growth of this plant. Burns
obtained from dry grass were effective only in killing the aerial growth of the
plant. The killing action of the effective fire treatments is due to the
destruction of coppice buds (below the burned areas) and to the complete ring-
barking effect obtained from these burns. Certain ecological and other factors
responsible for the encroachment of woody plants in the Molopo area are
discussed. It is pointed out that the mode of the distribution of the various
woody plants in the veld was mainly determined by the structure of the seeds and
pods of these plants. The proneness of certain edaphic conditions to the
colonisation of these areas by woody plants is also illustrated. It is finally
concluded that the problem of bush encroachment is intimately related to the
economics of bush control.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : BUSH ENCROACHMENT; SAVANNA; CARRYING CAPACITY; LAND DEGRADATION;
NORTHWEST PROVINCE; SUBSIDIES; VEGETATION DYNAMICS; CLIMATE; RAINFALL; FIRE
Ref ID : 2240
767. Donaldson, C.H. Die plek en rol van vuur en meganiese beheer - praktyke by
die voorkoming en beheer van bos. Proceedings of a workshop on bush encroachment
and bush thickening held in Pretoria. Pienaar, A.J.Anonymous Pretoria:Department
of Agriculture and Fisheries. :G1-G6, 1980.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : BUSH ENCROACHMENT
Ref ID : 2241
768. Donaldson, C.H. Omvang van bosindringing in die bosveldgebied van die
Transvaalstreek. Proceedings of a workshop on bush encroachment and bush
thickening held in Pretoria. Pienaar, A.J.Anonymous Pretoria:Department of
Agriculture and Fisheries. :A1-A3, 1980.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : BUSH ENCROACHMENT
Ref ID : 1328
769. Donaldson, C.H. and Vorster, M. Veldbestuur in die Karoo. Weiding: 'n
strategie vir die toekoms.Anonymous Anonymous Pretoria:Departement van Landbou
en Watervoorsiening. :1-28, 1989. 0-621-12073-1.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : RAINFALL; CLIMATE; DROUGHT; FYNBOS; VELD CONDITION; EROSION
Notes : The Karoo consists mainly of areas situated in the central and western
Cape. It encompasses an extensive area of about 37 million ha, about 30% of RSA
land. It's rainfall measures between 100 to 400 mm per annum, and occurs
chiefly in late summer. The mountainous and western areas are usually also
blessed with some winter rain. The climate is severe with warm, dry summers and
extremely cold winters. Spring is often quite changeable and is marked by dry
westerly winds and severe droughts. The topogrophy, ground and geological
formations are also changeable as is the plant growth. Generally, the ground is
flat, stony and alkaline. Plants consist mainly of a mixture of regrowth, karoo
bushes, grasses and shrubs. The eastern areas of the Karoo consists mainly of
sweet veld. As one moves more in a westerly direction, the grass component
changes progressively to desert grasses eg. Stipagrostis spp. As rainfall
decreases towards the western areas, grass covering decreases and secondary
growth and struggling plants become an important part of plant life. In
mountainous areas, one finds more sour grass species (eg. Merxmuellera spp.) and
fynbos. Due to the low rainfall, changes in topography, ground and geological
formations lead to changes in veld conditions within relatively small areas.
Karoo veld is generally sweet or tasty and can be fed to livestock throughout
the year. Grasses remain sweet and nurturing for a relatively lengthy duration,
while the brush and shrubs give nourishment during winter. The production of
karoo veld is particularly low and variable and the veld is also singularly
vulnerable to overgrazing. The bush component is reasonably stable and
resistant against exploitation compared to the grass component, but it also
reacts relatively slowly to rehabilitation. Farmers must therefore take care
not to exploit this component. The grass component reacts much faster and
damage to this component frequently leads to rapid encroachment by bush. The
relationship between beneficial versus destructive plants is relatively good on
undamaged karoo veld. Unfortunately there are large areas in the Karoo where
this relationship is not healthy and the veld has been badly damaged. The karoo
veld has also been subjected to selective grazing due to the great variation in
palatability of grazing. In addition, erosion has taken its toll particularly
where there is little ground cover. Drought is a general problem especially in
the western areas, particularly in spring and late summer. The problem of
unchecked veld degradation is extremely real in the Karoo. This is usually as a
result of ignorant grazing practices, especially overgrazing. Factors which
contribute to degradation include: droughts, rainfall patterns; and, indirectly,
economic pressures. The veld condition varies generally between reasonable and
weak. Overall, it appears that the western and southern areas are in a worse
condition than are the central and eastern areas.
