4.6 Article

Landscape Function Analysis: Responses to Bush Encroachment in a Semi-Arid Savanna in the Molopo Region, South Africa

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su14148616

Keywords

bush control; ecosystem functioning; landscape functional analysis; patch and inter-patch zones; nutrient cycling; infiltration; rangeland management; stability

Funding

  1. Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management (UESM)
  2. Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE)-Bush Expert [3X00172]

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Bush encroachment has negative effects on ecosystem functioning and services in semi-arid rangelands, highlighting the need for management, conservation, and restoration. A study in the Molopo region, South Africa, used landscape function analysis (LFA) to assess the landscape functioning of bush-encroached and controlled savanna rangelands.
Various factors lead to increased woody species density, biomass and cover (so-called 'bush encroachment') that influence ecosystem functioning and services in semi-arid rangelands. Ultimately, bush encroachment has adverse effects on human livelihoods. An increased understanding of ecosystem functioning in bush-encroached rangelands could contribute to improved management, conservation and restoration. This study, therefore, aimed to determine landscape functioning of bush-encroached and controlled savanna rangelands in the Molopo region, South Africa, by using the landscape function analysis (LFA) monitoring procedure. Mixed models revealed no significant differences based on LFA indices between bush-thickened and bush-controlled sites due to drought conditions that prevailed while the survey was carried out. Stability, which revealed the largest LFA contributing factors, always had the highest numerical value for sites that were still bush-encroached. Soil analyses revealed that grass litter patches from aeroplane-controlled sites had the highest average nutrient levels. As expected, high percentages of carbon and calcium levels were found in bush-encroached shrub litter patches. Bush-encroached landscapes are fully functional areas, especially under drought conditions. Long-term research is required to determine the effects successful management has on ecosystem functioning, especially during periods of higher rainfall.

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