Megaherbivores in succulent thicket: resource use and implications
- Authors: Landman, Marietjie
- Date: 2012
- Subjects: Elephants , African elephant , Black rhinoceros , Succulent plants
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:10689 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1007956 , Elephants , African elephant , Black rhinoceros , Succulent plants
- Description: This study aims to develop a predictive understanding of the resource use, impacts and interactions of elephant Loxodonta africana and black rhinoceros Diceros bicornis in the succulent thickets of the Eastern Cape, South Africa. While these megaherbivores typically dominate the biomass, elephant are more abundant, such that their impacts off-set that of all other herbivores. Consequently, this thesis has three main foci: first, developing a mechanistic understanding of the influences of elephant; second, developing predictive insights into elephant impacts on plant communities; finally, an understanding of the knockon-effects of the impacts for coexisting rhinoceros. Thus, by documenting the diet and dietary preferences of elephant, I firstly show that only about 18 percent of the species previously thought vulnerable to herbivory, occur in the diet. This refutes the generally held belief that elephant herbivory is the primary driver of decline among plants, and emphasizes the likely contribution of other mechanisms (e.g. trampling, knock-on-effects, etc.). Thus, the accurate prediction of the impacts caused by elephant requires an understanding of previously marginalized mechanisms. From here, I quantify >50 years of impacts on the thicket shrub community and test their spatial and temporal extent near water. I confirm the vulnerability of thicket to transformation (particularly near water) as the accumulated influences of elephant reduce community composition and structure, and predict that these impacts will eventually bring about landscape-level degradation and a significant loss of biodiversity. Importantly, results show an uneven distribution of effects between elements of this community: from community composition and structure, to the structure of individual canopy species and ecological functioning. While these findings confound our interpretation of the extent of the impacts, it demonstrates the importance of explicitly recognizing biodiversity and heterogeneity for the conservation management of elephant. Finally, I test the consequences of the impacts for coexisting rhinoceros. While I show that this causes rhinoceros to change their foraging strategies in the presence of elephant at high densities, I also show that elephant may facilitate access to food for rhinoceros at reduced densities. These findings indicate the importance of elephant in driving the structure and composition of the thicket shrub community and the consequences of this for coexisting large herbivores. Thus, developing a predictive understanding of the spatial and temporal variations of elephant impacts between elements of biodiversity and the mechanisms driving these changes are key to their management. This implies that the effective conservation management of elephant can only be achieved through the careful, scientific design of monitoring programmes.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2012
- Authors: Landman, Marietjie
- Date: 2012
- Subjects: Elephants , African elephant , Black rhinoceros , Succulent plants
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:10689 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1007956 , Elephants , African elephant , Black rhinoceros , Succulent plants
- Description: This study aims to develop a predictive understanding of the resource use, impacts and interactions of elephant Loxodonta africana and black rhinoceros Diceros bicornis in the succulent thickets of the Eastern Cape, South Africa. While these megaherbivores typically dominate the biomass, elephant are more abundant, such that their impacts off-set that of all other herbivores. Consequently, this thesis has three main foci: first, developing a mechanistic understanding of the influences of elephant; second, developing predictive insights into elephant impacts on plant communities; finally, an understanding of the knockon-effects of the impacts for coexisting rhinoceros. Thus, by documenting the diet and dietary preferences of elephant, I firstly show that only about 18 percent of the species previously thought vulnerable to herbivory, occur in the diet. This refutes the generally held belief that elephant herbivory is