Thicket expansion in a vachellia karroo-dominated landscape and its effect on herbaceous communities
- Authors: Khoza, Marina Rindzani
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Savanna ecology South Africa , Forbs South Africa , Grasslands South Africa , Herbaceous plants South Africa , Vegetation dynamics South Africa , Forest canopies South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291015 , vital:56808
- Description: Grass and forb species found in savannas are highly diverse, contributing to the structure and function of the savanna system. Where mean annual rainfall is seasonal and high enough to support closed canopy vegetation such as forests or thickets, savannas can exist as an alternative stable state maintained by disturbances such as fire and browsing. Biotic and abiotic processes act on savanna and forest (or thicket) systems maintaining both their tree and herbaceous cover at levels that ensure their persistence in those states. Studies have shown that many semi-arid rangelands in South Africa have undergone a rapid increase in tree cover (of both native and non-native species) over the past several decades. This process of increasing tree cover in semi-arid savannas, termed bush encroachment, results in a biome shift, changing landscapes that were once grasslands with few trees to ones dominated by broad-leaved trees with fewer sun-adapted forbs and grasses. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of changing woody cover and its associated changes in tree composition, tree canopy structure, light dynamics in the understory and herbaceous community composition on Endwell farm in the Eastern Cape. Canopy cover changes between the years 1949 and 2019 were analysed at 51 sites on the farm and related to historical rainfall patterns. There had been a general increase in tree cover over the past several decades on the farm, and many sites showed a change from open (0-15%) in 1949 to low (1635%), moderate (36-50%) and high (51-100%) canopy cover in 2019. In earlier years most sites had a canopy cover below 50%, and the higher canopy cover values (>65%) occurred in more recent decades. Canopy cover of ~ 50% was found to be rare in each decade. This suggests that ~50% canopy cover maybe a transient, unstable state. The period with the highest rate of canopy cover increase was 2002-2013, and this increase coincided with a high mean annual rainfall 10 years prior to 2002 and a high mean annual rainfall in most years between the 20022013 period. The period between 2002 and 2013 also had the highest number of sites transitioning from lower to higher tree canopy cover classes, indicating that rainfall may have been a factor driving bush encroachment during the past several decades. An increase in canopy cover (a decrease in light transmittance) was accompanied by changes in woody species composition during thicket formation. The low canopy cover (high light transmittance) sites were dominated by Vachellia karroo and Scutia myrtina trees, while high tree cover sites had fewer V. karroo and S. myrtina trees and were rather characterised by an abundance of thicket tree species. Species proportion, NMDS and dendrogram plots indicated that sites with a light transmittance range between 50-100% had similar tree species compositions, different from sites with light transmittances <50%. An increase in tree density was strongly correlated to an increase in canopy cover (from 2019 satellite imagery), density of trees > 3m, maximum height reached by trees, diversity of trees, total canopy volume, total canopy area and leaf area index (LAI), and a decrease in light transmittance. A structural equation model (SEM) was used to explore the relationships between canopy characteristics (maximum canopy area, canopy volume, tree diversity, density of trees, density of trees >3m, individual trees and maximum canopy height), aerial canopy cover in 2019, and light transmittance. The model explained 73% of the variation in light transmittance, mostly via the direct effect of canopy characteristics. Canopy characteristics had a strong influence on both aerial cover in 2019 and directly on light transmittance, but canopy cover in 2019 had a weak influence on light transmittance. The herbaceous layer was rich and dominated by C4 grasses such as Eragrostis plana, Sporobolus fimbriatus, Themeda triandra and Digitaria eriantha) and forbs including Hibiscus aethiopicus, Helichrysum dregeanum, Helichrysum nudifolium and Gerbera viridifolia at low canopy cover sites with high light transmittance. In contrast, high tree cover sites had fewer herbaceous species in general. Grass and forb species characteristic of these sites high canopy cover sites were Panicum maximum, Loudetia flavida, Pellaea viridis and Cyperus spp. Different sites with low light transmittance (<50%) had similar herbaceous species composition. Basal cover, richness, abundance and diversity of herbaceous plants decreased significantly with an increase in tree density, density of trees >3 m, canopy volume, canopy area, canopy cover, LAI, and increased significantly with increasing light transmittance. Most grasses had their highest densities at LAI <0.5, which was estimated to correspond to ~75% light transmittance and ~38% canopy cover and then started to decline thereafter. Herbaceous species basal cover was also highest at LAI <0.5. An SEM model indicated that herbaceous diversity, basal cover and richness responded both to light availability and to the structure of the woody vegetation directly (R2 = 0.53). While the effect of light transmittance on herbaceous communities was strong (0.41), there was little difference between the effect of light transmittance and canopy characteristics (-0.35) on herbaceous communities. Two possible threshold points, relating to two types of transitions in vegetation structure, could be deduced from this study. The first threshold occurred at canopy cover ~ 40% (LAI < ~ 0.5, light transmittance ~ 75%), at which point many of the common herbaceous species, including the dominant C4 grasses, began to decline in abundance while the composition remained characteristic of the savanna state. A canopy cover of less than ~ 40% at a site provides a suitable state for a high abundance of grass and forb species which help maintain an open system by facilitating fires. The second threshold marked a compositional shift between savanna and closed-canopy vegetation states. Savanna species (trees, grasses and forbs) dominated at high light transmittances (>50%) and were significantly reduced at low light transmittances (< 50%), indicating a possible species composition threshold at ~50% light transmittance at which a savanna state switches to a thicket (LAI ~ 1 and canopy cover ~70%). This point indicated the point where there was a significant difference in both tree and herbaceous plant compositions, with a marked reduction in the occurrence of C4 grasses at light transmittance <50%. Fire is supressed when the C4 grass layer is lost, and further thicket encroachment will take place causing complete canopy closure. Land managers in this system should start becoming concerned about a reduction in grass biomass when canopy cover reaches about 40% and would have to reduce tree cover before the threshold of 50% light transmittance (70% canopy cover from aerial photos) is reached to maintain a savanna system. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Botany, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
Thicket expansion in a vachellia karroo-dominated landscape and its effect on herbaceous communities
- Authors: Khoza, Marina Rindzani
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Savanna ecology South Africa , Forbs South Africa , Grasslands South Africa , Herbaceous plants South Africa , Vegetation dynamics South Africa , Forest canopies South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291015 , vital:56808
- Description: Grass and forb species found in savannas are highly diverse, contributing to the structure and function of the savanna system. Where mean annual rainfall is seasonal and high enough to support closed canopy vegetation such as forests or thickets, savannas can exist as an alternative stable state maintained by disturbances such as fire and browsing. Biotic and abiotic processes act on savanna and forest (or thicket) systems maintaining both their tree and herbaceous cover at levels that ensure their persistence in those states. Studies have shown that many semi-arid rangelands in South Africa have undergone a rapid increase in tree cover (of both native and non-native species) over the past several decades. This process of increasing tree cover in semi-arid savannas, termed bush encroachment, results in a biome shift, changing landscapes that were once grasslands with few trees to ones dominated by broad-leaved trees with fewer sun-adapted forbs and grasses. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of changing woody cover and its associated changes in tree composition, tree canopy structure, light dynamics in the understory and herbaceous community composition on Endwell farm in the Eastern Cape. Canopy cover changes between the years 1949 and 2019 were analysed at 51 sites on the farm and related to historical rainfall patterns. There had been a general increase in tree cover over the past several decades on the farm, and many sites showed a change from open (0-15%) in 1949 to low (1635%), moderate (36-50%) and high (51-100%) canopy cover in 2019. In earlier years most sites had a canopy cover below 50%, and the higher canopy cover values (>65%) occurred in more recent decades. Canopy cover of ~ 50% was found to be rare in each decade. This suggests that ~50% canopy cover maybe a transient, unstable state. The period with the highest rate of canopy cover increase was 2002-2013, and this increase coincided with a high mean annual rainfall 10 years prior to 2002 and a high mean annual rainfall in most years between the 20022013 period. The period between 2002 and 2013 also had the highest number of sites transitioning from lower to higher tree canopy cover classes, indicating that rainfall may have been a factor driving bush encroachment during the past several decades. An increase in canopy cover (a decrease in light transmittance) was accompanied by changes in woody species composition during thicket formation. The low canopy cover (high light transmittance) sites were dominated by Vachellia karroo and Scutia myrtina trees, while high tree cover sites had fewer V. karroo and S. myrtina trees and were rather characterised by an abundance of thicket tree species. Species proportion, NMDS and dendrogram plots indicated that sites with a light transmittance range between 50-100% had similar tree species compositions, different from sites with light transmittances <50%. An increase in tree density was strongly correlated to an increase in canopy cover (from 2019 satellite imagery), density of trees > 3m, maximum height reached by trees, diversity of trees, total canopy volume, total canopy area and leaf area index (LAI), and a decrease in light transmittance. A structural equation model (SEM) was used to explore the relationships between canopy characteristics (maximum canopy area, canopy volume, tree diversity, density of trees, density of trees >3m, individual trees and maximum canopy height), aerial canopy cover in 2019, and light transmittance. The model explained 73% of the variation in light transmittance, mostly via the direct effect of canopy characteristics. Canopy characteristics had a strong influence on both aerial cover in 2019 and directly on light transmittance, but canopy cover in 2019 had a weak influence on light transmittance. The herbaceous layer was rich and dominated by C4 grasses such as Eragrostis plana, Sporobolus fimbriatus, Themeda triandra and Digitaria eriantha) and forbs including Hibiscus aethiopicus, Helichrysum dregeanum, Helichrysum nudifolium and Gerbera viridifolia at low canopy cover sites with high light transmittance. In contrast, high tree cover sites had fewer herbaceous species in general. Grass and forb species characteristic of these sites high canopy cover sites were Panicum maximum, Loudetia flavida, Pellaea viridis and Cyperus spp. Different sites with low light transmittance (<50%) had similar herbaceous species composition. Basal cover, richness, abundance and diversity of herbaceous plants decreased significantly with an increase in tree density, density of trees >3 m, canopy volume, canopy area, canopy cover, LAI, and increased significantly with increasing light transmittance. Most grasses had their highest densities at LAI <0.5, which was estimated to correspond to ~75% light transmittance and ~38% canopy cover and then started to decline thereafter. Herbaceous species basal cover was also highest at LAI <0.5. An SEM model indicated that herbaceous diversity, basal cover and richness responded both to light availability and to the structure of the woody vegetation directly (R2 = 0.53). While the effect of light transmittance on herbaceous communities was strong (0.41), there was little difference between the effect of light transmittance and canopy characteristics (-0.35) on herbaceous communities. Two possible threshold points, relating to two types of transitions in vegetation structure, could be deduced from this study. The first threshold occurred at canopy cover ~ 40% (LAI < ~ 0.5, light transmittance ~ 75%), at which point many of the common herbaceous species, including the dominant C4 grasses, began to decline in abundance while the composition remained characteristic of the savanna state. A canopy cover of less than ~ 40% at a site provides a suitable state for a high abundance of grass and forb species which help maintain an open system by facilitating fires. The second threshold marked a compositional shift between savanna and closed-canopy vegetation states. Savanna species (trees, grasses and forbs) dominated at high light transmittances (>50%) and were significantly reduced at low light transmittances (< 50%), indicating a possible species composition threshold at ~50% light transmittance at which a savanna state switches to a thicket (LAI ~ 1 and canopy cover ~70%). This point indicated the point where there was a significant difference in both tree and herbaceous plant compositions, with a marked reduction in the occurrence of C4 grasses at light transmittance <50%. Fire is supressed when the C4 grass layer is lost, and further thicket encroachment will take place causing complete canopy closure. Land managers in this system should start becoming concerned about a reduction in grass biomass when canopy cover reaches about 40% and would have to reduce tree cover before the threshold of 50% light transmittance (70% canopy cover from aerial photos) is reached to maintain a savanna system. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Botany, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The use of lesson study to assist junior primary ‘in-service training teachers’ to develop learners’ number sense using number talks
- Authors: Ortman-Gaweseb, Dominika
- Date: 2023-03-30
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/408750 , vital:70522
- Description: Thesis embargoed. To be released in 2025. , Thesis (MEd) -- Faculty of Education, Education, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2023-03-30
- Authors: Ortman-Gaweseb, Dominika
- Date: 2023-03-30
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/408750 , vital:70522
- Description: Thesis embargoed. To be released in 2025. , Thesis (MEd) -- Faculty of Education, Education, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2023-03-30
The self and the impossible pursuit of justice in J.M. Coetzee’s "Waiting for the barbarians, disgrace and foe”
- Authors: Swanepoel, Elbie
- Date: 2022-04-07
- Subjects: Coetzee, J M, 1940- Criticism and interpretation , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Waiting for the barbarians , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Disgrace , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Foe , Ethics in literature , Deconstruction , Postmodernism (Literature) , Justice in literature
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232294 , vital:49979
- Description: In its engagement with J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians, Disgrace and Foe, this thesis explores how the philosophies of Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida can be used as a framework for understanding the self’s relationship with the other. In contrast to postcolonial readings of these texts, this thesis does not consider the separation between the self and the other in terms of social or cultural differences but rather the radical alterity of the other that is perceived in the face-to-face encounter. This study aims to illustrate how the engagement with alterity exposes the instability of the self’s structures of knowledge that, in these instances, are grounded in the Western metaphysical tradition. The effects of the self’s encounter with the other are seen in the personal transformation of Coetzee’s protagonists whose initial flaws and problematic worldviews are revealed in the context of the injustices done to the other. Furthermore, the study examines the extent to which the self is complicit in the suffering of the other and how this ultimately complicates their pursuit of justice for them. While the focus of this thesis is primarily on the characters, it also shows how the writer’s careful treatment of otherness functions to confront and engage the reader with the alterity of the other and the ethical dilemmas inherent in attempting to conceptualise it. The study concludes that the protagonists’ engagement with others and their subsequent confrontation with themselves lead them to consider what an ethical response to the other might be. This ethical turn results in positive change, however ambiguously, in their thoughts about and behaviours toward other beings. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, English Language and Linguistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-07
- Authors: Swanepoel, Elbie
- Date: 2022-04-07
- Subjects: Coetzee, J M, 1940- Criticism and interpretation , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Waiting for the barbarians , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Disgrace , Coetzee, J M, 1940- Foe , Ethics in literature , Deconstruction , Postmodernism (Literature) , Justice in literature
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232294 , vital:49979