Ref ID : 290
770. Doornkamp, J.L. and Tyson, P.D. A note on the aerial distribution of
suspended sediment yield in South Africa. Journal of Hydrology 20:335-340, 1973.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : SOIL EROSION; SEDIMENTATION
Ref ID : 1823
771. Downing, B.H. Reactions of grass communities to grazing and fire in the
sub-humid lowlands of Zululand. Proceedings of the Grasslands Society of
Southern Africa 9:33-37, 1974.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : FIRE
Abstract : A stratified sample of 350 plots was used to record grass species
presence, the physical conditions of grasses and forbs, and to assess grazing
usage. Normal association-analysis of the sample data identified and
characterised the grass communities present which, on a plant successional
basis, were found to be part of a retrogressive sequence induced by increasing
grazing usage and the elimination of veld fires.
Ref ID : 164
772. Downing, B.H. Environmental consequences of agricultural expansion in South
Africa since 1850. South African Journal of Science 74:420-422, 1978.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : DESERTIFICATION ASSESSMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY; AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT; STOCKING RATE; PRODUCTION POTENTIAL; CULTIVATION; CONSERVATION;
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; SOIL EROSION; EROSION
Notes : Eighty-three percent of the land in SA is used for agricultural
purposes. Some 11% of the agricultural land is suitable for cultivation,
whereas 82% is basically suited to natural grazing only. This paper examines the
hypothesis that environmental degradation arising from these usages in the
recent past is sufficiently serious to have economic and conservation
implications greater than were previously supposed. An attempt is made to draw
together a diversity of information, particularly from government reports, in
order to obtain some ecological perspective of the problem as a whole. A
paucity of environmental and vegetation information for past and even present
times necessitates some extrapolation of information from data on agricultural
production, soil erosion and exotic weeds for purposes of estimating the
environmental trends. These data are open to various interpretations,
especially so in the case of agricultural production where a number of
interacting components, including consumer demand and economic conditions, can
affect production. Such an empirical approach is nevertheless needed if some
assessment is to be made of the important subject of environmental change
because adequate, direct records pertinent to the last 1 000 years are unlikely
to be discovered in the immediate furture.
Ref ID : 291
773. Downing, B.M. Subsurface erosion as a geomorphological agent in Natal.
Tr.Geol.Soc.South Africa 71:131-134, 1997.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : SOIL EROSION; KWAZULU NATAL; GEOMORPHOLOGY
Ref ID : 1343
774. Dransfield, R.D., Williams, B.G., and Brightwell, R. Control of Tsetse
flies and Trypanosomiasis- myth or reality. 1991.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : AID; POPULATION; RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Abstract : The African trypanosomiases are among Africa's most devastating
diseases. The human disease, sleeping sickness, and the animal disease, nagana,
are caused by typanosomes, protozoan parasites transmitted by tsetse flies,
Glossina spp. Attempts have been made to control tsetse and trypanosomiasis for
over 70 years, supported by ever increasing amounts of foreign aid. Although
progress has been made in the control of sleeping sickness this disease still
persists in many countries. Nagana excludes cattle from many of the potentially
most productive areas of Africa and its major constraint on economic
development. In this paper we review the control of tsetse and tryponosomiasis
in the light of recent progress in our understanding of tsetse population
dynamics, with special reference to the experience gained in tsetse control on a
Maasai ranch at Nguruman in the Rift Valley of Kenya, and make suggestions for
the management and funding of future control programmes in relation to rural
development.