the primary driver of decline among plants, and emphasizes the likely contribution of other mechanisms (e.g. trampling, knock-on-effects, etc.). Thus, the accurate prediction of the impacts caused by elephant requires an understanding of previously marginalized mechanisms. From here, I quantify >50 years of impacts on the thicket shrub community and test their spatial and temporal extent near water. I confirm the vulnerability of thicket to transformation (particularly near water) as the accumulated influences of elephant reduce community composition and structure, and predict that these impacts will eventually bring about landscape-level degradation and a significant loss of biodiversity. Importantly, results show an uneven distribution of effects between elements of this community: from community composition and structure, to the structure of individual canopy species and ecological functioning. While these findings confound our interpretation of the extent of the impacts, it demonstrates the importance of explicitly recognizing biodiversity and heterogeneity for the conservation management of elephant. Finally, I test the consequences of the impacts for coexisting rhinoceros. While I show that this causes rhinoceros to change their foraging strategies in the presence of elephant at high densities, I also show that elephant may facilitate access to food for rhinoceros at reduced densities. These findings indicate the importance of elephant in driving the structure and composition of the thicket shrub community and the consequences of this for coexisting large herbivores. Thus, developing a predictive understanding of the spatial and temporal variations of elephant impacts between elements of biodiversity and the mechanisms driving these changes are key to their management. This implies that the effective conservation management of elephant can only be achieved through the careful, scientific design of monitoring programmes.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2012
The lost valley
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Valley , High noon , River Zambezi , Tonga , Valley Tonga , Victoria Falls , Kariba , The Trap , Hills , Cliffs , Escarpments , Insects , Bees , Vegetation , Baobabs , Elephants , Birds , Rooster , Chief Chipepo , Huts , Field , Greeting , Salutation , Mill stones , Grinding song , Housewife , Meals , Pestle and Mortar , David Livingstone , Chipepo , Drinking , Drums , Aeroplanes , Widows , Dam , High god , Ancestors , Rain , Crops , Rain shrine , Clapping for rain , Holy man , Singing , Flood , Construction , Summer , Lilac light , Millet , Trees , Corn , Animals , Hippo , Corn planting song , Xylophone , Italian contractors , Pumpkin , Ash , Stools , Pipe , Clay pot , Hubble Bubble Pipe , Party , Dancing , Fire , Laughing , Story-telling , Make-believe , Wandering musician , Moon , Horns , Funeral , Death , New-born , Chatter , Pounding , Relocation , Flute , Lament , Pounding song , Doves , Deza mbira , Drinking song , Anrosi Kaniamba , Jerevani Siakuteka , Muzimu wandiyanda moyo , Kela menda , Rain song , Tuwamba , Hammering , Gogogo , Kingaridi , Shamutanda , Muntundu , Mujinji , Pininga , Pati , Ngoma , Ngoma for a Dead Person , Lala , Newspaper reporter , Airman
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15103 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008531 , Reel number: BC140
- Description: A feature programme for broadcasting on the Batonga people of the Zambesi Valley which was submerged beneath the waters of the Kariba Dam, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Valley , High noon , River Zambezi , Tonga , Valley Tonga , Victoria Falls , Kariba , The Trap , Hills , Cliffs , Escarpments , Insects , Bees , Vegetation , Baobabs , Elephants , Birds , Rooster , Chief Chipepo , Huts , Field , Greeting , Salutation , Mill stones , Grinding song , Housewife , Meals , Pestle and Mortar , David Livingstone , Chipepo , Drinking , Drums , Aeroplanes , Widows , Dam , High god , Ancestors , Rain , Crops , Rain shrine , Clapping for rain , Holy man , Singing , Flood , Construction , Summer , Lilac light , Millet , Trees , Corn , Animals , Hippo , Corn planting song , Xylophone , Italian contractors , Pumpkin , Ash , Stools , Pipe , Clay pot , Hubble Bubble Pipe , Party , Dancing , Fire , Laughing , Story-telling , Make-believe , Wandering musician , Moon , Horns , Funeral , Death , New-born , Chatter , Pounding , Relocation , Flute , Lament , Pounding song , Doves , Deza mbira , Drinking song , Anrosi Kaniamba , Jerevani Siakuteka , Muzimu wandiyanda moyo , Kela menda , Rain song , Tuwamba , Hammering , Gogogo , Kingaridi , Shamutanda , Muntundu , Mujinji , Pininga , Pati , Ngoma , Ngoma for a Dead Person , Lala , Newspaper reporter , Airman