- Description: In its engagement with J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians, Disgrace and Foe, this thesis explores how the philosophies of Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida can be used as a framework for understanding the self’s relationship with the other. In contrast to postcolonial readings of these texts, this thesis does not consider the separation between the self and the other in terms of social or cultural differences but rather the radical alterity of the other that is perceived in the face-to-face encounter. This study aims to illustrate how the engagement with alterity exposes the instability of the self’s structures of knowledge that, in these instances, are grounded in the Western metaphysical tradition. The effects of the self’s encounter with the other are seen in the personal transformation of Coetzee’s protagonists whose initial flaws and problematic worldviews are revealed in the context of the injustices done to the other. Furthermore, the study examines the extent to which the self is complicit in the suffering of the other and how this ultimately complicates their pursuit of justice for them. While the focus of this thesis is primarily on the characters, it also shows how the writer’s careful treatment of otherness functions to confront and engage the reader with the alterity of the other and the ethical dilemmas inherent in attempting to conceptualise it. The study concludes that the protagonists’ engagement with others and their subsequent confrontation with themselves lead them to consider what an ethical response to the other might be. This ethical turn results in positive change, however ambiguously, in their thoughts about and behaviours toward other beings. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, English Language and Linguistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-07
The relationship between economic growth and taxation: an empirical study on optimal taxation in sub-Saharan Africa
- Authors: Kent, Bradley Athol
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Taxation Africa, Sub-Saharan , Optimal tax , Economic development Africa, Sub-Saharan , Tax collection Africa, Sub-Saharan
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403058 , vital:69918
- Description: The relationship between economic growth and taxation is a complex and highly debated issue, this thesis investigates whether a significant relationship can be identified, and whether it is the level that truly matters for fiscal policies aimed at being growth enhancing. Further investigation examines this relationship, in addition to testing whether there is a threshold below which tax collection may be considered ‘growth-enhancing’, and above which is negative for economic growth, and if such a threshold exists, to identify the manner in which taxation negatively impacts economic growth. The study makes use of a panel data approach to autoregressive distributed lag modelling and a generalised least squares regression. The study focuses on a panel data sample for seven (7) countries within Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) between 1997 – 2017. It found that total tax revenue held a positive and significant relationship with economic growth at the SSA level, whilst at the individual tax level; PAYE and property taxes were found to have a negative influence on growth, with no other fiscal variables significantly influencing growth in the long run in SSA test. Whereas, when analysing at the country-specific level it was found PAYE was only significantly influencing growth in South Africa, where the relationship was found to be negative. Corporate tax revealed a similar significant negative relationship in Swaziland and Cameroon. In addition, property taxes revealed a significant and negative relationship in South Africa, yet in Rwanda the influence was positive. Overall, the study found that there is significant relationship between economic growth and taxation in the SSA context. However, when analysing the countries in isolation, no such relationship was found. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
- Authors: Kent, Bradley Athol
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Taxation Africa, Sub-Saharan , Optimal tax , Economic development Africa, Sub-Saharan , Tax collection Africa, Sub-Saharan
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403058 , vital:69918
- Description: The relationship between economic growth and taxation is a complex and highly debated issue, this thesis investigates whether a significant relationship can be identified, and whether it is the level that truly matters for fiscal policies aimed at being growth enhancing. Further investigation examines this relationship, in addition to testing whether there is a threshold below which tax collection may be considered ‘growth-enhancing’, and above which is negative for economic growth, and if such a threshold exists, to identify the manner in which taxation negatively impacts economic growth. The study makes use of a panel data approach to autoregressive distributed lag modelling and a generalised least squares regression. The study focuses on a panel data sample for seven (7) countries within Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) between 1997 – 2017. It found that total tax revenue held a positive and significant relationship with economic growth at the SSA level, whilst at the individual tax level; PAYE and property taxes were found to have a negative influence on growth, with no other fiscal variables significantly influencing growth in the long run in SSA test. Whereas, when analysing at the country-specific level it was found PAYE was only significantly influencing growth in South Africa, where the relationship was found to be negative. Corporate tax revealed a similar significant negative relationship in Swaziland and Cameroon. In addition, property taxes revealed a significant and negative relationship in South Africa, yet in Rwanda the influence was positive. Overall, the study found that there is significant relationship between economic growth and taxation in the SSA context. However, when analysing the countries in isolation, no such relationship was found. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
The regulation of privacy on cloud computing services in terms of the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013
- Authors: Malahleka, Mthuthukisi
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: South Africa. Protection of Personal Information Act, 2013 , Cloud computing Law and legislation South Africa , Data protection Law and legislation South Africa , Personal information management South Africa , Data privacy South Africa , Computer security Law and legislation South Africa , General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/290731 , vital:56779
- Description: There is a relatively new development in Information Technology (IT) space known as cloud computing, software and service delivered remotely through the Internet without installing software on a computer. Cloud computing has quickly gathered steam as one of the most prominent topics in IT, and indeed within the business sector as a whole. Cloud computing is one such development associated with opportunities and benefits, especially in the commercial sector. Due to the development of IT and many businesses adopting e-commerce business-related strategies, cloud computing has revolutionised how personal information is processed. The advent of cloud computing as a mechanism to process personal information has brought many legal challenges for protecting the right to privacy enshrined under section 14 of the South African Constitution, which is a vulnerable part of one’s personality right. The right to privacy has long been protected even before adopting the Constitution under the common law of delict (actio iniuriarumn). As the adoption rate of cloud computing services by businesses continues to increase, the legal considerations and risks become more prevalent. The lawmakers struggle to keep pace with the rapidly changing technological advancements, at least for now. Both the common law and the Constitution could not address all the legal aspects of data protection and the adoption of cloud computing services hence the promulgation of the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (POPI Act). The POPI Act’s main objective is to protect the personal information of both natural and juristic persons. Personal information about an individual forms part of privacy. Unlawful processing of such personal information is a violation of the right to privacy of an individual. It is now widely recognised that the unregulated processing of personal information significantly impacts fundamental human rights like privacy, personality, and autonomy. A close analysis of cloud computing regulation is necessary, as legal protection mechanisms must safeguard the processing of personal information and establish extraterritorial jurisdiction to regulate the use of cloud computing within national legislation as cloud computing provides a transnational characteristic on the cross-border flow of personal information. In this thesis, a question is asked on whether the current data protection laws in South Africa on protecting the right to privacy in the cloud computing services context are adequate. The analysis will determine whether the overlaps between these pieces of data protection laws are competent to deal with the ever-increasing threats on the right to privacy and if they meet the international data protection standards set by the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The research seeks to analyse and reveal the shortcomings under the Constitution and the common law that led to adopting the POPI Act by studying the regulation of cloud computing services. This analysis will determine the shortcomings of the POPI Act as well in the context of cloud computing. The research will then follow a comparative analysis of the POPI Act and the GDPR to determine the application of the GDPR on international data breaches and compare its provisions with the POPI Act in the context of cloud computing. Finally, the research will address the question as to whether a multi-faceted approach, which includes a Model Law on cloud computing, would be an appropriate starting point setting out requirements for the use of this technology can be sufficient in protecting data subjects. And as cloud computing risks are not only a national but also a global problem, South Africa needs to look at the option of entering into mutual agreements with other countries and organisations to regulate cloud computing at an international level. , Thesis (LLM) -- Faculty of Law, Law, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Malahleka, Mthuthukisi
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: South Africa. Protection of Personal Information Act, 2013 , Cloud computing Law and legislation South Africa , Data protection Law and legislation South Africa , Personal information management South Africa , Data privacy South Africa , Computer security Law and legislation South Africa , General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/290731 , vital:56779
- Description: There is a relatively new development in Information Technology (IT) space known as cloud computing, software and service delivered remotely through the Internet without installing software on a computer. Cloud computing has quickly gathered steam as one of the most prominent topics in IT, and indeed within the business sector as a whole. Cloud computing is one such development associated with opportunities and benefits, especially in the commercial sector. Due to the development of IT and many businesses adopting e-commerce business-related strategies, cloud computing has revolutionised how personal information is processed. The advent of cloud computing as a mechanism to process personal information has brought many legal challenges for protecting the right to privacy enshrined under section 14 of the South African Constitution, which is a vulnerable part of one’s personality right. The right to privacy has long been protected even before adopting the Constitution under the common law of delict (actio iniuriarumn). As the adoption rate of cloud computing services by businesses continues to increase, the legal considerations and risks become more prevalent. The lawmakers struggle to keep pace with the rapidly changing technological advancements, at least for now. Both the common law and the Constitution could not address all the legal aspects of data protection and the adoption of cloud computing services hence the promulgation of the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (POPI Act). The POPI Act’s main objective is to protect the personal information of both natural and juristic persons. Personal information about an individual forms part of privacy. Unlawful processing of such personal information is a violation of the right to privacy of an individual. It is now widely recognised that the unregulated processing of personal information significantly impacts fundamental human rights like privacy, personality, and autonomy. A close analysis of cloud computing regulation is necessary, as legal protection mechanisms must safeguard the processing of personal information and establish extraterritorial jurisdiction to regulate the use of cloud computing within national legislation as cloud computing provides a transnational characteristic on the cross-border flow of personal information. In this thesis, a question is asked on whether the current data protection laws in South Africa on protecting the right to privacy in the cloud computing services context are adequate. The analysis will determine whether the overlaps between these pieces of data protection laws are competent to deal with the ever-increasing threats on the right to privacy and if they meet the international data protection standards set by the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The research seeks to analyse and reveal the shortcomings under the Constitution and the common law that led to adopting the POPI Act by studying the regulation of cloud computing services. This analysis will determine the shortcomings of the POPI Act as well in the context of cloud computing. The research will then follow a comparative analysis of the POPI Act and the GDPR to determine the application of the GDPR on international data breaches and compare its provisions with the POPI Act in the context of cloud computing. Finally, the research will address the question as to whether a multi-faceted approach, which includes a Model Law on cloud computing, would be an appropriate starting point setting out requirements for the use of this technology can be sufficient in protecting data subjects. And as cloud computing risks are not only a national but also a global problem, South Africa needs to look at the option of entering into mutual agreements with other countries and organisations to regulate cloud computing at an international level. , Thesis (LLM) -- Faculty of Law, Law, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The quality of higher education and its influence on graduate employability and employer perception
- Authors: Mqingwana, Siviwe Nokulinda
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Employability , Career education , Education, Higher Aims and objectives , College graduates Employment , Universities and colleges Ratings and rankings , Labor supply Effect of education on , College graduates Vocational guidance
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/284526 , vital:56071
- Description: This study examined the quality of higher education and its influence on graduate employability and employer perception. Through determining the factors influencing graduates’ employment by employers and also the elements that induce employers in employing graduates, this was achieved. This research is rooted in a positivist perspective determining the relationship between graduate employability and a universities’ status. The main goal of this research was to examine to what extent employers are influenced by a higher education institution's perceived reputation when employing graduates. The linear regression model was used to predict the relationship between graduate employability (dependent variable) and the perceived reputation of the university by employers and citations of the university. This was achieved using quantitative methods. The quantitative database that this research relied on is Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) world university ranking. This research made use of descriptive data analysis as well as linear regression. The data set analysis showed citations of the institution had a significant negative relationship with the rate of employability (although this was a relatively weak relationship). The reputation of the institution and the number of international students enrolled do not affect the rate of employability. The analysed data set also showed that the number of citations of a university had a significant impact on the rate of employability at the 10% significance level. As such, higher education institutions need to consider including current market demand into their offerings to improve their graduate’s employability. , Thesis (MBA) -- Faculty of Commerce, Rhodes Business School, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Mqingwana, Siviwe Nokulinda
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Employability , Career education , Education, Higher Aims and objectives , College graduates Employment , Universities and colleges Ratings and rankings , Labor supply Effect of education on , College graduates Vocational guidance
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/284526 , vital:56071
