Publication | Open Access
The vegetation of Tshanini Game Reserve and a comparison with equivalent units in the Tembe Elephant Park in Maputaland, South Africa
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
Community-based ConservationEngineeringRangeland ProductivityRenewable Natural ResourcesEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesNatural ResourcePolitical EcologyNatural ResourcesBiogeographyConservation PoliticsTshanini Game ReserveSouth AfricaTembe Elephant ParkConservation BiologyNatural Resource PlanningBiodiversityGeographyConservation PolicyNature ConservationBiodiversity ConservationNatural Resource Management
The Tembe Elephant Park was proclaimed in 1983 after negotiations between the then KwaZulu Bureau of Natural Resources and the Tembe Tribal Authority in consultation with the local communities of northern Maputaland, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. The park boundaries were subsequently fenced and animal numbers started to increase. The fence has kept the utilisation of renewable natural resources by the local communities at bay for the past 19 years. In this period, the vegetation of the park has been utilised only by the indigenous fauna, but it has been affected by management decisions and possibly also regional environmental changes.
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