Mao Angua Amis

Identifying and Protecting Threatened Freshwater Ecosystems in the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa

A wetland in the study area important for migratory birds (photo: Mao Angua).

Mao Angua contemplating on dams, which remain a serious threat to major watercourses in Southern Africa (photo: Karen Vickers).

An upper foothill river.

Study group.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Cape Floristic RegionSouth AfricaAfrica, Biodiversity, Plants, Wetlands30 Aug 2006

The Cape Floristic Region (CFR) of South Africa is a region of global significance as a biodiversity hotspot. The CFR is home to the greatest concentration of non-tropical plants in the world, but it's also severely impacted by water stress. Freshwater ecosystems in general face severe threats from anthropogenic disturbances.

Assessing threats to these systems has been complicated by the lack of rapid assessment techniques, thus hampering efforts to prioritize them for conservation intervention. Often very little is known about some of these systems, which may otherwise possess a high level of biodiversity and the provision of ecosystem services. Land use and climate change are some of the major threats to freshwater ecosystems, and unlike in the terrestrial ecosystems where species distribution is expected to shift in response to global warming, when the water warms up, freshwater biota have no where to escape. However, currently concerns for climate change have not been integrated into protocols for reserve selection. Freshwater biodiversity have been overlooked in most terrestrial conservation planning exercises because of the complexity of integrating these systems.

This project seeks to develop tools and methodologies for identifying threatened freshwater ecosystems, develop an approach for the integration of freshwater and terrestrial perspectives in conservation planning, and assess the impact of the divergent water management policies on freshwater ecosystems in South Africa.

Spatially explicit data on freshwater systems for GIS analyses will be gathered and available datasets verified through extensive field surveys, to ascertain whether major sources of pollution and other anthropogenic disturbances have been accurately captured. Statistical and GIS-based modelling will be used to identify threatened freshwater watersheds under land use change and other anthropogenic disturbances, and for developing approaches for integrating freshwater ecosystems into terrestrial priority areas. An extensive literature review, expert workshop, and short interviews will be undertaken with various stakeholders to evaluate the extent to which policies implemented at the watershed level are reminiscent of the national and regional policy context.

Expected output include an approach for identifying vulnerable freshwater systems, a comprehensive database on freshwater ecosystems, maps and booklets for land use planners and the general public, capacity building in freshwater conservation.

For more information, contact amis@sanbi.org

Project Update January 2007

Systematic conservation planning seeks to identify priority areas for conserving biodiversity in the face of limited resources and global change. Effective conservation planning requires that all ecosystems in the planning region be well represented in the plan to ensure biodiversity persistence. For a long time freshwater ecosystems have been neglected in conservation planning as it was assumed that protecting terrestrial biodiversity alone will adequately protect freshwater ecosystems. However, many studies have recently showed that freshwater systems that are found inside terrestrial protected areas are often highly imperilled as these terrestrial areas do not offer adequate protect.

So far the core project activities that have been accomplished since I received funding from the Rufford include the following: -

 A framework for integrating the assessment of freshwater and terrestrial biodiversity has been developed and tested.

 Collation of geo-referenced data for the conservation plan is in the process

 To ensure maximum representation of wetlands in the freshwater conservation plan, a classification exercise has been undertaken to group them according to their functional units

 Field verification of the wetlands map is on-going, and expected to be completed in the next two months.

Project Update July 2007

I was awarded the 3rd Prize for the best student oral presentation during the 21st Annual Meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology, held in Port Elizabeth, South Africa between 1st- 5th July 07.

The paper I presented was entitled: Do Freshwater and Terrestrial Priorities Overlap in Conservation Assessments?

Final Report

Read more about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

File DownloadSize
Detailed Final Report.pdf1.93 MB

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