Academic literature on the topic 'Pongolo floodplain'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pongolo floodplain"

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Appleton, C. C., and P. la Hausse de Lalouvieret. "SOME POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS OF THE BIVALVES OF THE PONGOLO RIVER FLOODPLAIN." Journal of the Limnological Society of Southern Africa 13, no. 1 (1987): 14–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03779688.1987.9634538.

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Heeg, J., and H. M. Kok. "Food resource sharing and partitioning among some fishes of the Pongolo River floodplain." South African Journal of Zoology 23, no. 4 (1988): 356–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02541858.1988.11448125.

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Drewes, A. K. "A SYSTEM DYNAMICS MODEL OF PART OF THE PONGOLO RIVER FLOODPLAIN: DEVELOPMENT AND WATER MANAGEMENT POLICY ANALYSIS." Journal of the Limnological Society of Southern Africa 13, no. 2 (1987): 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03779688.1987.9633122.

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Drewes, A. K. "A SYSTEM DYNAMICS MODEL OF PART OF THE PONGOLO RIVER FLOODPLAIN: DEVELOPMENT AND WATER MANAGEMENT POLICY ANALYSIS." Southern African Journal of Child and Adolescent Mental Health 13, no. 2 (2001): 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16826108.2001.9632406.

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Mills, J. J. "A pilot study to assess rural water supplies and sanitation conditions on the Pongolo floodplain — A social anthropological perspective." Development Southern Africa 3, no. 3 (1986): 479–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03768358608439258.

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Furness, H. D., and C. M. Breen. "Interactions between period of exposure, grazing and crop growth rate of Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers. in seasonally flooded areas of the Pongolo River floodplain." Hydrobiologia 126, no. 1 (1985): 65–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00008389.

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Heath, S. K., and A. J. Plater. "Records of pan (floodplain wetland) sedimentation as an approach for post-hoc investigation of the hydrological impacts of dam impoundment: The Pongolo river, KwaZulu-Natal." Water Research 44, no. 14 (2010): 4226–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2010.05.026.

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Furness, H. D., and C. M. Breen. "An assessment of the importance of water stress in seasonally floodedC. dactylon on the Pongolo River floodplain in the formulation of guidelines for controlled flooding." Hydrobiologia 137, no. 2 (1986): 175–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00004213.

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Lankford, Bruce, Catherine Pringle, Chris Dickens, et al. "Hydrological modelling of water allocation, ecosystem services and poverty alleviation in the Pongola floodplain, South Africa." Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 54, no. 9 (2011): 1237–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09640568.2011.567127.

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Nkhata, Bimo Abraham, Charles Breen, Duncan Hay, and Melanie Wilkinson. "Property rights, institutional regime shifts and the provision of freshwater ecosystem services on the Pongola River floodplain, South Africa." International Journal of the Commons 11, no. 1 (2017): 97. http://dx.doi.org/10.18352/ijc.615.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pongolo floodplain"

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Weldrick, Sarah Katharine. "The development of an ecological model to determine flood release options for the management of the Phongolo floodplain in Kwazulu/Natal (South Africa)." Thesis, Rhodes University, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005102.

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The Phongolo River floodplain in KwaZulu/Natal is a river-associated wetland which was subject to regular cycles of flooding in the past. The floods were associated with seasonal summer rainfall. Through the wet and dry cycles on the floodplain there was an alternation between the aquatic and terrestrial biomes. Many of the fishes on the floodplain are dependent on this cycle for their survival. The construction of the Pongolapoort Dam in 1969 has resulted in alterations to the timing, magnitudes and duration of the natural flooding events of the Phongolo River. This alteration has affected the fisheries. It is now necessary to simulate natural floods by artificial water releases from the dam. There are several demands on the water supply, so it has not always been possible to adhere to the natural flood regime. This necessitated the need for an integrated management programme to ensure the sustainability of the natural resources. A practical ecological model of the fishery was developed to determine an optimum flood release scenario for the floodplain. The relative abundances, distribution and species richness of the fishes were determined at various lakes and rivers on the floodplain. A community classification of the fishes was determined using TWINSPAN ordination. The potential yield of the fish at each site was calculated. Flood releases of varying magnitudes were simulated using Geographic Information Systems (GIS). This information was combined in a model which can be used by resource managers to estimate the percentage species compositions of fishes at each of the lakes, and to compare the actual harvest to the potential calculated sustainable yields of fishes for various flood release regimes. Subsistence agriculture and other beneficial ecological information can be incorporated into the model to determine the effect of different flood release options for the Phongolo floodplain.
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Salagae, Modukanele Alloycius. "Perceptions of the impacts of artificial flood releases on the general use of the natural resources of the Pongolo River floodplain, South Africa." Thesis, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10413/415.

