The role of empiricism in predicting mean annual primary production at the mesoscale is demonstrated through development of a simple model (RESAP) for application over all land surfaces within a given savanna region. The model is necessarily pragmatic and constrained by availability of standardized data on a network scale. The model was applied to a large test area in southern Africa and provides results using a SYMAP routine for representing spatially continuous information. The model discrimates between woody and herbaceous plant components and also assesses the effects of anthropogenic disturbance on plant productivity. Productivity of natural vegetation was found to be remarkably equitably distributed across the diverse conditions which suggests various compensatory production mechanisms at the mesoscale. Model output graphically indicated that intensive agriculture successfully converts total productivity into both a more usable and more accessible form at the apparent cost of long-evolved total production levels.
Journal articles from the Grassland Society of Southern Africa (GSSA) African Journal of Range and Forage Science as well as related articles and reports from throughout the southern African region.