Browsing by Author "Hoffman Michael"
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- ItemOpen AccessTesting alternative stable state theory at Afromontane and Milkwood forest-fynbos ecotones(2023) Fouche, Bianke; Cramer, Michael; Hoffman MichaelAlternative stable state (ASS) and ‘sharpening switch' theories provide a conceptual framework within which to understand abrupt ecotones between two (or more) contrasting ecosystem configurations. ASS theory is more suited for explaining ecosystems that exist within the same abiotic conditions. In the Greater Cape Region, forest-fynbos ecotones are often juxtaposed in landscapes where fire is the most important disturbance that maintains open canopy fire-prone fynbos and closed- canopy forests in fire refugia. Forest and fynbos ecotones are, however, additionally maintained by biotic feedbacks that result in edaphic differences between the contrasting ecosystems. Anthropogenic modifications to disturbance regimes alter the stability of forests and fynbos and may shift forest and fynbos into a degraded species-poor state. Conservation practitioners are concerned over perceived loss of forest habitat, and tree planting initiatives are common in parts of the Western Cape of South Africa. I hypothesised that diverse (e.g., Afromontane-and Milkwood-forests) forest and fynbos (e.g., different fynbos types) assemblages are ASS on the same nutrient-poor geology, and that biotic feedbacks with the soil result in edaphic discontinuities across the forest-fynbos ecotone. A sub- hypothesis is that anthropogenically altered disturbance regimes (e.g., timber harvesting, herbivory, fire management) have the potential to keep forest and fynbos in a transient state, so that a regime shift may be more likely. Soil samples (n=5 per vegetation type) were taken, and vegetation plot surveys conducted (n=3 per vegetation type) at seven study sites in Grootbos Private Nature Reserve (GPNR) and Platbos Forest Reserve (PFR) in South Africa. These data were collected in areas identified as forests, transitional vegetation, reforested areas (from conservation management), and the surrounding fynbos matrix. Forests were floristically distinct from fynbos at all study sites (sharing max. = 5% spp. at one site). Most forests had similar soil texture to fynbos however, one site associated with an Afromontane Forest had a much higher silt: sand ratio (ca. 1: 0.9) than the fynbos matrix (ca. 1: 1.6), indicating differences in pedogenic processes in the forest compared to the surrounding fynbos. Forest soils had higher soil nutrient content (N, P, K, Mg, Ca, Fe, and loss-on-ignition) than fynbos soils. The edaphic nutrient differences across ecotones were not due to geological variability, indicating that edaphic differences are largely due to differences in nutrient cycling and vegetation-soil feedback mechanisms. The soil nutrient status of transitional vegetation was variable and not always intermediate between forest and fynbos. Historical imagery revealed that a complex history of disturbance has negatively affected all of the Southern Coastal/Milkwood Forests in the past, but that the forests have recovered in the absence of continued disturbances. Tree cover for most Southern Coastal/Milkwood forests has increased since 1938 (ca. 65% tree cover increase at one of the forests). Afromontane Forests have, however, not changed in extent or tree density since 1938. These findings add to the evidence that soil nutrient differences are sufficient to prevent a regime shift between forest and fynbos. The Southern Coastal/Milkwood Forests can be considered a fire-derived ASS, where edaphic differences reinforce the stability of forest and fynbos boundaries. Afromontane Forest- fynbos ecotones are perhaps better explained by a ‘sharpening switch' model than ASS. Most existing transitional vegetation should not be considered a degraded vegetation state since transitional vegetation is a natural spatial and temporal gradation between fynbos and forest and also a natural buffer for forests against fire. Keywords: alternative stable state, regime shift, bistability, multi-stability, hysteresis, tipping point, resilience, vulnerability, edaphic properties
- ItemOpen AccessUsing applied palaeoecology and participatory system dynamics modelling to investigate changes in ecosystem services in response to climate and social-ecological drivers within the middle berg river catchment, South Africa(2022) Dirk, Cherié Janine; Gillson, Lindsey; Hoffman MichaelConservation and agricultural landscapes are social-ecological systems that co-produce ecosystem services, which change over time in response to environmental, biotic and social drivers. Failure to consider this variability, and the feedbacks that cause system instability, can have consequences for sustainable ecosystem services provision. A transdisciplinary approach is needed to understand the interacting processes that drive the dynamics of ecosystem service provision. This study applies a conceptual meta-framework: past-present-future lens of environmental change to interpret changes in land cover and ecosystem services, with the aim of informing sustainable land-use management within the Cape Floristic Region, a globally recognised biodiversity hotspot. The project methodology followed a four-part structure: (1) Changes in land cover, fire, herbivory, and hydrological indicators were reconstructed using palaeoecological proxies (fossil pollen, charcoal, coprophilous spores, geochemistry, and diatoms) from two sites and associated sedimentary cores. (2) Palaeoecological data were interpreted in terms of supporting/provisioning (plant biodiversity) and regulating (water quality and soil erosion regulation) services, and (3) the drivers of these changes (climate, fire and herbivory) were analysed. (4) A pilot study used participatory system dynamics modelling to articulate dynamic feedbacks and explore future scenarios. Palaeoecological and modelling results explored resilience and thresholds in ecosystem services, defined the historical range of variability and was used to generate management recommendations. Results showed that (1) high temporal resolution, multi-proxy data suggested variability in ecosystem services. (2) Ecosystem change was driven mainly by climate in the early palaeo-records with increasing anthropogenic influence from the mid-20th C, and (3) although some plant biodiversity and landscape heterogeneity was lost, the main vegetation elements remain, suggesting no environmental thresholds have yet been crossed. (4) Even so, model simulation results show that it may be difficult to return to past ecological states. Adaptive grazing-fire management is recommended to maintain and restore ecosystem function, thereby decreasing the likelihood of future regime shifts to a degraded alternative stable state. This innovative interdisciplinary approach provides a contextual understanding of processes that influence dynamic social-ecological systems and translates long-term data into a form that can be used by policymakers and land-use managers to inform sustainable management of ecosystem services.