- Description: This study examined the quality of higher education and its influence on graduate employability and employer perception. Through determining the factors influencing graduates’ employment by employers and also the elements that induce employers in employing graduates, this was achieved. This research is rooted in a positivist perspective determining the relationship between graduate employability and a universities’ status. The main goal of this research was to examine to what extent employers are influenced by a higher education institution's perceived reputation when employing graduates. The linear regression model was used to predict the relationship between graduate employability (dependent variable) and the perceived reputation of the university by employers and citations of the university. This was achieved using quantitative methods. The quantitative database that this research relied on is Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) world university ranking. This research made use of descriptive data analysis as well as linear regression. The data set analysis showed citations of the institution had a significant negative relationship with the rate of employability (although this was a relatively weak relationship). The reputation of the institution and the number of international students enrolled do not affect the rate of employability. The analysed data set also showed that the number of citations of a university had a significant impact on the rate of employability at the 10% significance level. As such, higher education institutions need to consider including current market demand into their offerings to improve their graduate’s employability. , Thesis (MBA) -- Faculty of Commerce, Rhodes Business School, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The invasion autecology of Iris pseudacorus L. (Iridaceae) in South Africa
- Authors: Sandenbergh, Emma
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Iris pseudacorus South Africa , Invasive plants South Africa , Aquatic weeds South Africa , Plant genetics South Africa , Freshwater ecology South Africa , Iris pseudacorus Geographical distribution , Phytogeography
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232272 , vital:49977
- Description: Iris pseudacorus L. (Iridaceae) is an emergent aquatic macrophyte originating from Europe, north Africa, and western Asia, and is becoming an increasingly problematic invader in South Africa. By forming dense rhizomatic mats in the absence of natural enemies, I. pseudacorus outcompetes co-occurring indigenous biota, causing serious environmental and socioeconomic challenges. Iris pseudacorus is a declared invader in South Africa, Argentina, New Zealand, the United States of America, and Canada, but little information is known regarding the species’ invasive potential, particularly in the southern hemisphere, hindering the effectiveness of control efforts. This study addresses this knowledge gap in a South African context, providing valuable insight into the invasion autecology of I. pseudacorus in South Africa. For effective management and control of I. pseudacorus in South Africa and the global south, its distribution and invasive potential must be determined, and its population genetics understood. Hence, this study aimed to map the current confirmed distribution of I. pseudacorus populations in South Africa, investigating the relative abundance of I. pseudacorus individuals in each population, and comparing their sexual reproductive outputs. Moreover, this study assessed the competitive interactions between I. pseudacorus and co-occurring native species T. capensis, and examined the genetic diversity present between and within South African I. pseudacorus populations. Through field surveys, I. pseudacorus infestations were confirmed in eight of the country’s nine provinces, with the highest number of infestations recorded in the urban hubs, and greatest population abundances reported in the warmer, wetter regions of South Africa. These surveys indicated that South African I. pseudacorus populations have enhanced their sexual reproductive output relative to native range populations, and a germination rate of ~ 83 % was determined in the laboratory. The results of a common garden competition experiment indicated that T. capensis may be a superior competitor over I. pseudacorus, but this was not supported by field observations, and may be a result of the short duration of the experiment. Using inter-simple sequence repeats (ISSRs), high genetic diversity was observed within and between populations of I. pseudacorus, indicating the employment of sexual reproductive strategies, and providing evidence for gene-flow between and within populations. Moreover, a weak negative correlation was observed between geographic distance and genetic similarity, ii indicating a largely anthropogenic spread of I. pseudacorus, and suggesting the occurrence of fewer founding events than reported in the United States. This study provides useful insight into the invasion autecology of I. pseudacorus in South Africa, contributing to the ongoing research surrounding I. pseudacorus invasions worldwide, particularly in the southern hemisphere. These results contribute to the development of appropriate adaptive and integrated management strategies to control I. pseudacorus invasions in South Africa, and should be implemented before South African I. pseudacorus infestations reach the severity observed elsewhere. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Botany, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Sandenbergh, Emma
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Iris pseudacorus South Africa , Invasive plants South Africa , Aquatic weeds South Africa , Plant genetics South Africa , Freshwater ecology South Africa , Iris pseudacorus Geographical distribution , Phytogeography
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232272 , vital:49977
- Description: Iris pseudacorus L. (Iridaceae) is an emergent aquatic macrophyte originating from Europe, north Africa, and western Asia, and is becoming an increasingly problematic invader in South Africa. By forming dense rhizomatic mats in the absence of natural enemies, I. pseudacorus outcompetes co-occurring indigenous biota, causing serious environmental and socioeconomic challenges. Iris pseudacorus is a declared invader in South Africa, Argentina, New Zealand, the United States of America, and Canada, but little information is known regarding the species’ invasive potential, particularly in the southern hemisphere, hindering the effectiveness of control efforts. This study addresses this knowledge gap in a South African context, providing valuable insight into the invasion autecology of I. pseudacorus in South Africa. For effective management and control of I. pseudacorus in South Africa and the global south, its distribution and invasive potential must be determined, and its population genetics understood. Hence, this study aimed to map the current confirmed distribution of I. pseudacorus populations in South Africa, investigating the relative abundance of I. pseudacorus individuals in each population, and comparing their sexual reproductive outputs. Moreover, this study assessed the competitive interactions between I. pseudacorus and co-occurring native species T. capensis, and examined the genetic diversity present between and within South African I. pseudacorus populations. Through field surveys, I. pseudacorus infestations were confirmed in eight of the country’s nine provinces, with the highest number of infestations recorded in the urban hubs, and greatest population abundances reported in the warmer, wetter regions of South Africa. These surveys indicated that South African I. pseudacorus populations have enhanced their sexual reproductive output relative to native range populations, and a germination rate of ~ 83 % was determined in the laboratory. The results of a common garden competition experiment indicated that T. capensis may be a superior competitor over I. pseudacorus, but this was not supported by field observations, and may be a result of the short duration of the experiment. Using inter-simple sequence repeats (ISSRs), high genetic diversity was observed within and between populations of I. pseudacorus, indicating the employment of sexual reproductive strategies, and providing evidence for gene-flow between and within populations. Moreover, a weak negative correlation was observed between geographic distance and genetic similarity, ii indicating a largely anthropogenic spread of I. pseudacorus, and suggesting the occurrence of fewer founding events than reported in the United States. This study provides useful insight into the invasion autecology of I. pseudacorus in South Africa, contributing to the ongoing research surrounding I. pseudacorus invasions worldwide, particularly in the southern hemisphere. These results contribute to the development of appropriate adaptive and integrated management strategies to control I. pseudacorus invasions in South Africa, and should be implemented before South African I. pseudacorus infestations reach the severity observed elsewhere. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Botany, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The governance of schools for internally displaced learners in Puntland, Somalia: a top-down or bottom-up approach to education peacebuilding?
- Authors: Ramaite, Adivhaho Florence
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Peace-building Somalia Puntland , Internally displaced persons Education Somalia Puntland , School management and organization Somalia Puntland , Educational governance , Top-down and bottom-up design
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/406807 , vital:70309
- Description: This study examines educational governance in schools for internally displaced learners in Puntland, Somalia. Many Somalis have been internally displaced from the south and central of Somalia and neighbouring regions because of armed insurgence, as well as climate and ecological disasters. Communities of internally displaced Somalis who have settled in the north-eastern region of Somalia, together with the Ministry of Education and nongovernmental organisations such as Relief International, have established schools for internally displaced learners. The study uses interviews with teachers, school principals and school committee members to examine their experiences of how schools are governed, specifically in terms of the bottom-up and top-down approaches to peacebuilding education. This research study is the first of its kind to examine the experiences of education actors in internally displaced person schools in Somalia. It provides crucial, new information on northern NGOs and how they shape the governance of knowledge and resources in Somali schools and how Somali education actors interpret and respond to these interventions. Drawing on education studies and international relations, it develops a transdisciplinary framing of peacebuilding education and specifically focuses on the top-down and bottom-up approaches to peacebuilding education provision. It weaves these two disciplinary perspectives together to help establish the implications of the security sector in education and broadly post-conflict reconstruction. The study finds that donors, international NGOs and government actors use a top-down approach to education, which may sit at odds with local needs and priorities. It finds that Somali knowledge and values are marginalised in the curriculum and teachers’ professional development and that the distribution of resources such as teacher salaries and school feeding programmes is fragmented, opaque and lacking in accountability. The study emphasises that the exclusion of local voices may further contribute to the causes underlying conflict. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Political and International Studies, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
- Authors: Ramaite, Adivhaho Florence
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Peace-building Somalia Puntland , Internally displaced persons Education Somalia Puntland , School management and organization Somalia Puntland , Educational governance , Top-down and bottom-up design
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/406807 , vital:70309
- Description: This study examines educational governance in schools for internally displaced learners in Puntland, Somalia. Many Somalis have been internally displaced from the south and central of Somalia and neighbouring regions because of armed insurgence, as well as climate and ecological disasters. Communities of internally displaced Somalis who have settled in the north-eastern region of Somalia, together with the Ministry of Education and nongovernmental organisations such as Relief International, have established schools for internally displaced learners. The study uses interviews with teachers, school principals and school committee members to examine their experiences of how schools are governed, specifically in terms of the bottom-up and top-down approaches to peacebuilding education. This research study is the first of its kind to examine the experiences of education actors in internally displaced person schools in Somalia. It provides crucial, new information on northern NGOs and how they shape the governance of knowledge and resources in Somali schools and how Somali education actors interpret and respond to these interventions. Drawing on education studies and international relations, it develops a transdisciplinary framing of peacebuilding education and specifically focuses on the top-down and bottom-up approaches to peacebuilding education provision. It weaves these two disciplinary perspectives together to help establish the implications of the security sector in education and broadly post-conflict reconstruction. The study finds that donors, international NGOs and government actors use a top-down approach to education, which may sit at odds with local needs and priorities. It finds that Somali knowledge and values are marginalised in the curriculum and teachers’ professional development and that the distribution of resources such as teacher salaries and school feeding programmes is fragmented, opaque and lacking in accountability. The study emphasises that the exclusion of local voices may further contribute to the causes underlying conflict. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Political and International Studies, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
The effects of temperature and exploitation on the behaviour of red roman Chrysoblephus laticeps (Sparidae) at baited video stations
- Authors: Mataboge, Bontle Boitumelo
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Marine resources conservation South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of temperature on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Climatic factors South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of fishing on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of human beings on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Behavior South Africa Agulhas , Overfishing South Africa Agulhas , Underwater videography in wildlife monitoring South Africa Agulhas , Red roman (Chrysoblephus laticeps)
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291140 , vital:56823
- Description: Marine environments are experiencing rapidly increasing temperatures, sea levels and acidification and higher frequencies and magnitudes of extreme weather events as a result of climate change. In the Agulhas Ecoregion of South Africa, there has been an increase in the frequency and intensity of upwelling events. Upwelling events result in rapid and large decreases in water temperature which can persist for several days. Variation in water temperature is known to impact the metabolic rate of fish (which are ectotherms) and in turn their activity patterns. To promote fitness related traits, the metabolic rate of fish is maximised at a specific temperature range. Outside of this optimal temperature range, the capacity of fish to perform aerobically declines. Therefore, it is expected that an increase in upwelling may place the fish under significant physiological stress. The effects of climate change can be compounded by the effects of fisheries-induced evolution; the microevolution of a fish population due to the artificial selection of certain biological traits by fishing practices. Passive fishing gears preferentially remove large (older) and bold individuals, causing reductions in population size, genetic diversity and fecundity as well as size and age truncation and the loss of large, bold and dominant phenotypes in fish populations. These demographic changes affect the adaptive capacity of fish and exploited populations are expected to be less resilient to climate variability and long-term temperature change. The resilience of fish is largely dependent on their physiological attributes, particularly their metabolic rate. Theoretically, fish with broader aerobic scope (defined as the difference between an individual’s maximum metabolic rate and standard metabolic rate) will be more tolerant to the impacts of climate change as they have energy available for adaptation. Recent respirometry and accelerometry studies suggest that populations of the endemic southern African linefish Chrysoblephus laticeps (red roman) from inside marine protected areas (MPAs) have higher metabolic rates and broader aerobic scope compared to those found outside of MPAs, particularly at thermal extremes. As C. laticeps are highly resident it is possible that fish populations protected within well-established MPAs may be more resilient to the physiological stresses caused by upwelling if they are able to maintain their activity levels despite changing temperatures. Behaviour is a proxy that can be used to infer metabolism as behaviours have associated metabolic costs and benefits. Behaviour is also a trait that can be altered by passive fishing practices which preferentially extract more active and bold individuals. Given this context, the aim of this thesis was to determine the effects of short-term thermal variability on the population structure and behaviour of C. laticeps and whether these effects differed between protected and exploited populations. Baited remote underwater stereo-video systems (stereo-BRUVs) were used to observe C. laticeps inside two MPAs (Tsitsikamma and Goukamma) and at two exploited sites (Port Elizabeth and Cape St. Francis) over the temperature range 10-18 °C. The relative abundance, size and relevant behaviours of C. laticeps were recorded. The relative abundance (MaxN) of C. laticeps was not significantly higher inside the MPAs compared to the exploited sites. The size of C. laticeps did not vary significantly by protection level either. However, the mean size of C. laticeps was considerably smaller at Port Elizabeth compared to the three other locations. There was a notable absence of large C. laticeps size classes at Port Elizabeth. The effect of water temperature on relative abundance was only seen in the exploited areas, where temperature and abundance were positively correlated. This was not the case in the protected areas where C. laticeps abundance remained roughly consistent. Generally, the effect of temperature on all measured behaviours was consistent across protection levels. An exception was that the feeding rate at Tsitsikamma MPA was significantly higher than at Cape St. Francis at temperatures below 11.5 °C. Temperature had a significant effect on the time taken for the first individual to appear in the field of view. This time shortened with increasing temperature, regardless of protection level. This was likely a result of the metabolic constraints placed on individuals by low waters temperatures and individuals would be able to pursue the bait more readily at higher temperatures. However, there was no evidence of greater metabolic scope from the C. laticeps individuals observed in the MPAs, relative to the exploited areas. Individual size and the presence of conspecifics were also found to significantly influence behaviour. Generally, size had a positive relationship with behaviour, with larger individuals more likely to feed on the bait, chase other fish from the bait (only in the MPAs) and spend more time in the field of view. The higher displays of aggression in MPAs may be an indication of fishing practices having removed bold and dominant individuals at the exploited sites. The probability of fleeing and the feeding rates of individuals increased with increasing numbers of conspecifics, suggesting that C. laticeps behaviour is influenced by intraspecific competition. Overall, this thesis did not find strong evidence that C. laticeps from MPAs performed better than C. laticeps from exploited areas, even at low temperatures. Behavioural responses to temperature were highly variable across locations and this may be attributed to high behavioural phenotypic diversity among individuals. Environmental stressors, such as temperature changes, can illicit very different behavioural responses among individuals in a population. It is also possible that C. laticeps from the exploited areas have the same genetic predispositions to physiological stress as the individuals in the MPAs due to spillover and larval recruitment from the MPAs. Indeed, genetic studies find that all C. laticeps population in South African represent a single well-mixed genetic stock. It is likely that greater sampling effort is required to resolve the patterns in behaviour between exploited and protected populations. Nonetheless, given the influence of size on behaviour, the smaller size of C. laticeps at Port Elizabeth may be cause for concern regarding the vulnerability of future populations to ongoing climate change. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology and Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Mataboge, Bontle Boitumelo
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Marine resources conservation South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of temperature on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Climatic factors South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of fishing on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Effect of human beings on South Africa Agulhas , Sparidae Behavior South Africa Agulhas , Overfishing South Africa Agulhas , Underwater videography in wildlife monitoring South Africa Agulhas , Red roman (Chrysoblephus laticeps)
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291140 , vital:56823
- Description: Marine environments are experiencing rapidly increasing temperatures, sea levels and acidification and higher frequencies and magnitudes of extreme weather events as a result of climate change. In the Agulhas Ecoregion of South Africa, there has been an increase in the frequency and intensity of upwelling events. Upwelling events result in rapid and large decreases in water temperature which can persist for several days. Variation in water temperature is known to impact the metabolic rate of fish (which are ectotherms) and in turn their activity patterns. To promote fitness related traits, the metabolic rate of fish is maximised at a specific temperature range. Outside of this optimal temperature range, the capacity of fish to perform aerobically declines. Therefore, it is expected that an increase in upwelling may place the fish under significant physiological stress. The effects of climate change can be compounded by the effects of fisheries-induced evolution; the microevolution of a fish population due to the artificial selection of certain biological traits by fishing practices. Passive fishing gears preferentially remove large (older) and bold individuals, causing reductions in population size, genetic diversity and fecundity as well as size and age truncation and the loss of large, bold and dominant phenotypes in fish populations. These demographic changes affect the adaptive capacity of fish and exploited populations are expected to be less resilient to climate variability and long-term temperature change. The resilience of fish is largely dependent on their physiological attributes, particularly their metabolic rate. Theoretically, fish with broader aerobic scope (defined as the difference between an individual’s maximum metabolic rate and standard metabolic rate) will be more tolerant to the impacts of climate change as they have energy available for adaptation. Recent respirometry and accelerometry studies suggest that populations of the endemic southern African linefish Chrysoblephus laticeps (red roman) from inside marine protected areas (MPAs) have higher metabolic rates and broader aerobic scope compared to those found outside of MPAs, particularly at thermal extremes. As C. laticeps are highly resident it is possible that fish populations protected within well-established MPAs may be more resilient to the physiological stresses caused by upwelling if they are able to maintain their activity levels despite changing temperatures. Behaviour is a proxy that can be used to infer metabolism as behaviours have associated metabolic costs and benefits. Behaviour is also a trait that can be altered by passive fishing practices which preferentially extract more active and bold individuals. Given this context, the aim of this thesis was to determine the effects of short-term thermal variability on the population structure and behaviour of C. laticeps and whether these effects differed between protected and exploited populations. Baited remote underwater stereo-video systems (stereo-BRUVs) were used to observe C. laticeps inside two MPAs (Tsitsikamma and Goukamma) and at two exploited sites (Port Elizabeth and Cape St. Francis) over the temperature range 10-18 °C. The relative abundance, size and relevant behaviours of C. laticeps were recorded. The relative abundance (MaxN) of C. laticeps was not significantly higher inside the MPAs compared to the exploited sites. The size of C. laticeps did not vary significantly by protection level either. However, the mean size of C. laticeps was considerably smaller at Port Elizabeth compared to the three other locations. There was a notable absence of large C. laticeps size classes at Port Elizabeth. The effect of water temperature on relative abundance was only seen in the exploited areas, where temperature and abundance were positively correlated. This was not the case in the protected areas where C. laticeps abundance remained roughly consistent. Generally, the effect of temperature on all measured behaviours was consistent across protection levels. An exception was that the feeding rate at Tsitsikamma MPA was significantly higher than at Cape St. Francis at temperatures below 11.5 °C. Temperature had a significant effect on the time taken for the first individual to appear in the field of view. This time shortened with increasing temperature, regardless of protection level. This was likely a result of the metabolic constraints placed on individuals by low waters temperatures and individuals would be able to pursue the bait more readily at higher temperatures. However, there was no evidence of greater metabolic scope from the C. laticeps individuals observed in the MPAs, relative to the exploited areas. Individual size and the presence of conspecifics were also found to significantly influence behaviour. Generally, size had a positive relationship with behaviour, with larger individuals more likely to feed on the bait, chase other fish from the bait (only in the MPAs) and spend more time in the field of view. The higher displays of aggression in MPAs may be an indication of fishing practices having removed bold and dominant individuals at the exploited sites. The probability of fleeing and the feeding rates of individuals increased with increasing numbers of conspecifics, suggesting that C. laticeps behaviour is influenced by intraspecific competition. Overall, this thesis did not find strong evidence that C. laticeps from MPAs performed better than C. laticeps from exploited areas, even at low temperatures. Behavioural responses to temperature were highly variable across locations and this may be attributed to high behavioural phenotypic diversity among individuals. Environmental stressors, such as temperature changes, can illicit very different behavioural responses among individuals in a population. It is also possible that C. laticeps from the exploited areas have the same genetic predispositions to physiological stress as the individuals in the MPAs due to spillover and larval recruitment from the MPAs. Indeed, genetic studies find that all C. laticeps population in South African represent a single well-mixed genetic stock. It is likely that greater sampling effort is required to resolve the patterns in behaviour between exploited and protected populations. Nonetheless, given the influence of size on behaviour, the smaller size of C. laticeps at Port Elizabeth may be cause for concern regarding the vulnerability of future populations to ongoing climate change. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology and Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The effect of orchard sanitation and predatory ants on the eclosion of the internal feeding pests and Oriental fruit fly, in South Africa
- Authors: Makitla, Tshepang
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Orchards South Africa , Phytosanitation , Citrus Diseases and pests Biological control , Ants , Insects as biological pest control agents
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/362927 , vital:65375
- Description: There are several pests of phytosanitary concern in the citrus industry in South Africa. Orchard sanitation can play an important role in suppressing the populations of these pests, however there are little data on the efficacy of sanitation techniques. Therefore, the current study investigated the effect of fruit disposal techniques and burying depths on the eclosion of the most important pests of citrus in South Africa, false codling moth Thaumatotibia leucotreta Meyrick (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), Mediterranean fruit fly or Medfly Ceratitis capitata Wiedemann (Diptera: Tephritidae), Natal fruit fly Ceratitis rosa Karsh (Diptera: Tephritidae), and Oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis Hendel (Diptera: Tephritidae). Abscised C. sinensis fruits were inoculated with larvae of T. leucotreta, and eggs of C. capitata, C. rosa, and B. dorsalis, before being disposed as pulped, or whole, and buried at different depths (0 cm, 5 cm, 25 cm, and 50 cm). Abundance and richness of predatory ants were monitored using pitfall traps to ascertain their effect on the mortality of the immature stages of these pests. Ceratitis capitata and C. rosa failed to eclose from the inoculated fruits disposed at different depths, however, T. leucotreta and B. dorsalis adults did eclosed. Significantly fewer B. dorsalis eclosed from fruits that were pulped in comparison to eclosion where the fruit were left whole (F (3, 16) = 11.45, P < 0.01). Furthermore, depth of burial had a significant effect on the number of eclosed adults of Drosophila sp (F (3, 112) = 3.43, P < 0.01). Burying fruits at 50 cm suppressed the eclosion of all the internal feeding pests tested. Twenty-seven thousand seventy-three individual ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) were sampled from the same plots as used above, with at least 47% and 53% sampled from plots where pulped and whole C. sinensis fruits were disposed of, respectively. The ants were identified to morphospecies which included Pheidole1, Pheidole2, Formicinae1, Formicinae2, Formicinae3, and Myrmicinae1. The disposal of the inoculated C. sinensis fruits either as pulped or whole and burying at different depths significantly suppressed and/or delayed the eclosion of either of the tested internal feeding pests of citrus. Although, predacious ants were sampled from the same treatment plots they did not affect the survival or eclosion of the tested pests, and this could be attributed to the application of the slow toxic ant bait. Therefore, based on the observed results B. dorsalis adults showed the ability to eclose from 50 cm depth where fruit was either disposed as pulped or whole, thus, citrus farmers are advised to use hammer mill that will finely crush sanitised fruit, and/or bury fruit beyond 50 cm depth to prevent the adult od this pest from eclosing. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
- Authors: Makitla, Tshepang
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Orchards South Africa , Phytosanitation , Citrus Diseases and pests Biological control , Ants , Insects as biological pest control agents
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/362927 , vital:65375
- Description: There are several pests of phytosanitary concern in the citrus industry in South Africa. Orchard sanitation can play an important role in suppressing the populations of these pests, however there are little data on the efficacy of sanitation techniques. Therefore, the current study investigated the effect of fruit disposal techniques and burying depths on the eclosion of the most important pests of citrus in South Africa, false codling moth Thaumatotibia leucotreta Meyrick (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), Mediterranean fruit fly or Medfly Ceratitis capitata Wiedemann (Diptera: Tephritidae), Natal fruit fly Ceratitis rosa Karsh (Diptera: Tephritidae), and Oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis Hendel (Diptera: Tephritidae). Abscised C. sinensis fruits were inoculated with larvae of T. leucotreta, and eggs of C. capitata, C. rosa, and B. dorsalis, before being disposed as pulped, or whole, and buried at different depths (0 cm, 5 cm, 25 cm, and 50 cm). Abundance and richness of predatory ants were monitored using pitfall traps to ascertain their effect on the mortality of the immature stages of these pests. Ceratitis capitata and C. rosa failed to eclose from the inoculated fruits disposed at different depths, however, T. leucotreta and B. dorsalis adults did eclosed. Significantly fewer B. dorsalis eclosed from fruits that were pulped in comparison to eclosion where the fruit were left whole (F (3, 16) = 11.45, P < 0.01). Furthermore, depth of burial had a significant effect on the number of eclosed adults of Drosophila sp (F (3, 112) = 3.43, P < 0.01). Burying fruits at 50 cm suppressed the eclosion of all the internal feeding pests tested. Twenty-seven thousand seventy-three individual ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) were sampled from the same plots as used above, with at least 47% and 53% sampled from plots where pulped and whole C. sinensis fruits were disposed of, respectively. The ants were identified to morphospecies which included Pheidole1, Pheidole2, Formicinae1, Formicinae2, Formicinae3, and Myrmicinae1. The disposal of the inoculated C. sinensis fruits either as pulped or whole and burying at different depths significantly suppressed and/or delayed the eclosion of either of the tested internal feeding pests of citrus. Although, predacious ants were sampled from the same treatment plots they did not affect the survival or eclosion of the tested pests, and this could be attributed to the application of the slow toxic ant bait. Therefore, based on the observed results B. dorsalis adults showed the ability to eclose from 50 cm depth where fruit was either disposed as pulped or whole, thus, citrus farmers are advised to use hammer mill that will finely crush sanitised fruit, and/or bury fruit beyond 50 cm depth to prevent the adult od this pest from eclosing. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
The diversity and dry season habitat associations of fish communities in the Kabompo River Basin, Upper Zambezi, Zambia
- Authors: Rennie, Craig Lawrence
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Biodiversity Zambia Kabompo District , Ecology Zambia Kabompo District , Fish communities Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Ecology Zambia Kabompo District , Freshwater habitats Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Effect of human beings on Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Climatic factors Zambia Kabompo District , Mesohabitat
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232261 , vital:49976