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Buchan, Alastair James Charles. "Studies of the management of grazing resources on the Makatini Flats and Pongolo River Floodplain." Thesis, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10413/10340.

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Subsequent to the impounding of the Pongolo river in the 1970's, development of irrigated agriculture on the Makatini flats has been reducing the area of vegetation available for grazing, and flooding patterns on the seasonally inundated Pongolo River Floodplain have been determined by the controlled release of water from the Pongolapoort dam. About 50 000 people live along the 10 000 ha floodplain within the 63 000 ha northern region of the flats which was studied. This population includes 2 970 registered cattle owners who own a total of 19 300 cattle. The objectives of this study were: to gain an understanding of the Makatini pastoral system which would facilitate prediction of the effects of potential developments, including agricultural expansion, modification of floodplain hydrology and changed cattle management practices on the utility value of cattle; and to provide guidelines for the management of pastoral resources on the Makatini and other traditional African pastoral systems. It was established that the value of cattle cannot be determined without understanding the importance of the subsistence utilities provided and that the value of utilities relative to each other influences the way in which the system is stocked and managed by the local people. The value of all marketed and non-marketed utilities was determined and the implications of the economic evaluation for the identification of management options in African pastoral systems assessed. Despite the "low productivity" of the Makatini system compared to western style ranches, cattle owners receive annual returns worth approximately 100 % of the asset value of their stock. This explains low market offtake rate in this and other subsistence systems. Non-marketed utilities, particularly milk production provide most of the returns to cattle owners. The mean stocking density on the floodplain vegetation was estimated to be three times that of dry-land areas, but only 23 % of all grazing time is spent on the floodplain. Although floodplain forage provides an important supplement to winter grazing, its use is not vital to maintenance of animal condition. The coincident occurrence of an annual "stress period"; greater acceptability of Echinochloa pyramidalis vegetation as forage; the absence of floods; and the reduced use of floodplain fields, results in increased floodplain use in winter to a stocking density approximately ten times that of dry-land areas. How the floodplain hydrology, rainfall and grazing interact with the crop growth rate and quality of E. pyramidalis stands was examined. The forage production potential of E. pyramidalis was found to be higher than that of other floodplain vegetation types and stocking densities of up to 4.5 AU/ha in summer and 2.5 AU/ha in winter are considered possible on the Pongolo floodplain. Echinochloa pastures may become wet and cause scouring if grazed exclusively, but grazing reduces plant moisture content and makes the forage more acceptable. Local pastoral management was found to depend on the collective activities of cattle owners in pursuit of personal needs in a dynamic socio-economic context. Motivation for the manipulation of cattle numbers and herd composition is dictated by a cattle owner's perception of his needs for utilities and his ability to access those benefits. Because of this, the pastoral practices were found to be closely linked to other socio-economic activities such as agriculture and migrant labour. stock owners have a narrow perspective of pastoral resource management and use strategies developed on small spatial and temporal scales. In contrast development planners tend to identify objectives on a regional scale and on long-term (10 - 50 year) time scales and to orient management towards maximising the value of marketable utilities and preventing long-term overstocking. Management of pastoral resources in traditional African systems requires that the needs of local people be met, that the resource base be maintained; that pastoral policy be developed as a component of regional development planning and that close liaison between interest groups be maintained. Failure to establish or maintain this liaison is considered the main reason for the failure of many African pastoral development programmes. It was recommended that local pasture management committees be established on the Makatini and that extension officers, trained specifically to understand management problems of Third World pastoral systems, be used to maintain liaison between stock owners and development planners. It was also suggested that formal cattle camps be established and managed by local people and that at least one flood (river flow> 200 cumecs) be released from the Pongolapoort darn each summer.<br>Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1988.
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