Ref ID : 653
775. Dregne, H.E. Erosion and soil productivity in Africa. Journal of Soil and
Water Conservation 45(4):431-436, 1990.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : SOIL EROSION; PRODUCTION POTENTIAL; SOUTHERN AFRICA; LAND
DEGRADATION; EROSION; LESOTHO; SWAZILAND; ZIMBABWE; WIND EROSION; MAPS;
POPULATION; SOIL CONSERVATION; CONSERVATION
Notes : Irreversible soil productivity losses from water erosion appear to be
serious on a national scale in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia in North Africa; in
Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda in East Africa; in Nigeria and northern Ghana in
West Africa; and in Lesotho, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe in southern Africa. Wind
erosion apparently has reduced long-term productivity by more than 50% in parts
of southeastern Tunisia. Some evidence indicates that a number of other
countries have suffered considerable productivity loss also, but the location
and magnitude of the damage cannot be assessed adequately to delineate the areas
on the erosion map. Those countries include Burkina Faso and Niger in West
Africa; Burundi and Rwanda in East Africa; and Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique,
and South Africa in southern Africa. All have been eroded, sometimes severely,
but the effect on productivity is unclear. Many knowledgeable observers believe
that the erosion map understates the erosion productivity problem. They may
well be correct, but that remains to be shown. Whatever the present situation
is, it seems certain to become worse in the near future because populations are
growing rapidly and there is little evidence that current soil conservation
programmes are effective. Water erosion is the dominant threat to long-term
soil productivity and the ability of humans to feed themselves. Wind erosion is
nearly ubiquitous in the arid regions. Although it has obvious and widespread
off-site impacts on human well-being, its impact on crop growth and potential
soil productivity is largely unknown in economic terms.
Ref ID : 1287
776. Drewers, R.H. and Venter, A.D. Physical planning of veld. Grazing
management a strategy for the future.Anonymous Anonymous Pretoria:Department of
Agriculture and Water Supply. :1-5, 1989. 0 621 11410 3.
Reprint : In File,
Ref ID : 1350
777. Drewes, R.H. and Venter, A.D. Physical planning of the veld.
Pretoria:Department of Water Supply. , 1985.
Reprint : In File,
Ref ID : 1290
778. Drewes, R.H. and Venter, A.D. Physical planning of veld. Grazing management
a strategy for the future.Anonymous Anonymous Pretoria:Department of Agriculture
and Water Supply. :1-5, 1989. 0 621 11410 3.
Reprint : In File,
Notes : The physical planning of veld involves the subdivision of the veld into
camps, the supply and correct placing of watering points and gates and the
provision of passages to allow access to certain camps. It is often thought
that subdivision of the veld into camps is done primarily for better control and
management of different classes of animals on the farm. It is also often
claimed that camps are necessary for the implementation of a system of
rotational grazing and rotational rest. Although these reasons are both valid,
there is a more fundamental reason requiring the veld to be subdivided into
camps, namely that the grazing animal tends to give preference to certain parts
of the veld, giving rise to overgrazing, whilst other areas tend to be avoided
which in turn leads to undergrazing in such areas. It has not yet been
established beyond doubt why animals prefer certain areas and avoid others. It
is also still unknown how the animal manages to select the same area for
preferential grazing. What has, however, been established is that the
palatability of a specific area of veld can be coupled with one or more of the
following environmental features: (1) position in the landscape, that is the
plateau, the slope, the plain or the water course; (2) aspect, that is whether
the slope faces north, south, east or west; (3) slope; (4) parent rock; and (5)
soil form and series. The more these environmental factors vary from place to
place on the farm, the greater will the differences in palatability of the veld
be. It is correct to state therefore that on farms where the topography is
broken and/or parent rocks vary considerably, substantial differences in
palatability will occur. On the other hand, on a farm where the topography is
fairly flat and/or the parent rocks are the same over large areas, no marked
differences in palatibility will be apparent.
Ref ID : 1295
779. Drewes, R.H. and Venter, A.D. Fisiese beplanning van die veld. Weiding 'n
strategie vir die toekoms.Anonymous Anonymous Pretoria:Departement van Landbou
en Watervoorsiening. :1-6, 1989. 0 621 11409 x.
Reprint : Not in File,
Ref ID : 1382
780. Dreyer, L. The dynamics of community non-compliance with basic water
supply.Anonymous Pretoria:Water Research Commission. TT93/98:1-57, 1998.
