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A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation

Soil erosion is regarded as a serious problem throughout the world. Erosion is. caused by both water and wind. Al though the two usually occur ·together, wind erosion has received little attention with the exception of the problems associated with croplands. Wind erosion can, however, also be a seri...

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Main Author: Hallward, Jennifer R
Other Authors: Meadows, Micheal
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Not Specified 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hallward, Jennifer R
author2 Meadows, Micheal
author_browse Hallward, Jennifer R
Meadows, Micheal
author_facet Meadows, Micheal
Hallward, Jennifer R
author_sort Hallward, Jennifer R
collection Thesis
description Soil erosion is regarded as a serious problem throughout the world. Erosion is. caused by both water and wind. Al though the two usually occur ·together, wind erosion has received little attention with the exception of the problems associated with croplands. Wind erosion can, however, also be a serious problem in natural grazing lands. In this research project an attempt is made to . determine the areas of potential wind erosion in the Cape Province through the use of two different models. The models used were developed and applied in semi-arid areas and thus were considered to be applicable in South Africa. The models used are: The Wind Erosion Equation developed by Chepil, ·woodruff and Sideway in the United States; and Lynch and Edward's Model for the Analysis of Limited Climatic Data, developed in Australia. There are two aspects to soi 1 erosion by wind - the erodibility of the soil as determined by moisture, grains size, aggregates, plant cover and surface topography; and soil erosive ty as determined by wind strength and duration. Methods to control wind erosion are based on decreasing erosivity through the establishment of shelterbelts and by decreasing erodibility ty through improving plant cover, aggregate stability and moisture retention properties. Efforts at wind erosion measurement are generally ineffective. A number of models have been developed to overcome these difficulties and to allow for prediction of soil loss. Two of these models are applied to conditions in the Cape Province. This area covers a wind range of climatic, soil and agricultural conditions and as such provides an appropriate area for their application. It is, however, concluded that neither of these models can be directly applied to conditions in the Cape Province. The seasonal rainfall distribution and the uneven distribution of the data points contribute to the ineffectiveness of the models. The greatest problem, however, is the importance of management in determining whether or not wind erosion occurs. As a result, although the models illustrate the general climatic trends affecting the susceptibility of an area to wind erosion, the lack of a management factor accounts for the lack of detail.
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id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38892
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:49:23.786Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Not Specified
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38892 A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation Hallward, Jennifer R Meadows, Micheal Botany Soil erosion is regarded as a serious problem throughout the world. Erosion is. caused by both water and wind. Al though the two usually occur ·together, wind erosion has received little attention with the exception of the problems associated with croplands. Wind erosion can, however, also be a serious problem in natural grazing lands. In this research project an attempt is made to . determine the areas of potential wind erosion in the Cape Province through the use of two different models. The models used were developed and applied in semi-arid areas and thus were considered to be applicable in South Africa. The models used are: The Wind Erosion Equation developed by Chepil, ·woodruff and Sideway in the United States; and Lynch and Edward's Model for the Analysis of Limited Climatic Data, developed in Australia. There are two aspects to soi 1 erosion by wind - the erodibility of the soil as determined by moisture, grains size, aggregates, plant cover and surface topography; and soil erosive ty as determined by wind strength and duration. Methods to control wind erosion are based on decreasing erosivity through the establishment of shelterbelts and by decreasing erodibility ty through improving plant cover, aggregate stability and moisture retention properties. Efforts at wind erosion measurement are generally ineffective. A number of models have been developed to overcome these difficulties and to allow for prediction of soil loss. Two of these models are applied to conditions in the Cape Province. This area covers a wind range of climatic, soil and agricultural conditions and as such provides an appropriate area for their application. It is, however, concluded that neither of these models can be directly applied to conditions in the Cape Province. The seasonal rainfall distribution and the uneven distribution of the data points contribute to the ineffectiveness of the models. The greatest problem, however, is the importance of management in determining whether or not wind erosion occurs. As a result, although the models illustrate the general climatic trends affecting the susceptibility of an area to wind erosion, the lack of a management factor accounts for the lack of detail. 2023-09-27T12:43:15Z 2023-09-27T12:43:15Z 1988 2023-09-27T10:32:35Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38892 eng application/pdf Not Specified Not Specified
spellingShingle Botany
Hallward, Jennifer R
A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
title_full A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
title_fullStr A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
title_short A comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern Karoo vegetation
title_sort comparison of the effects of two different grazing systems on community attributes of eastern karoo vegetation
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38892
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