Rangeland Ecology & Management

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South Africa's arid and semiarid rangelands : Why are they changing and can they be restored?
Author
Milton, S J
Dean, W R J
Publisher
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Publication Year
1995
Body

Since the mid-19th century settled livestock ranching has been the major form of land use in South Africa, occupying 68% of the land surface. Decreases in livestock densities and ranch numbers during the past century imply that carrying capacities for domestic herbivores are falling. Differences in carbon isotope signals with soil depth and abrupt shifts in dominant plant species across ranch boundaries reveal that southern African rangelands are changing. Case studies suggest ways to control altered grassland composition, bush encroachment in arid savanna, and dominance by toxic and halophytic shrubs in arid shrublands. But climatic and biological factors constrain rates of passive recovery, and guidelines for active restoration are poor and techniques costly. Moreover, conservation of remaining good rangeland is seldom enforced, and economic considerations usually outweigh the land user's desire to sustain diversity and productivity.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
37
Journal Number
no. 1-3
Journal Pages
245-264
Journal Name
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Keywords
rangeland condition
rangelands
management
degradation
carrying capacity
grazing
indigenous encroaching species
restoration ecology
sustainability
Africa