- Description: The Zambezian headwaters contain diverse fish communities which support thriving fisheries. This region and its fishes are under pressure from multiple anthropogenic threats, including overexploitation and large-scale developments with potential knock-on effects for the riparian communities. Previous studies have focused on known fisheries areas and the mainstem Zambezi River, neglecting large tributaries such as the Kabompo River. Consequently, little literature is available on the diversity and ecology of the fishes that inhabit these large tributaries, hindering the effective management and protection of biodiversity. This study aimed to fill the current knowledge gaps in the diversity and habitat associations of fish communities in the Upper Zambezi, using the Kabompo River as a case study. The first objective was to provide an updated checklist of the fishes of the Kabompo River basin using a compilation of historical data and field surveys. This study detailed the occurrence and distribution of 83 fish species within the Kabompo River basin. All these species have been recorded in the Upper Zambezi, with some of their ranges extending into the Middle (29 species) and Lower Zambezi (23 species) while others have more restricted distributions. The most diverse families were the Cyprinidae (26 species) and the Cichlidae (15 species). A number of potential undescribed species, whose taxonomic distinctiveness need further investigation were also collected. Taxonomic conflicts are also highlighted for some of the taxa that were previously considered to have broad geographic ranges or disjunct distributions. Consistent with findings from other studies within the region, the current taxonomy underestimates the diversity of fishes in the Kabompo River and Upper Zambezi. The second objective was to assess the habitat use of small-bodied fish communities during the low-flow period in 2019. Reconnaissance trips identified dominant mesohabitats along the middle Kabompo River around Jivundu. A total of 139 mesohabitats were sampled across the five dominant mesohabitats identified; Phragmites mauritianus, wood, rock, Vallisneria aethiopica and bare substrate. Catch per unit effort, species richness, Shannon diversity and Pielou’s evenness differed significantly between these mesohabitats. Twenty-six species showed significant associations (p < 0.05) with a specific mesohabitat type or environmental variable (current velocity or depth). Eight species were associated with the woody habitat, with three of these, E. radiatus, E. unitaeniatus, and P. ngamensis being almost exclusively associated with this habitat. Enteromius kerstenii, E. lineomaculatus and S. depressirostris were almost exclusively associated with P. mauritianus and represent potential indicator species for this habitat. A number of species were also with both P. mauritianus and woody habitats. Nine species showed statistically significant associations with the rocky mesohabitat, with Amphilius uranoscopus and Petrocephalus longicapitis, being almost exclusive to rocky sections of the river. Therefore, species such as A. uranoscopus are potential indicators for monitoring the integrity of rocky habitats under threat from sedimentation. The strong associations indicate that this comprehensive baseline may be valuable indicators/ proxies for identifying anthropogenic induced change in the Kabompo basin. This would provide a basis to determine fish responses to regional environmental changes associated with human activities. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology & Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Rennie, Craig Lawrence
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Biodiversity Zambia Kabompo District , Ecology Zambia Kabompo District , Fish communities Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Ecology Zambia Kabompo District , Freshwater habitats Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Effect of human beings on Zambia Kabompo District , Fishes Climatic factors Zambia Kabompo District , Mesohabitat
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232261 , vital:49976
- Description: The Zambezian headwaters contain diverse fish communities which support thriving fisheries. This region and its fishes are under pressure from multiple anthropogenic threats, including overexploitation and large-scale developments with potential knock-on effects for the riparian communities. Previous studies have focused on known fisheries areas and the mainstem Zambezi River, neglecting large tributaries such as the Kabompo River. Consequently, little literature is available on the diversity and ecology of the fishes that inhabit these large tributaries, hindering the effective management and protection of biodiversity. This study aimed to fill the current knowledge gaps in the diversity and habitat associations of fish communities in the Upper Zambezi, using the Kabompo River as a case study. The first objective was to provide an updated checklist of the fishes of the Kabompo River basin using a compilation of historical data and field surveys. This study detailed the occurrence and distribution of 83 fish species within the Kabompo River basin. All these species have been recorded in the Upper Zambezi, with some of their ranges extending into the Middle (29 species) and Lower Zambezi (23 species) while others have more restricted distributions. The most diverse families were the Cyprinidae (26 species) and the Cichlidae (15 species). A number of potential undescribed species, whose taxonomic distinctiveness need further investigation were also collected. Taxonomic conflicts are also highlighted for some of the taxa that were previously considered to have broad geographic ranges or disjunct distributions. Consistent with findings from other studies within the region, the current taxonomy underestimates the diversity of fishes in the Kabompo River and Upper Zambezi. The second objective was to assess the habitat use of small-bodied fish communities during the low-flow period in 2019. Reconnaissance trips identified dominant mesohabitats along the middle Kabompo River around Jivundu. A total of 139 mesohabitats were sampled across the five dominant mesohabitats identified; Phragmites mauritianus, wood, rock, Vallisneria aethiopica and bare substrate. Catch per unit effort, species richness, Shannon diversity and Pielou’s evenness differed significantly between these mesohabitats. Twenty-six species showed significant associations (p < 0.05) with a specific mesohabitat type or environmental variable (current velocity or depth). Eight species were associated with the woody habitat, with three of these, E. radiatus, E. unitaeniatus, and P. ngamensis being almost exclusively associated with this habitat. Enteromius kerstenii, E. lineomaculatus and S. depressirostris were almost exclusively associated with P. mauritianus and represent potential indicator species for this habitat. A number of species were also with both P. mauritianus and woody habitats. Nine species showed statistically significant associations with the rocky mesohabitat, with Amphilius uranoscopus and Petrocephalus longicapitis, being almost exclusive to rocky sections of the river. Therefore, species such as A. uranoscopus are potential indicators for monitoring the integrity of rocky habitats under threat from sedimentation. The strong associations indicate that this comprehensive baseline may be valuable indicators/ proxies for identifying anthropogenic induced change in the Kabompo basin. This would provide a basis to determine fish responses to regional environmental changes associated with human activities. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology & Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
The biology and movement patterns of non-native common carp, cyprinus carpio (l) in Groenvlei, South Africa
- Authors: Mukhari, Dinah Lorraine
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Introduced fishes South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp Behavior South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve Growth , Carp Habitat South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve Reproduction , Habitat conservation South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Aquatic resources conservation South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291233 , vital:56834
- Description: The common carp, Cyprinus carpio is a highly invasive fish species, first introduced into South Africa in the late nineteen century, and now widely spread throughout the country. In 1991 carp were illegally introduced to Groenvlei, within the Goukamma Nature Reserve in the Western Cape Province. Decreases in water quality and declines in biota have been attributed to the now large numbers of carp. Management measures have commenced to reduce the carp population, however these are not underpinned by science as little is known about the biology and movement patterns of resident carp. The age, growth and maturity of carp within the lake was determined using oxytetracycline hydrochloride marked asteriscus otoliths and macroscopic gonad development staging methods. The results showed that carp in Groenvlei had similar growth characteristics to the invasive populations in North America and Australia; fast growth during the first three to five years and reproductive maturity attained between the ages of two to three years, and are long lived (maximum age of 20 years old). Their growth however differed from the only other study on a South African population. Six acoustically tagged carp were manually tracked in order to report on their movement patterns and habitat use. Carp moved much greater distances in February compared to October and November, and occupied different areas of the lake. In November they were found to aggregate in backwaters which corresponds with their breeding activities. Literature on global carp control shows that whilst eradication of this fish can be achieved in small isolated waters using icthyocides and water drawdowns, in conservation priority areas such as Groenvlei where this is not possible, mechanical removal using multiple gears targeting vulnerable life stages can most efficient at controlling carp. This study identified where and when these methods could be focused to optimise control efforts. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology and Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Mukhari, Dinah Lorraine
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Introduced fishes South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp Behavior South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve Growth , Carp Habitat South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Carp South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve Reproduction , Habitat conservation South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve , Aquatic resources conservation South Africa Goukamma Nature Reserve
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/291233 , vital:56834
- Description: The common carp, Cyprinus carpio is a highly invasive fish species, first introduced into South Africa in the late nineteen century, and now widely spread throughout the country. In 1991 carp were illegally introduced to Groenvlei, within the Goukamma Nature Reserve in the Western Cape Province. Decreases in water quality and declines in biota have been attributed to the now large numbers of carp. Management measures have commenced to reduce the carp population, however these are not underpinned by science as little is known about the biology and movement patterns of resident carp. The age, growth and maturity of carp within the lake was determined using oxytetracycline hydrochloride marked asteriscus otoliths and macroscopic gonad development staging methods. The results showed that carp in Groenvlei had similar growth characteristics to the invasive populations in North America and Australia; fast growth during the first three to five years and reproductive maturity attained between the ages of two to three years, and are long lived (maximum age of 20 years old). Their growth however differed from the only other study on a South African population. Six acoustically tagged carp were manually tracked in order to report on their movement patterns and habitat use. Carp moved much greater distances in February compared to October and November, and occupied different areas of the lake. In November they were found to aggregate in backwaters which corresponds with their breeding activities. Literature on global carp control shows that whilst eradication of this fish can be achieved in small isolated waters using icthyocides and water drawdowns, in conservation priority areas such as Groenvlei where this is not possible, mechanical removal using multiple gears targeting vulnerable life stages can most efficient at controlling carp. This study identified where and when these methods could be focused to optimise control efforts. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Ichthyology and Fisheries Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
Statistical and Mathematical Learning: an application to fraud detection and prevention
- Authors: Hamlomo, Sisipho
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Credit card fraud , Bootstrap (Statistics) , Support vector machines , Neural networks (Computer science) , Decision trees , Machine learning , Cross-validation , Imbalanced data
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233795 , vital:50128
- Description: Credit card fraud is an ever-growing problem. There has been a rapid increase in the rate of fraudulent activities in recent years resulting in a considerable loss to several organizations, companies, and government agencies. Many researchers have focused on detecting fraudulent behaviours early using advanced machine learning techniques. However, credit card fraud detection is not a straightforward task since fraudulent behaviours usually differ for each attempt and the dataset is highly imbalanced, that is, the frequency of non-fraudulent cases outnumbers the frequency of fraudulent cases. In the case of the European credit card dataset, we have a ratio of approximately one fraudulent case to five hundred and seventy-eight non-fraudulent cases. Different methods were implemented to overcome this problem, namely random undersampling, one-sided sampling, SMOTE combined with Tomek links and parameter tuning. Predictive classifiers, namely logistic regression, decision trees, k-nearest neighbour, support vector machine and multilayer perceptrons, are applied to predict if a transaction is fraudulent or non-fraudulent. The model's performance is evaluated based on recall, precision, F1-score, the area under receiver operating characteristics curve, geometric mean and Matthew correlation coefficient. The results showed that the logistic regression classifier performed better than other classifiers except when the dataset was oversampled. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Statistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Hamlomo, Sisipho
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Credit card fraud , Bootstrap (Statistics) , Support vector machines , Neural networks (Computer science) , Decision trees , Machine learning , Cross-validation , Imbalanced data
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233795 , vital:50128
- Description: Credit card fraud is an ever-growing problem. There has been a rapid increase in the rate of fraudulent activities in recent years resulting in a considerable loss to several organizations, companies, and government agencies. Many researchers have focused on detecting fraudulent behaviours early using advanced machine learning techniques. However, credit card fraud detection is not a straightforward task since fraudulent behaviours usually differ for each attempt and the dataset is highly imbalanced, that is, the frequency of non-fraudulent cases outnumbers the frequency of fraudulent cases. In the case of the European credit card dataset, we have a ratio of approximately one fraudulent case to five hundred and seventy-eight non-fraudulent cases. Different methods were implemented to overcome this problem, namely random undersampling, one-sided sampling, SMOTE combined with Tomek links and parameter tuning. Predictive classifiers, namely logistic regression, decision trees, k-nearest neighbour, support vector machine and multilayer perceptrons, are applied to predict if a transaction is fraudulent or non-fraudulent. The model's performance is evaluated based on recall, precision, F1-score, the area under receiver operating characteristics curve, geometric mean and Matthew correlation coefficient. The results showed that the logistic regression classifier performed better than other classifiers except when the dataset was oversampled. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Statistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
Soil and vegetation recovery following Acacia dealbata clearing in the Tsitsa catchment, Eastern Cape Province of South Africa: implications for ecological restoration
- Authors: Balintulo, Putuma
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Acacia South Africa Eastern Cape , Invasive plants South Africa Eastern Cape , Working for Water Programme , Soil restoration South Africa Eastern Cape , Plant nutrients South Africa Eastern Cape , Restoration ecology South Africa Eastern Cape , Clearing of land South Africa Eastern Cape , Legacy effect
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/290778 , vital:56783
- Description: Invasion by alien plant species in South Africa continues to compromise the stability of ecosystems by causing declines in biodiversity, altering soil nutrients and processes, and subsequently transforming ecosystem functionality. Control of invasive alien plant species has been widely implemented in South Africa to minimize their negative impacts; however, the legacy effects can persist long after the plant has been removed. The impacts of Acacia dealbata clearing on soil properties and native vegetation recovery remains understudied despite their significance in ecological restoration and monitoring. This comparative study determined the impacts of A. dealbata clearing on both soil physicochemical properties and vegetation in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. Soils were collected from three different clearing treatments, namely, cleared, invaded, and uninvaded, on 5 m x 5 m plots over three summer months. The plots were replicated four times for each clearing treatment, making a total of 72 sampling plots. Soils were assessed for soil pH, resistivity, P, C, N, and exchangeable cations as well as soil moisture content, penetration resistance, infiltration rate, hydraulic conductivity, and water repellency. Clearing of A. dealbata did not have any significant effects on most soil nutrients, however, there were variations in soil pH, resistance, and Na. Soil pH was significantly higher in the uninvaded treatments than in the cleared and invaded treatments. Soil moisture content was significantly higher in the cleared treatments than the adjacent invaded and uninvaded treatments, but this was observed in the month of December only. Soil penetration resistance and infiltration rates were significantly higher in the month of December in the cleared treatments. For all clearing treatments, no significant differences were recorded for soil hydraulic conductivity. These results on changes in soil properties following A. dealbata clearing are varied, with some soil properties showing decreases, an indication that removal of A. dealbata has the potential to shift soil properties towards a positive recovery trajectory. This study further assessed whether the clearing of A. dealbata facilitates the recovery of native plant species. Vegetation surveys were conducted in the three above-mentioned treatments and plots. Results showed little recruitment of native grasses and forbs, but the persistence of A. dealbata seedlings in the cleared treatments. Species richness and Shannon-Wiener diversity index were significantly (P < 0.05) higher in the cleared and invaded treatments than the uninvaded treatments, and this was more visible for trees and shrubs. Cover for all species was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the uninvaded than the cleared and invaded treatments. This study observed the recruitment of some native species in the cleared treatments that were not present in the invaded treatments. Therefore, the recruitment and establishment of some native species, mostly grasses, in the cleared treatments gives assurance that passive restoration is on a positive vegetation recovery trajectory that can lead to recovery of native vegetation after A. dealbata clearing. Therefore, the study concludes that investing in ecological restoration after alien plant clearing is a necessity for complete ecosystem recovery to be achieved. Overall, the study concludes that the removal of A. dealbata triggers changes to some soil properties. Similarly, the study observed recruitment of some native grasses in cleared areas, an indication that alien plant clearing facilitates changes in both soil properties and vegetation. However, soil and vegetation recovery are being hampered by the regrowth of A. dealbata and secondary invaders that were observed in the cleared treatments. Two key recommendations of this study are (i) clearing follow-up to remove recruiting seedlings of invasive plant species and secondary invaders should be timeous and well-funded, and (ii) active restoration should be considered to speed-up soil and vegetation recovery processes. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Environmental Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
