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      Vegetation of the eastern communal conservancies in Namibia: I. Phytosociological descriptions

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      1
      Koedoe
      AOSIS Publishing

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          Abstract

          The establishment of communal conservancies aims to have the local communities share in the benefits especially of wildlife resources, in this way spearheading the conservation of the environment. The Desert Margins Programme in Namibia aimed to develop vegetation resource data for the Otjituuo, Okamatapati, Ozonahi, African Wild Dog, Otjinene, Epukiro, Otjombinde, Omuramba Ua Mbinda, Eiseb and Ondjou communal conservancies, in order to assist with natural resource planning. For this purpose, a phytosociological survey of this area, with 422 relevés, was conducted during 2004. The data was captured in Turboveg and forms part of the Namibian phytosociological database (GIVD AF-NA-001). The data was split into two, representing two major land forms, the 'hardeveld' and the 'sandveld', respectively. A classification was undertaken using the Modified two-way indicator species analysis (TWINSPAN) procedure. Further refinements, based on field observations and literature sources, were performed using Cocktail procedures. Thirteen vegetation associations were formally described in this article, of which two were subdivided into subassociations. These associations can broadly be grouped into broad-leaved savanna types typical of the central and northern Kalahari of Namibia and microphyll savannas found on the transitions to the Central Plateau. One association, the Burkeo africanae-Pterocarpetum angolensis, forms the southern fringe of the Zambesian Baikiaea Woodlands ecoregion of the World Wildlife Fund, whilst all the other associations fall within the Kalahari Acacia-Baikiaea Woodlands ecoregion. The Combreto collini-Terminalietum sericeae is the most widespread association and dominates the landscape. Threats to the vegetation include overutilisation and regular fires, both of which could easily lead to desertification. This threat is aggravated by global climate change. CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS: This article described 13 plant associations of the central Kalahari in eastern Namibia, an area hitherto virtually unknown to science. The information presented in this article forms a baseline description, which can be used for future monitoring of the vegetation under communal land use

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          Most cited references78

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          'Guidelines for phytosociological classifications and descriptions of vegetation in southern Africa'

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            'A broad-scale structural classification of vegetation for practical purposes'

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              L Tichý (2002)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Journal
                koedoe
                Koedoe
                Koedoe
                AOSIS Publishing (Cape Town )
                2071-0771
                January 2014
                : 56
                : 1
                : 1-18
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Polytechnic of Namibia Namibia
                Article
                S0075-64582014000100006
                10.4102/koedoe.v56i1.1116
                2b6ca12d-c1b3-4c88-ba25-ee4a82622a7d

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                SciELO South Africa

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0075-6458&lng=en
                Categories
                Biodiversity Conservation
                Environmental Sciences

                Animal science & Zoology,General environmental science
                Animal science & Zoology, General environmental science

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