The vegetation and floristics of the Letaba exclosures, Kruger National Park, South Africa
Abstract
Conservation implications: Floristic surveying and vegetation mapping of a long-term monitoring site, such as the Letaba exclosures, is seen as a baseline inventory to assist natural resource management. Linking mapping units to biodiversity strengthens the understanding needed to maintain biodiversity in all its natural facets and fluxes.
How to cite this article: Siebert, F., Eckhardt, H.C. & Siebert, S.J., 2010, ‘The vegetation and floristics of the Letaba exclosures, Kruger National Park, South Africa’, Koedoe 52(1), Art. #777, 12 pages. DOI: 10.4102/koedoe.v52i1.777
References
Barbour, M.G., Burk, J.H. & Pitts, W.D., 1987, Terrestrial plant ecology, Cummings, California.
Bredenkamp, G.J. & Van Rooyen, N., 1993, ‘A survey of the vegetation of the Letaba River in the Kruger National Park’, unpublished report, Ekotrust.
Du Plessis, F., 2001, ‘A phytosociological synthesis of Mopaneveld’, MSc dissertation, University of Pretoria.
Germishuizen, G. & Meyer, N.L., 2003, ‘Plants of southern Africa: An annotated checklist’, Strelitzia 14, National Botanical Institute, Pretoria.
Gertenbach, W.P.D., 1983, ‘Landscapes of the Kruger National Park’, Koedoe 26, 9–121.
Hennekens, S., 1996, MEGATAB: A visual editor for phytosociological tables, computer program, version 1.0, user’s guide, Giesen & Geurts, Ulft.
Hill, M.O., 1979, TWINSPAN – a FORTRAN program for arranging multivariate data in an ordered two way table by classification of individuals and attributes, computer program, Cornell University, Ithaca.
Mucina, L., Rutherford, M.C. (eds.), 2006, ‘The vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland’, Strelitzia 19, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria.
Mueller-Dombois, D. & Ellenberg, H., 1974, Aims and methods of vegetation ecology, Wiley, New York.
O’Connor, T.G., 1992, ‘Woody vegetation-environment relations in a semi-arid savanna in the northen Transvaal’, South African Journal of Botany 58(4), 268–274.
O’Keeffe, T. & Alard G., 2002, Field operations manual for herbivore & fire exclosures on the Sabie and Letaba Rivers in the Kruger National Park, viewed n.d. April 2009, from http://www.sanparks.org/parks/kruger/conservation/scientific/exclosures/Exclosure_Field_Manual.pdf
O’Keeffe, J. & Rogers K.H., 2003, ‘Heterogeneity and management of the Lowveld rivers’ in J.T. du Toit, K.H. Rogers & H.C. Biggs (eds.), The Kruger experience: Ecology and management of savanna heterogeneity, pp. 41–58, Island Press, Washington.
Parsons, M., McLoughlin, C.A., Kotschy, K.A., Rogers, K.H. & Rountree, M.W., 2005, ‘The effects of extreme floods on the biophysical heterogeneity of river landscapes’, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 3, 487–494.
Paterson, D.G. & Steenekamp, P.I., 2003, ‘Soil survey of Letaba exclosure’, ISCW Report No. GW/A/2003/38, ARC – Institute for Soil, Climate & Water, Pretoria.
Siebert, F., Bredenkamp, G.J. & Siebert, S.J., 2003, ‘A comparison of mopaneveld vegetation in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe’, Bothalia 33(1), 121–134.
Siebert, S.J., Van Wyk, A.E., Bredenkamp, G.J. & Siebert, F., 2003, ‘Vegetation of the rock habitats of the Sekhukhuneland Centre of Plant Endemism, South Africa’, Bothalia 33(2), 207–228.
Siebert, F. & Eckhardt, H.C., 2008, ‘The vegetation and floristics of the Nkhuhlu exclosures, Kruger National Park’, Koedoe 50(1), 126–144.
Van Rooyen, N., Theron, G.K. & Grobbelaar, N., 1981, ‘A floristic description and structural analysis of the plant communities of the Punda–Milia–Wambiya area in the Kruger National Park, Republic of South Africa: 3. The Colophospermum mopane communities’, Journal of South African Botany 47(4), 585–626.
Visser, D.J.L., Coertze, F.J. & Walraven F., 1989, Explanation of the 1:1000000 geological map, fourth edition, 1984: The geology of the Republics of South Africa, Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei and the Kingdoms of Lesotho and Swaziland, Government Printer, Pretoria.
Weather Bureau, 1986, Climate of South Africa. Pretoria, South Africa, Department of Environmental Affairs, Weather Bureau Publication No. 40.
Full Text: PDF (1MB) HTML XML Online Appendix (235 KB)