- Authors: Balintulo, Putuma
- Date: 2022-04-06
- Subjects: Acacia South Africa Eastern Cape , Invasive plants South Africa Eastern Cape , Working for Water Programme , Soil restoration South Africa Eastern Cape , Plant nutrients South Africa Eastern Cape , Restoration ecology South Africa Eastern Cape , Clearing of land South Africa Eastern Cape , Legacy effect
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/290778 , vital:56783
- Description: Invasion by alien plant species in South Africa continues to compromise the stability of ecosystems by causing declines in biodiversity, altering soil nutrients and processes, and subsequently transforming ecosystem functionality. Control of invasive alien plant species has been widely implemented in South Africa to minimize their negative impacts; however, the legacy effects can persist long after the plant has been removed. The impacts of Acacia dealbata clearing on soil properties and native vegetation recovery remains understudied despite their significance in ecological restoration and monitoring. This comparative study determined the impacts of A. dealbata clearing on both soil physicochemical properties and vegetation in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. Soils were collected from three different clearing treatments, namely, cleared, invaded, and uninvaded, on 5 m x 5 m plots over three summer months. The plots were replicated four times for each clearing treatment, making a total of 72 sampling plots. Soils were assessed for soil pH, resistivity, P, C, N, and exchangeable cations as well as soil moisture content, penetration resistance, infiltration rate, hydraulic conductivity, and water repellency. Clearing of A. dealbata did not have any significant effects on most soil nutrients, however, there were variations in soil pH, resistance, and Na. Soil pH was significantly higher in the uninvaded treatments than in the cleared and invaded treatments. Soil moisture content was significantly higher in the cleared treatments than the adjacent invaded and uninvaded treatments, but this was observed in the month of December only. Soil penetration resistance and infiltration rates were significantly higher in the month of December in the cleared treatments. For all clearing treatments, no significant differences were recorded for soil hydraulic conductivity. These results on changes in soil properties following A. dealbata clearing are varied, with some soil properties showing decreases, an indication that removal of A. dealbata has the potential to shift soil properties towards a positive recovery trajectory. This study further assessed whether the clearing of A. dealbata facilitates the recovery of native plant species. Vegetation surveys were conducted in the three above-mentioned treatments and plots. Results showed little recruitment of native grasses and forbs, but the persistence of A. dealbata seedlings in the cleared treatments. Species richness and Shannon-Wiener diversity index were significantly (P < 0.05) higher in the cleared and invaded treatments than the uninvaded treatments, and this was more visible for trees and shrubs. Cover for all species was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the uninvaded than the cleared and invaded treatments. This study observed the recruitment of some native species in the cleared treatments that were not present in the invaded treatments. Therefore, the recruitment and establishment of some native species, mostly grasses, in the cleared treatments gives assurance that passive restoration is on a positive vegetation recovery trajectory that can lead to recovery of native vegetation after A. dealbata clearing. Therefore, the study concludes that investing in ecological restoration after alien plant clearing is a necessity for complete ecosystem recovery to be achieved. Overall, the study concludes that the removal of A. dealbata triggers changes to some soil properties. Similarly, the study observed recruitment of some native grasses in cleared areas, an indication that alien plant clearing facilitates changes in both soil properties and vegetation. However, soil and vegetation recovery are being hampered by the regrowth of A. dealbata and secondary invaders that were observed in the cleared treatments. Two key recommendations of this study are (i) clearing follow-up to remove recruiting seedlings of invasive plant species and secondary invaders should be timeous and well-funded, and (ii) active restoration should be considered to speed-up soil and vegetation recovery processes. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Environmental Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-06
Singing madness: three performative analyses of the “mad scene” from Lucia di Lammermoor
- Authors: Le Kay, Jo-Nette
- Date: 2023-10-13
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/425377 , vital:72234
- Description: This study describes three internationally recognised sopranos and their presentations of character psychology on stage, during their performances of the famous “mad scene” from Gaetano Donizetti’s opera Lucia di Lammermoor. These sopranos are Joan Sutherland, Mariella Devia, and Lisette Oropesa. I use Margaret Kartomi’s (2014) model of performativity to interpret the “madness” depicted by the three selected sopranos, as based on my interpretations of commercially released audio-visual recordings of their performances in the role of Lucia. Through analysing these performances with the help of Kartomi’s performativity model (which focuses on persona, emotion-and intersubjectivity, and reception), my research determines – with speculative interpretation, and within the reasonable limits of standard psychiatric frameworks – which mental illnesses the sopranos can be understood to have portrayed in their interpretations of the role of Lucia. The study’s goal is not to make an accurate mental health diagnosis of someone’s portrayal of a fictional character. (Considering the fact that one cannot make accurate mental health diagnoses for people who do not exist.) Rather, my focus is to discover which dramatic and possibly musical characteristics are utilised to perform this fictional character and give expressive content to her “madness”. The concept of “madness” and its psychological characterisation during performance thus becomes the framework from which to interpret and understand vocal and acting techniques related to opera in general and to bel canto more specifically. My research findings are that the three performers use facial expressions, different aspects of using the voice through bel canto singing, and body movements as a way of expression. Bel canto characteristics include coloratura embellishments, fioritura, melismas, messa di voce, squillo and chiaroscuro. The sopranos also show musical and dramatic elements in how they respond to the flute or glass harmonica during the ‘Mad Scene’ – which counts as the personae expressed by the performers. These personae are further applied in the emotional and intersubjectivity and the reception aspects of Kartomi’s performativity model. In the emotional and intersubjectivity aspect, the chorus and other characters singing on stage are read as emphasising the reaction of society on the mentally dysfunctional behaviour enacted by the sopranos. In the reception aspect, reviewers are used to filling in for audience members. I read their reactions as contributing factors in forming an understanding of the interpretations of the “mad scene” performed by the three sopranos. My reading of the three interpretations of the “mad scene” goes further by subjectively interpreting how these sopranos approximate different states of mental collapse. These readings include approximations of psychosis such as mania, dissociative personality disorder, and paranoid schizophrenic behaviour. Always, though, these mental health behaviours are identified as approximations to better understand vocal and acting techniques. , Thesis (MMus) -- Faculty of Humanities, Music and Musicology, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2023-10-13
- Authors: Le Kay, Jo-Nette
- Date: 2023-10-13
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/425377 , vital:72234
- Description: This study describes three internationally recognised sopranos and their presentations of character psychology on stage, during their performances of the famous “mad scene” from Gaetano Donizetti’s opera Lucia di Lammermoor. These sopranos are Joan Sutherland, Mariella Devia, and Lisette Oropesa. I use Margaret Kartomi’s (2014) model of performativity to interpret the “madness” depicted by the three selected sopranos, as based on my interpretations of commercially released audio-visual recordings of their performances in the role of Lucia. Through analysing these performances with the help of Kartomi’s performativity model (which focuses on persona, emotion-and intersubjectivity, and reception), my research determines – with speculative interpretation, and within the reasonable limits of standard psychiatric frameworks – which mental illnesses the sopranos can be understood to have portrayed in their interpretations of the role of Lucia. The study’s goal is not to make an accurate mental health diagnosis of someone’s portrayal of a fictional character. (Considering the fact that one cannot make accurate mental health diagnoses for people who do not exist.) Rather, my focus is to discover which dramatic and possibly musical characteristics are utilised to perform this fictional character and give expressive content to her “madness”. The concept of “madness” and its psychological characterisation during performance thus becomes the framework from which to interpret and understand vocal and acting techniques related to opera in general and to bel canto more specifically. My research findings are that the three performers use facial expressions, different aspects of using the voice through bel canto singing, and body movements as a way of expression. Bel canto characteristics include coloratura embellishments, fioritura, melismas, messa di voce, squillo and chiaroscuro. The sopranos also show musical and dramatic elements in how they respond to the flute or glass harmonica during the ‘Mad Scene’ – which counts as the personae expressed by the performers. These personae are further applied in the emotional and intersubjectivity and the reception aspects of Kartomi’s performativity model. In the emotional and intersubjectivity aspect, the chorus and other characters singing on stage are read as emphasising the reaction of society on the mentally dysfunctional behaviour enacted by the sopranos. In the reception aspect, reviewers are used to filling in for audience members. I read their reactions as contributing factors in forming an understanding of the interpretations of the “mad scene” performed by the three sopranos. My reading of the three interpretations of the “mad scene” goes further by subjectively interpreting how these sopranos approximate different states of mental collapse. These readings include approximations of psychosis such as mania, dissociative personality disorder, and paranoid schizophrenic behaviour. Always, though, these mental health behaviours are identified as approximations to better understand vocal and acting techniques. , Thesis (MMus) -- Faculty of Humanities, Music and Musicology, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2023-10-13
Sequence, structure, dynamics, and substrate specificity analyses of bacterial Glycoside Hydrolase 1 enzymes from several activities
- Authors: Veldman, Wayde Michael
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Glycosidases , Bioinformatics , Molecular dynamics , Ligands (Biochemistry) , Enzymes , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Sequence alignment (Bioinformatics) , Structural bioinformatics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233805 , vital:50129 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233810
- Description: Glycoside hydrolase 1 (GH1) enzymes are a ubiquitous family of enzymes that hydrolyse the glycosidic bond between two or more carbohydrates, or between a carbohydrate and a non-carbohydrate moiety. Despite their conserved catalytic domain, these enzymes have many different enzyme activities and/or substrate specificities as a change of only a few residues in the active site can alter their function. Most GH1 active site residues are situated in loop regions, and it is known that enzymes are more likely to develop new functions (broad specificity) if they possess an active site with a high proportion of loops. Furthermore, the GH1 active site consists of several subsites and cooperative binding makes the binding affinity of sites difficult to measure because the properties of one subsite are influenced by the binding of the other subsites. Extensive knowledge of protein-ligand interactions is critical to the comprehension of biology at the molecular level. However, the structural determinants and molecular details of GH1 ligand specificity and affinity are very broad, highly complex, not well understood, and therefore still need to be clarified. The aim of this study was to computationally characterise the activity of three newly solved GH1 crystallographic structures sent to us by our collaborators, and to provide evidence for their ligand-binding specificities. In addition, the differences in structural and biochemical contributions to enzyme specificity and/or function between different GH1 activities/enzymes was assessed, and the sequence/structure/function relationship of several activities of GH1 enzymes was analysed and compared. To accomplish the research aims, sequence analyses involving sequence identity, phylogenetics, and motif discovery were performed. As protein structure is more conserved than sequence, the discovered motifs were mapped to 3D structures for structural analysis and comparisons. To obtain information on enzyme mechanism or mode of action, as well as structure-function relationship, computational methods such as docking, molecular dynamics, binding free energy calculations, and essential dynamics were implemented. These computational approaches can provide information on the active site, binding residues, protein-ligand interactions, binding affinity, conformational change, and most structural or dynamic elements that play a role in enzyme function. The three new structures received from our collaborators are the first GH1 crystallographic structures from Bacillus licheniformis ever determined. As phospho-glycoside compounds were unavailable for purchase for use in activity assays, and as the active sites of the structures were absent of ligand, in silico docking and MD simulations were performed to provide evidence for their GH1 activities and substrate specificities. First though, the amino acid sequences of all known characterised bacterial GH1 enzymes were retrieved from the CAZy database and compared to the sequences of the three new B. licheniformis crystallographic structures which provided evidence of the putative 6Pβ-glucosidase activity of enzyme BlBglH, and dual 6Pβ-glucosidase/6Pβ-galactosidase (dual-phospho) activity of enzymes BlBglB and BlBglC. As all three enzymes were determined to be putative 6Pβ-glycosidase activity enzymes, much of the thesis focused on the overall analysis and comparison of the 6Pβ-glucosidase, 6Pβ-galactosidase, and dual-phospho activities that make up the 6Pβ-glycosidases. The 6Pβ-glycosidase active site residues were identified through consensus of binding interactions using all known 6Pβ-glycosidase PDB structures complexed complete ligand substrates. With regards to the 6Pβ-glucosidase activity, it was found that the L8b loop is longer and forms extra interactions with the L8a loop likely leading to increased L8 loop rigidity which would prevent the displacement of residue Ala423 ensuring a steric clash with galactoconfigured ligands and may engender substrate specificity for gluco-configured ligands only. Also, during molecular dynamics simulations using enzyme BlBglH (6Pβ-glucosidase activity), it was revealed that the favourable binding of substrate stabilises the loops that surround and make up the enzyme active site. Using the BlBglC (dual-phospho activity) enzyme structure with either galacto- (PNP6Pgal) or gluco-configured (PNP6Pglc) ligands, MD simulations in triplicate revealed important details of the broad specificity of dual-phospho activity enzymes. The ligand O4 hydroxyl position is the only difference between PNP6Pgal and PNP6Pgal, and it was found that residues Gln23 and Trp433 bind strongly to the ligand O3 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pgal-enzyme complex, but to the ligand O4 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pglc-enzyme complex. Also, His124 formed many hydrogen bonds with the PNP6Pgal O3 hydroxyl group but had none with PNP6Pglc. Alternatively, residues Tyr173, Tyr301, Gln302 and Thr321 formed hydrogen bonds with PNP6Pglc but not PNP6Pgal. Lastly, using multiple 3D structures from various GH1 activities, a large network of conserved interactions between active site residues (and other important residues) was uncovered, which most likely stabilise the loop regions that contain these residues, helping to retain their positions needed for binding molecules. Alternatively, there exists several differing residue-residue interactions when comparing each of the activities which could contribute towards individual activity substrate specificity by causing slightly different overall structure and malleability of the active site. Altogether, the findings in this thesis shed light on the function, mechanisms, dynamics, and ligand-binding of GH1 enzymes – particularly of the 6Pβ-glycosidase activities. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-08