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15103 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008531 , Reel number: BC140
- Description: A feature programme for broadcasting on the Batonga people of the Zambesi Valley which was submerged beneath the waters of the Kariba Dam, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
The lost valley (New Edition)
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Valley , River Zambezi , Tonga , Valley Tonga , Victoria Falls , Kariba , The trap , Hills , Cliffs , African , Wilderness , Trees , Bees , Chief Chipepo , Thatched huts , Lions , Elephants , Hippopotamus , Grinding stones , Pounding , Millet , Singing , Pestle and Mortar , Housewife , Livingstone, David , Drums , Clapping , Dance tune , Love song , Siakuteka, Jerevani , Kaniamba, Anrosi , Deza mbira , Kalumbo bow , Aeroplanes , Aerial survey , Summer , Drought , Rain shrine , Mulende , Mwami , Pangazana , Mwisampisia , Baobab , Sinefwala , Drummers , Gogogo , Kingaridi , Chamutanda , Muntundu , Mujinji , Pininga , Pati , Antelope horns , Drinking , Animals , Chikorekore , Floods , Italian contractors , Calabash , Clay pots , Carved stools , Ngoma for a dead person , Inching up , Great serpent , Goodbye , Ngoma for a dead valley , Dam , Complete , Trap closed , Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15125 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012051 , Reel numbers: BC142, BC143
- Description: A feature programme for broadcasting on the Batonga people of the Zambesi Valley which was submerged beneath the waters of the Kariba Dam, being edited version for the broadcast by the British Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Valley , River Zambezi , Tonga , Valley Tonga , Victoria Falls , Kariba , The trap , Hills , Cliffs , African , Wilderness , Trees , Bees , Chief Chipepo , Thatched huts , Lions , Elephants , Hippopotamus , Grinding stones , Pounding , Millet , Singing , Pestle and Mortar , Housewife , Livingstone, David , Drums , Clapping , Dance tune , Love song , Siakuteka, Jerevani , Kaniamba, Anrosi , Deza mbira , Kalumbo bow , Aeroplanes , Aerial survey , Summer , Drought , Rain shrine , Mulende , Mwami , Pangazana , Mwisampisia , Baobab , Sinefwala , Drummers , Gogogo , Kingaridi , Chamutanda , Muntundu , Mujinji , Pininga , Pati , Antelope horns , Drinking , Animals , Chikorekore , Floods , Italian contractors , Calabash , Clay pots , Carved stools , Ngoma for a dead person , Inching up , Great serpent , Goodbye , Ngoma for a dead valley , Dam , Complete , Trap closed , Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15125 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012051 , Reel numbers: BC142, BC143
- Description: A feature programme for broadcasting on the Batonga people of the Zambesi Valley which was submerged beneath the waters of the Kariba Dam, being edited version for the broadcast by the British Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
The Sound of Africa: Music of three Northern Rhodesian mines
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Marimba , Malimba , Victoria Falls , Bulawayo , Zimbabwe , Southern Rhodesia , Trees , Mopani , Wankie , Elephants , Coal mine , Lozi , Dance song , Siyomboka , Xylophone , Drums , Mbira , Hand piano , Courting song , Marriage , Mosquito net , Lament , Fairytale , Tonga , Bango , Board zither , Women , Northern Rhodesia , Petauke , Zambia , The Watch Tower , Christian , Sect , Broken Hill Mine , Mining , Lusaka , Serenje , Lala , David Livingstone , Chitambo Village , Drumming , Sai dance , Kazembe , Mother of Jesus , Death , Mufilirwa , Copper mines , Tumbuka-Henga , Pounding song , Mari is going to marry a Henga , Girl‘s initiation song , Threshing song , The Chief‘s Train , Jumbo‘s Train , Bemba , Kasama , Kalela , Kalela dance , Strutting , Calypso , Barotseland , Milupa drum , Kalanga , Chief Wangi , Kangombio , Kalimba , Plateau Tonga , Valley Tonga , Zambezi , Reef Gold Mines , Nyakyusa , Southern Tanganyika , Nsenga , Native Religious Sect , Watchtower , Wankie Coal Mine , Petauke District , Northern Rhodesian Mining Settlement , Chitambo‘s village , Kankowele , Leg rattles , The Great Hill , Lala Drum rhythms , Edward Kalunga , Chila dance , Mama Jesu , Copper Belt , Mufulira , Tumbuka Henga , Rumpi , Nyasaland , Belgian Congo , Canna seeds , Chigwinini chikuko , Elmas Nachilwe , Shitima wa Jumbo , The Chief‘s train , Jumbo‘s train , Chief Jumbo , Ruben Tancadi Mbuluwundi , Paramount Chief , Praying mantis , Eagle , Witch , Nkhendanga uteka , Comedy Harmonists