Reprint : In File,
Notes : This research studied the problem of non-compliance for payment of
water, from the perspective of community members. A number of projects were
studied to this end. A research team comprising the project leader and a lady
familiar with the language and customs of each province visited villages in
which the projects were situated, unannounced. Conversations were conducted
with ordinary villagers, village leaders and water committeees on water matters,
including the project. Men and women, individually and in groups, were spoken
to. The research team was received in a friendly manner by the villagers who
were all very willing to talk about the matter. The results of the research
pointed to problems with the conceptualisation of the national water rural
community supply initiative. The water supply programme was designed to provide
each household with 25 litres of clean water per person per day within 200
metres. This is intended to meet the basic water needs of the villagers and for
which they are to pay operations and maintanance costs. In the projects studied
here, agreements were negotiated with elected community representatives (who
comprise a water committee) while community members were trained to manage the
projects as well as the ultimate water scheme. The research found that many
communities already had their basic needs for water met, and wanted a higher
level of service than the national water supply programme envisaged. The
projects that were successful, were situated in villages with a dire need for
water and who benefitted appreciably from the project. When the communities
that felt their basic need for water was already satisfied (even if it was not
clean water), or found that their expectations for a higher level of service
(which they interpreted as a tap in their own yards) would not be met, they
withdrew their payments. The collapse of water projects did not happen simply
and directly. There were usually other problems during implementation which
were manifest reason for project failure, but which the water committee or
community in general could not find enough enthusiasm to resolve, probably
because they did not really need the water. The second problem regarding the
conceptualisation of the water delivery programme, is the assumption that
community cohesiveness is a valid basis for the election of a water committee
with whom outsiders can negotiate and conclude agreements. The research cast
doubts on this assumption. In the cases where there did appear to be
significant community cohesion, the cohesion itself was sometimes the last straw
leading to the collapse of the project. In these cases, the community preferred
to abandon the project rather than risk internal conflict over water matters.
Within the projects themselves, there were a number of reasons for project
failure. These are: weak community leadership, lack of communication between
the water committee and the community, lack of project management expertise,
impatient and ill-advised engineering consultants, unequal benefits from the
water scheme to community members, projects proceeding without contributions
from all community members, no means of forcing community members to pay, multi-
village schemes which are too difficult for water committees to manage, a low
level of service, unwillingness to give money to fellow villagers, and the role
played by organisations such as SANCO and the ANC Youth League. Affordability,
although used as an excuse, did not appear to be the real reason for community
non-compliance with projects. The report recommends that the national water
initiative be adjusted to provide for a higher level of service where
communities feel their basic need for water has already been met. This would
entail taps in each yard where the water source can support this. Users should
pay towards the higher level of service as well as the operations and
maintenance costs, preferably by prepayments. Porjects should be undertaken
with community consultation and include some kind of provision for the indigent.
Ref ID : 527
781. Drummond, J. Towards a geography of development for the rural periphery.
In: Geography in a changing South Africa, edited by Rogerson, C. and McCarthy,
J.Cape Town:Oxford University Press, 1992,p. 265-280.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; COMMUNAL AREA
Ref ID : 1888
782. Du Pisanie, A.L. Klimatologie - hoe beinvloed die klimat die
boerderybedryf. Veld Trust Conference on the conservation status of agricultural
resources in the RSA. Du Preez, J.F.Anonymous Pretoria:Unisa. , 1990.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : CONSERVATION
Notes : This article describes the importance of taking weather into account
before deciding what type of farming is suited to specific areas. It is also
shown that climatology may be used to assist farmers make sound managerial
decisions, both for the medium- and long-term. Climatology offers people an
excellent opportunity to work with nature, rather than against it, and so
prevent costly mistakes being made.
Ref ID : 2210
783. Du Plessis, H.M. Water quality and irrigation in South Africa.Anonymous
Water Research Commission. , 1998.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : WATER QUALITY; IRRIGATION
Ref ID : 2134
784. Du Plessis, H.M. and Van Veelen, M. Water quality: salinization and
eutrophication time series and trends in South Africa. South African Journal of
Science 87:11-16, 1991.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : WATER QUALITY; SALINIZATION
Ref ID : 1449
785. du Plessis, M.A. The effects of fuelwood removal on the diversity of some
cavity-using birds and mammals in South Africa. Biological Conservation 74:77-
82, 1995.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : BIODIVERSITY; DEFORESTATION; EASTERN CAPE; FOREST; ENERGY; PLANT-
ANIMAL INTERACTIONS
Abstract : Although the sustainability of the woodfuel resource has been the
cause for concern in many developing countries, few studies have considered the
impact of fuelwood utilisation on biota other than trees. In this study, I show
that in the eastern Cape Province, South Africa, the increasing removal of dead
wood over less than a decade negatively affected the diversity of cavity-using
vertebrate species. More specifically, this study provides evidence that, in
South African riverine forest habitats, cavity-using forest-edge species, and
species that are limited to making holes in soft-wood substrata, may soon
disappear from utilised areas. It may be shortsighted to consider the
sustainability of the fuelwood resource in isolation of the protection of
biodiversity. This study serves to point out the dangers of overlooking the
effects of fuelwood utilisation practices.
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