- Authors: Veldman, Wayde Michael
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Glycosidases , Bioinformatics , Molecular dynamics , Ligands (Biochemistry) , Enzymes , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Sequence alignment (Bioinformatics) , Structural bioinformatics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233805 , vital:50129 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233810
- Description: Glycoside hydrolase 1 (GH1) enzymes are a ubiquitous family of enzymes that hydrolyse the glycosidic bond between two or more carbohydrates, or between a carbohydrate and a non-carbohydrate moiety. Despite their conserved catalytic domain, these enzymes have many different enzyme activities and/or substrate specificities as a change of only a few residues in the active site can alter their function. Most GH1 active site residues are situated in loop regions, and it is known that enzymes are more likely to develop new functions (broad specificity) if they possess an active site with a high proportion of loops. Furthermore, the GH1 active site consists of several subsites and cooperative binding makes the binding affinity of sites difficult to measure because the properties of one subsite are influenced by the binding of the other subsites. Extensive knowledge of protein-ligand interactions is critical to the comprehension of biology at the molecular level. However, the structural determinants and molecular details of GH1 ligand specificity and affinity are very broad, highly complex, not well understood, and therefore still need to be clarified. The aim of this study was to computationally characterise the activity of three newly solved GH1 crystallographic structures sent to us by our collaborators, and to provide evidence for their ligand-binding specificities. In addition, the differences in structural and biochemical contributions to enzyme specificity and/or function between different GH1 activities/enzymes was assessed, and the sequence/structure/function relationship of several activities of GH1 enzymes was analysed and compared. To accomplish the research aims, sequence analyses involving sequence identity, phylogenetics, and motif discovery were performed. As protein structure is more conserved than sequence, the discovered motifs were mapped to 3D structures for structural analysis and comparisons. To obtain information on enzyme mechanism or mode of action, as well as structure-function relationship, computational methods such as docking, molecular dynamics, binding free energy calculations, and essential dynamics were implemented. These computational approaches can provide information on the active site, binding residues, protein-ligand interactions, binding affinity, conformational change, and most structural or dynamic elements that play a role in enzyme function. The three new structures received from our collaborators are the first GH1 crystallographic structures from Bacillus licheniformis ever determined. As phospho-glycoside compounds were unavailable for purchase for use in activity assays, and as the active sites of the structures were absent of ligand, in silico docking and MD simulations were performed to provide evidence for their GH1 activities and substrate specificities. First though, the amino acid sequences of all known characterised bacterial GH1 enzymes were retrieved from the CAZy database and compared to the sequences of the three new B. licheniformis crystallographic structures which provided evidence of the putative 6Pβ-glucosidase activity of enzyme BlBglH, and dual 6Pβ-glucosidase/6Pβ-galactosidase (dual-phospho) activity of enzymes BlBglB and BlBglC. As all three enzymes were determined to be putative 6Pβ-glycosidase activity enzymes, much of the thesis focused on the overall analysis and comparison of the 6Pβ-glucosidase, 6Pβ-galactosidase, and dual-phospho activities that make up the 6Pβ-glycosidases. The 6Pβ-glycosidase active site residues were identified through consensus of binding interactions using all known 6Pβ-glycosidase PDB structures complexed complete ligand substrates. With regards to the 6Pβ-glucosidase activity, it was found that the L8b loop is longer and forms extra interactions with the L8a loop likely leading to increased L8 loop rigidity which would prevent the displacement of residue Ala423 ensuring a steric clash with galactoconfigured ligands and may engender substrate specificity for gluco-configured ligands only. Also, during molecular dynamics simulations using enzyme BlBglH (6Pβ-glucosidase activity), it was revealed that the favourable binding of substrate stabilises the loops that surround and make up the enzyme active site. Using the BlBglC (dual-phospho activity) enzyme structure with either galacto- (PNP6Pgal) or gluco-configured (PNP6Pglc) ligands, MD simulations in triplicate revealed important details of the broad specificity of dual-phospho activity enzymes. The ligand O4 hydroxyl position is the only difference between PNP6Pgal and PNP6Pgal, and it was found that residues Gln23 and Trp433 bind strongly to the ligand O3 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pgal-enzyme complex, but to the ligand O4 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pglc-enzyme complex. Also, His124 formed many hydrogen bonds with the PNP6Pgal O3 hydroxyl group but had none with PNP6Pglc. Alternatively, residues Tyr173, Tyr301, Gln302 and Thr321 formed hydrogen bonds with PNP6Pglc but not PNP6Pgal. Lastly, using multiple 3D structures from various GH1 activities, a large network of conserved interactions between active site residues (and other important residues) was uncovered, which most likely stabilise the loop regions that contain these residues, helping to retain their positions needed for binding molecules. Alternatively, there exists several differing residue-residue interactions when comparing each of the activities which could contribute towards individual activity substrate specificity by causing slightly different overall structure and malleability of the active site. Altogether, the findings in this thesis shed light on the function, mechanisms, dynamics, and ligand-binding of GH1 enzymes – particularly of the 6Pβ-glycosidase activities. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-08
Rural households’ perceptions of an invasive alien species rosa rubiginosa l. (rosehip) and the role it plays in rural livelihoods in Lesotho
- Authors: Makhorole, Thato Violet
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Rose hips Lesotho , Invasive plants Lesotho , Rural poor Lesotho , Probit model , Principal components analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403069 , vital:69919
- Description: Despite the vast research on the negative impacts of invasive alien species on the environment, these species remain part of the rural communities due to their numerous livelihood uses. Thus, more research is required, focusing mainly on the impacts of invasive alien species on the livelihoods of rural communities. This study investigated the community perceptions of rosehip (Rosa rubiginosa) and its contribution to rural communities as an invasive alien species. Four community councils, Pitseng, Matlameng, Limamarela and Mphorosane in the Leribe District Lesotho, were assessed. The study followed the pragmatism paradigm. The contribution of rosehip to rural livelihoods was analysed by comparing income from rosehip with other income sources. The study used simple random sampling and snowball sampling to select a representative of 160 respondents. The primary data was collected using semi-structured questionnaires. Moreover, SPSS and Stata statistical package programs were used for statistical analyses. The results showed that rosehip's livelihood benefits, its negative impacts, the length of time it has been available in the area, and its abundance highly influence the social, economic and environmental perception of rural communities. Furthermore, the study revealed that although the income from rosehip is extremely low and available for only three months of the year, the income plays an important part to the poorer households who have no other income sources. The study found that the main reason for engagement in rosehip harvesting despite its challenging nature was unemployment. The study also revealed that rosehip is part of the risk-reducing strategy or income diversification. Some households used it to complement other sources of income, such as agricultural production. Rosehip trade, if well-controlled, has the potential to alleviate rural poverty by creating job opportunities, providing a source of household income, and acting as a safety net in the face of shocks such as limited job opportunities and food shortages. In conclusion, households’ perceptions of rosehip have proven that rosehip is a valuable resource that provides a supplementary income that contributes towards alleviating poverty in Lesotho’s rural communities. The study recommends the private sector to establish and manages small agro-processing industries focusing on products used daily. The study also encourages environmental education and indigenous knowledge among community members, which would include knowledge and recognition of invasive alien species and their potential benefits and threats. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
- Authors: Makhorole, Thato Violet
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Rose hips Lesotho , Invasive plants Lesotho , Rural poor Lesotho , Probit model , Principal components analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403069 , vital:69919
- Description: Despite the vast research on the negative impacts of invasive alien species on the environment, these species remain part of the rural communities due to their numerous livelihood uses. Thus, more research is required, focusing mainly on the impacts of invasive alien species on the livelihoods of rural communities. This study investigated the community perceptions of rosehip (Rosa rubiginosa) and its contribution to rural communities as an invasive alien species. Four community councils, Pitseng, Matlameng, Limamarela and Mphorosane in the Leribe District Lesotho, were assessed. The study followed the pragmatism paradigm. The contribution of rosehip to rural livelihoods was analysed by comparing income from rosehip with other income sources. The study used simple random sampling and snowball sampling to select a representative of 160 respondents. The primary data was collected using semi-structured questionnaires. Moreover, SPSS and Stata statistical package programs were used for statistical analyses. The results showed that rosehip's livelihood benefits, its negative impacts, the length of time it has been available in the area, and its abundance highly influence the social, economic and environmental perception of rural communities. Furthermore, the study revealed that although the income from rosehip is extremely low and available for only three months of the year, the income plays an important part to the poorer households who have no other income sources. The study found that the main reason for engagement in rosehip harvesting despite its challenging nature was unemployment. The study also revealed that rosehip is part of the risk-reducing strategy or income diversification. Some households used it to complement other sources of income, such as agricultural production. Rosehip trade, if well-controlled, has the potential to alleviate rural poverty by creating job opportunities, providing a source of household income, and acting as a safety net in the face of shocks such as limited job opportunities and food shortages. In conclusion, households’ perceptions of rosehip have proven that rosehip is a valuable resource that provides a supplementary income that contributes towards alleviating poverty in Lesotho’s rural communities. The study recommends the private sector to establish and manages small agro-processing industries focusing on products used daily. The study also encourages environmental education and indigenous knowledge among community members, which would include knowledge and recognition of invasive alien species and their potential benefits and threats. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-10-14
Representations of adult women who have experienced 'absent' fathers: a thematic analysis of True Love magazine
- Authors: Moola, Lubayna Codelia
- Date: 2022-04
- Subjects: Absentee fathers South Africa , Fathers and daughters South Africa , Fathers and daughters in literature South Africa , Mass media and families South Africa , Mass media and women South Africa , Families Psychological aspects , Self-actualization (Psychology) in women South Africa , True Love magazine , Thematic analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232568 , vital:50003
- Description: This study explored how adult women who have experienced father 'absence' are represented in True Love magazine, a popular South African women's magazine targeting black women readers. The study examined nineteen articles published between 2016 and 2021 in True Love, featuring black women’s stories and clinical psychologists, which mentioned ‘absent’ fathers. Through the lenses of psychoanalytic, traditional African cultural, and feminist theoretical frameworks and their key concepts, the articles were examined in relation to how the effects on the adult women of complicated relationships with their fathers while they were growing up, were represented. The selected articles were analysed using Braun and Clarke's reflexive thematic analysis, and representational themes were identified guided by theoretical frameworks and familiarity with the scholarly literature on father ‘absence’ in South Africa. A wide range of childhood and young adult experiences of father-daughter relationships, and household circumstances, appeared alongside the strong maternal networks which supported these girls and women. Representations and themes of clinical psychologists involved Freudian psychoanalytic frameworks to describe the damaging psychological implications of ‘absent’ fathers, particularly affecting adult women’s capacities to form trusting intimate relationships with men. The adult women’s stories – largely successful businesswomen and/or celebrities in the arts, as represented by True Love feature writers and editors – presented themes of what the women had learnt from their mothers, and how they had overcome difficulties and obstacles. These themes included representations of resilience, and of being ‘survivors’, informed by empowerments from a feminist theoretical framework. These themes also represented the women as working psychotherapeutically to manage their past experiences and psychological distress, to transform their retriggering in adult heterosexual relationships, and to pursue healing and self-actualisation. These representations and themes are argued to have inspirational and motivating implications for girls and women in contemporary South Africa. They generate alternate stories about the longer-term effects and outcomes of father ‘absence’, rather than the prominent 'victim' stories in media and scholarly literature of young women doomed to suffer poor relationships and depression forever. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Psychology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04
- Authors: Moola, Lubayna Codelia
- Date: 2022-04
- Subjects: Absentee fathers South Africa , Fathers and daughters South Africa , Fathers and daughters in literature South Africa , Mass media and families South Africa , Mass media and women South Africa , Families Psychological aspects , Self-actualization (Psychology) in women South Africa , True Love magazine , Thematic analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Master's thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232568 , vital:50003
- Description: This study explored how adult women who have experienced father 'absence' are represented in True Love magazine, a popular South African women's magazine targeting black women readers. The study examined nineteen articles published between 2016 and 2021 in True Love, featuring black women’s stories and clinical psychologists, which mentioned ‘absent’ fathers. Through the lenses of psychoanalytic, traditional African cultural, and feminist theoretical frameworks and their key concepts, the articles were examined in relation to how the effects on the adult women of complicated relationships with their fathers while they were growing up, were represented. The selected articles were analysed using Braun and Clarke's reflexive thematic analysis, and representational themes were identified guided by theoretical frameworks and familiarity with the scholarly literature on father ‘absence’ in South Africa. A wide range of childhood and young adult experiences of father-daughter relationships, and household circumstances, appeared alongside the strong maternal networks which supported these girls and women. Representations and themes of clinical psychologists involved Freudian psychoanalytic frameworks to describe the damaging psychological implications of ‘absent’ fathers, particularly affecting adult women’s capacities to form trusting intimate relationships with men. The adult women’s stories – largely successful businesswomen and/or celebrities in the arts, as represented by True Love feature writers and editors – presented themes of what the women had learnt from their mothers, and how they had overcome difficulties and obstacles. These themes included representations of resilience, and of being ‘survivors’, informed by empowerments from a feminist theoretical framework. These themes also represented the women as working psychotherapeutically to manage their past experiences and psychological distress, to transform their retriggering in adult heterosexual relationships, and to pursue healing and self-actualisation. These representations and themes are argued to have inspirational and motivating implications for girls and women in contemporary South Africa. They generate alternate stories about the longer-term effects and outcomes of father ‘absence’, rather than the prominent 'victim' stories in media and scholarly literature of young women doomed to suffer poor relationships and depression forever. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Psychology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04