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15089 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008517 , Reel number: BC093
- Description: 7th programme in ‘The Sound of Africa‘ Series III of illustrated talks by Hugh Tracey and Peggy Tracey on their travels in search of African music, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh , Tracey, Peggy
- Subjects: Marimba , Malimba , Victoria Falls , Bulawayo , Zimbabwe , Southern Rhodesia , Trees , Mopani , Wankie , Elephants , Coal mine , Lozi , Dance song , Siyomboka , Xylophone , Drums , Mbira , Hand piano , Courting song , Marriage , Mosquito net , Lament , Fairytale , Tonga , Bango , Board zither , Women , Northern Rhodesia , Petauke , Zambia , The Watch Tower , Christian , Sect , Broken Hill Mine , Mining , Lusaka , Serenje , Lala , David Livingstone , Chitambo Village , Drumming , Sai dance , Kazembe , Mother of Jesus , Death , Mufilirwa , Copper mines , Tumbuka-Henga , Pounding song , Mari is going to marry a Henga , Girl‘s initiation song , Threshing song , The Chief‘s Train , Jumbo‘s Train , Bemba , Kasama , Kalela , Kalela dance , Strutting , Calypso , Barotseland , Milupa drum , Kalanga , Chief Wangi , Kangombio , Kalimba , Plateau Tonga , Valley Tonga , Zambezi , Reef Gold Mines , Nyakyusa , Southern Tanganyika , Nsenga , Native Religious Sect , Watchtower , Wankie Coal Mine , Petauke District , Northern Rhodesian Mining Settlement , Chitambo‘s village , Kankowele , Leg rattles , The Great Hill , Lala Drum rhythms , Edward Kalunga , Chila dance , Mama Jesu , Copper Belt , Mufulira , Tumbuka Henga , Rumpi , Nyasaland , Belgian Congo , Canna seeds , Chigwinini chikuko , Elmas Nachilwe , Shitima wa Jumbo , The Chief‘s train , Jumbo‘s train , Chief Jumbo , Ruben Tancadi Mbuluwundi , Paramount Chief , Praying mantis , Eagle , Witch , Nkhendanga uteka , Comedy Harmonists
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15089 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008517 , Reel number: BC093
- Description: 7th programme in ‘The Sound of Africa‘ Series III of illustrated talks by Hugh Tracey and Peggy Tracey on their travels in search of African music, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
The Sound of Africa: Northern Congo
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh
- Subjects: Jimbo ya Telofoma , Ituri , Pygmies , Congo River , Hot climate , Ngala , Simone , La Societe Harmonie , Clarinets , Guitar , Bottle , Friction stick , Amina-e , Call and response , Story telling , Tales , Jean Pierre , Moral story , Safari ya Basaka , Message drums , Lokele , Drum Signals , Elephants , Zande , Cornacks , La la la Lise , Xylophones , Dancing , Kponiylo , Lute , Two stringed fiddle , Medje , Nenjenje , Love song , Likembe , Malimba , Hand piano , Dzoli , Bembele Henri de Bon Coeur , Histoire , Onole , Slit drums , Talking drum , W H Ford
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15066 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008494 , Reel numbers: BC037, BC038, BC039, BC040
- Description: 11th programme in ‘The Sound of Africa‘ Series A of illustrated talks by Hugh Tracey on his travels in search of African music, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Tracey, Hugh
- Subjects: Jimbo ya Telofoma , Ituri , Pygmies , Congo River , Hot climate , Ngala , Simone , La Societe Harmonie , Clarinets , Guitar , Bottle , Friction stick , Amina-e , Call and response , Story telling , Tales , Jean Pierre , Moral story , Safari ya Basaka , Message drums , Lokele , Drum Signals , Elephants , Zande , Cornacks , La la la Lise , Xylophones , Dancing , Kponiylo , Lute , Two stringed fiddle , Medje , Nenjenje , Love song , Likembe , Malimba , Hand piano , Dzoli , Bembele Henri de Bon Coeur , Histoire , Onole , Slit drums , Talking drum , W H Ford
- Language: English
- Type: Sound , Radio broadcast , Music
- Identifier: vital:15066 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008494 , Reel numbers: BC037, BC038, BC039, BC040
- Description: 11th programme in ‘The Sound of Africa‘ Series A of illustrated talks by Hugh Tracey on his travels in search of African music, broadcast by the South African Broadcasting Corporation , For further details refer to the ILAM Document Collection: Hugh Tracey Broadcasts
- Full Text: false
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