Recruitment disruptors: an exploratory study on the perception of artificial intelligence amongst selected Eastern Cape Province recruiters
- Authors: Sobekwa, Sinazo
- Date: 2022-04
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232238 , vital:49974
- Description: Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Psychology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04
- Authors: Sobekwa, Sinazo
- Date: 2022-04
- Subjects: Uncatalogued
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/232238 , vital:49974
- Description: Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Humanities, Psychology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04
Quantifying the impacts of cactus biological control agents in South Africa
- Authors: Mnqeta, Zezethu
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Cactus Biological control South Africa , Noxious weeds South Africa , Invasive plants Biological control South Africa , Insects as biological pest control agents South Africa , Cochineal insect South Africa , Mealybugs South Africa , Agricultural productivity South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/294631 , vital:57239 , DOI 10.21504/10962/294631
- Description: Invasive alien cacti are prominent weeds that threaten indigenous biodiversity and have a negative impact on agricultural productivity in South Africa. These plants are problematic because they form dense thickets that reduce the carrying capacity of rangelands; restrict the movement of livestock and wildlife thus reducing access to shade and water sources; and are directly harmful to livestock, wildlife and people due to their sharp spines. Biological control is the most effective, affordable and environmentally friendly method to control invasive alien cacti and minimize their negative impacts. Cochineal insects (Dactylopius spp.: Dactylopiidae) and the gall-forming mealybug, Hypogeococcus sp. (Pseudococcidae) are used as biological control agents for cacti. The agents are however poor dispersers, so mass-rearing and augmentative releases are required in order to establish the agents at sites where they are needed. This study aimed to evaluate the mass-rearing and release efforts of cactus biological control in South Africa, quantify the impact of the biological control agents on cactus plant populations through long-term monitoring, and assess the benefits accrued due to the biological control agents through the perceptions of land-users. An assessment of the effectiveness of the release effort for cactus biological control agents was conducted by comparing where biological control agents have been released with the known distribution of the target weeds. Only 26% of the quarter degree squares that are known to be occupied by invasive alien cacti have had biological control agents released in them. This indicated that the mass-rearing and release efforts in South Africa are inadequate and should be increased, especially in areas where few releases have been made and many cacti are present, such as the Limpopo Province. The impact of the biological control agents on cactus plant populations was assessed by monitoring agent densities, target plant densities and target plant reproductive outputs before and after releases. Plant biomass and reproductive output were reduced by biological control agents for three of the target weeds that were assessed, while the duration of the study was too short to measure reductions for the fourth target weed. Benefits to land-users were then quantified through a questionnaire survey. Land-users perceived biological control as an effective management option, with 81% of the land-users reporting that there was less invasive alien cactus after releasing biological control agents on their land. Forty-nine percent of the land-users believed that the negative impacts of the cactus had been reduced and that they benefited more from their land since control was achieved. Since land-users were only interviewed within four years of the releases being conducted, it is expected that the percentage of land-users who gained benefits from biological control will increase in future. Ninety-seven percent of the land-users stated that the agents were safe and had not fed on any other plants or had any detrimental impacts. These perceptions indicated that land-users regarded biological control as a safe and effective method of controlling invasive alien cacti. This study confirms that biological control is an effective and safe way of controlling invasive alien Cactaceae. It is also the first to assess some of the benefits that land-users have accrued due to biological control of cactus weeds. It is however evident that a greater mass-rearing and release effort is required for South Africa to get the maximum benefits possible from the use of the biological control agents for cactus weeds that are available in the country. , Izityalo ze-cactus ezisuka kwamanye amazwe zilukhula olubalaseleyo, olwenza ingxaki kwintlobo ngeentlobo zezityalo nezilwanyana kwaye ezizityalo zinefuthe neziphumo ezingalunganga kwimveliso yezolimo eMzantsi Afrika. Ezi zizityalo ziyingxaki kuba zenza amatyholo ashinyeneyo athi anciphise umthamo wokusebenzisa umhlaba: zinqanda ukuhamba nogkukhululekileyo kwemfuyo nezilwanyana zasendle ngokwenza oko zingakwazi ukufikelela emthuzini xa kutshisa nakwimithombo yamanzi yokusela; zikwayiyo nengozi kwimfuyo, izilwanyana zasendle kunye nabantu ngenxa yamave abukhali afumaneka kwezizityalo. Ukulawula nokwehliza ubunzini nezinga lemigcipheko yezizityalo, kusetyenziswa indlela ekuthiwa yi-biological control. Lendlela yeyona ndlela isebenza ngokuphucukileyo, efikelelayo, nengenabungozi kokusingqongileyo. Izinambuzane ze- cochineal (i-Dactylopius spp.: Dactylopiidae) kunye ne-mealybug, i-Hypogeococcus sp. (Pseudococcidae) zisetyenziswe njengezixhobo ze-biological control ezinceda ukulawula ezizityalo ze-cactus zingafunekiyo. Ingxaki yazo ezizinambuzane zizixhobo ze-biological control zingentla kukuba azikwazi kuzisasaza ngokwazo ukuba zifikelele nakwizityalo ezikude ngoko ke ukukhuliswa nokukhutshwa ngobuninzi bazo kuyafuneka ukukhawulelana nalengxaki kunye nokwandisa amathuba wokuba zifikelele kuzozonke izityalo ze-cactus ekufuneka zizilawule. Olu phononongo lujolise ekuvavanyeni iinzame zokukhulisa ngobuninzi nokukhupha ezezinambuzane zizixhobo ze-bioloigical control zokulawula izityalo ze-cactus eMzantsi Afrika, ukujonga ubungakanani befuthe notshintsho elenziwa zezinambuzane zizixhobo ze-bioloigical control kwizityalo ze-cactus emva kwexesha elide lokuzijonga, kunye nokuvavanya inzuzo efunyenwe ngenxa yokulawula ezizityalo ze-cactus ngokwemibono yabasebenzisi bomhlaba. Uvavanyo lweenzame zokukhutshwa kwezixhobo zezixhobo zezinambuzane ze-bioloigical control kwizityalo ze-cactus lwenziwa ngokuthelekisa iindawo apho izixhobo zezinambuzane ze-biological control zikhutshwe khona kunye neendawo apho izityalo ze-cactus kwaziwayo ukuba ziyafumaneka khona. Yi-26% kuphela yesikwere sekota eyaziwayo ukuba kukhona izityalo ze-cactus nalapho kukhutshwe khona kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control. Oku kubonisa ukuba iinzame zokukhulisa nokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control eMzantsi Afrika azanelanga kwaye kufuneka zandiswe, ngakumbi kwiindawo apho kukho ukhutsho olumbalwa olwenziweyo kunye nezityalo ze-cactus ezininzi ezifumaneka khona, njengePhondo laseLimpopo. Iimpembelelo yokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kwizityalo ze-cactus zavavanywa ngokujonga ubunizi bezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control, ukuxinana kwezityalo ze-cactus ekujoliswe kuzo kunye nemveliso yokuzala kwezityalo ze-cactus phambi nasemva kokuba kukhutshwe izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control. Ubungakanani bezityalo ze-cactus kunye nemveliso yokuzala ziye zacutheka emva kokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kwinzityalo ezintathu ze-cactus ebekujoliswe uvavanyo kuzo, ngelixa ixesha lophononongo lalifutshane kakhulu ukuvavanya unciphiso kwisityalo se-cactus sesine. Izibonelelo zabasebenzisi bomhlaba zaye zavavanywa kusetyenziswa uhlobo lwemibuzo. Abasebenzisi bomhlaba balubona ukusetyenziswa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control njengendlela yolawulo olusebenzayo, yi81% yabasebenzisi bomhlaba echaze ukuba izityalo ze-cactus zecuthekile emva kokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control emhlabeni wabo. Amashumi amane anesithoba eepesenti zabasebenzisi bomhlaba bakholelwa ukuba impembelelo ezingalunganga ze-cactus zincitshisiwe kwaye baxhamle kakhulu kumhlaba wabo okoko lwaphunyenzwa. Oludliwano-ndlebe belwenziwe kubasebenzisi bomhlaba kwisithuba seminyaka emine emva kokuba kukhutshwe izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control, kulindeleke ukuba ipesenti yabasebenzisi bomhlaba abathe bafumana izibonelelo kwi-biological control lonyuke kwixesha elizayo. Amashumi alithoba anesixhenxe ekhulwini abasebenzisi bomhlaba bachaze ukuba izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control zikhuselekile kwaye khange zidle kuzo naziphi na ezinye izityalo ezingezi eze-cactus ebekujoliswe kuzo okanye zineempembelelo eyingozi. Ezi mbono ziyabonisa ukuba abasebenzi bomhlaba bayithatha i-biological control njengendlela ekhuselekileyo nesebenzayo yokulawula izityalo ze-cactus zamanye amazwe. Olu phononongo luqinisekisa ukuba ulawulo olusebenzisa izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control yindlela esebenzayo nekhuselekileyo yokulawula iCactaceae yamanye amazwe. Ikwangolokuqala ukuvavanya ezinye zezibonelelo ezizuzwe ngabasebenzisi bomhlaba ngenxa ye-biological control yezityalo ze-cactus. Nangona kunjalo kucacile ukuba ukwandisa inzame zokukhulisa nokukhupha ngobuninzi izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kuyafuneka ukuze uMzantsi Afrika ufumane izibonelelo eziphakamileyo enokubakho ngokusetyenziswa kwe zinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control zokulawula ukhula lwe-cactus olukhoyo kweli lizwe. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-04-08
- Authors: Mnqeta, Zezethu
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Cactus Biological control South Africa , Noxious weeds South Africa , Invasive plants Biological control South Africa , Insects as biological pest control agents South Africa , Cochineal insect South Africa , Mealybugs South Africa , Agricultural productivity South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/294631 , vital:57239 , DOI 10.21504/10962/294631
- Description: Invasive alien cacti are prominent weeds that threaten indigenous biodiversity and have a negative impact on agricultural productivity in South Africa. These plants are problematic because they form dense thickets that reduce the carrying capacity of rangelands; restrict the movement of livestock and wildlife thus reducing access to shade and water sources; and are directly harmful to livestock, wildlife and people due to their sharp spines. Biological control is the most effective, affordable and environmentally friendly method to control invasive alien cacti and minimize their negative impacts. Cochineal insects (Dactylopius spp.: Dactylopiidae) and the gall-forming mealybug, Hypogeococcus sp. (Pseudococcidae) are used as biological control agents for cacti. The agents are however poor dispersers, so mass-rearing and augmentative releases are required in order to establish the agents at sites where they are needed. This study aimed to evaluate the mass-rearing and release efforts of cactus biological control in South Africa, quantify the impact of the biological control agents on cactus plant populations through long-term monitoring, and assess the benefits accrued due to the biological control agents through the perceptions of land-users. An assessment of the effectiveness of the release effort for cactus biological control agents was conducted by comparing where biological control agents have been released with the known distribution of the target weeds. Only 26% of the quarter degree squares that are known to be occupied by invasive alien cacti have had biological control agents released in them. This indicated that the mass-rearing and release efforts in South Africa are inadequate and should be increased, especially in areas where few releases have been made and many cacti are present, such as the Limpopo Province. The impact of the biological control agents on cactus plant populations was assessed by monitoring agent densities, target plant densities and target plant reproductive outputs before and after releases. Plant biomass and reproductive output were reduced by biological control agents for three of the target weeds that were assessed, while the duration of the study was too short to measure reductions for the fourth target weed. Benefits to land-users were then quantified through a questionnaire survey. Land-users perceived biological control as an effective management option, with 81% of the land-users reporting that there was less invasive alien cactus after releasing biological control agents on their land. Forty-nine percent of the land-users believed that the negative impacts of the cactus had been reduced and that they benefited more from their land since control was achieved. Since land-users were only interviewed within four years of the releases being conducted, it is expected that the percentage of land-users who gained benefits from biological control will increase in future. Ninety-seven percent of the land-users stated that the agents were safe and had not fed on any other plants or had any detrimental impacts. These perceptions indicated that land-users regarded biological control as a safe and effective method of controlling invasive alien cacti. This study confirms that biological control is an effective and safe way of controlling invasive alien Cactaceae. It is also the first to assess some of the benefits that land-users have accrued due to biological control of cactus weeds. It is however evident that a greater mass-rearing and release effort is required for South Africa to get the maximum benefits possible from the use of the biological control agents for cactus weeds that are available in the country. , Izityalo ze-cactus ezisuka kwamanye amazwe zilukhula olubalaseleyo, olwenza ingxaki kwintlobo ngeentlobo zezityalo nezilwanyana kwaye ezizityalo zinefuthe neziphumo ezingalunganga kwimveliso yezolimo eMzantsi Afrika. Ezi zizityalo ziyingxaki kuba zenza amatyholo ashinyeneyo athi anciphise umthamo wokusebenzisa umhlaba: zinqanda ukuhamba nogkukhululekileyo kwemfuyo nezilwanyana zasendle ngokwenza oko zingakwazi ukufikelela emthuzini xa kutshisa nakwimithombo yamanzi yokusela; zikwayiyo nengozi kwimfuyo, izilwanyana zasendle kunye nabantu ngenxa yamave abukhali afumaneka kwezizityalo. Ukulawula nokwehliza ubunzini nezinga lemigcipheko yezizityalo, kusetyenziswa indlela ekuthiwa yi-biological control. Lendlela yeyona ndlela isebenza ngokuphucukileyo, efikelelayo, nengenabungozi kokusingqongileyo. Izinambuzane ze- cochineal (i-Dactylopius spp.: Dactylopiidae) kunye ne-mealybug, i-Hypogeococcus sp. (Pseudococcidae) zisetyenziswe njengezixhobo ze-biological control ezinceda ukulawula ezizityalo ze-cactus zingafunekiyo. Ingxaki yazo ezizinambuzane zizixhobo ze-biological control zingentla kukuba azikwazi kuzisasaza ngokwazo ukuba zifikelele nakwizityalo ezikude ngoko ke ukukhuliswa nokukhutshwa ngobuninzi bazo kuyafuneka ukukhawulelana nalengxaki kunye nokwandisa amathuba wokuba zifikelele kuzozonke izityalo ze-cactus ekufuneka zizilawule. Olu phononongo lujolise ekuvavanyeni iinzame zokukhulisa ngobuninzi nokukhupha ezezinambuzane zizixhobo ze-bioloigical control zokulawula izityalo ze-cactus eMzantsi Afrika, ukujonga ubungakanani befuthe notshintsho elenziwa zezinambuzane zizixhobo ze-bioloigical control kwizityalo ze-cactus emva kwexesha elide lokuzijonga, kunye nokuvavanya inzuzo efunyenwe ngenxa yokulawula ezizityalo ze-cactus ngokwemibono yabasebenzisi bomhlaba. Uvavanyo lweenzame zokukhutshwa kwezixhobo zezixhobo zezinambuzane ze-bioloigical control kwizityalo ze-cactus lwenziwa ngokuthelekisa iindawo apho izixhobo zezinambuzane ze-biological control zikhutshwe khona kunye neendawo apho izityalo ze-cactus kwaziwayo ukuba ziyafumaneka khona. Yi-26% kuphela yesikwere sekota eyaziwayo ukuba kukhona izityalo ze-cactus nalapho kukhutshwe khona kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control. Oku kubonisa ukuba iinzame zokukhulisa nokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control eMzantsi Afrika azanelanga kwaye kufuneka zandiswe, ngakumbi kwiindawo apho kukho ukhutsho olumbalwa olwenziweyo kunye nezityalo ze-cactus ezininzi ezifumaneka khona, njengePhondo laseLimpopo. Iimpembelelo yokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kwizityalo ze-cactus zavavanywa ngokujonga ubunizi bezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control, ukuxinana kwezityalo ze-cactus ekujoliswe kuzo kunye nemveliso yokuzala kwezityalo ze-cactus phambi nasemva kokuba kukhutshwe izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control. Ubungakanani bezityalo ze-cactus kunye nemveliso yokuzala ziye zacutheka emva kokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kwinzityalo ezintathu ze-cactus ebekujoliswe uvavanyo kuzo, ngelixa ixesha lophononongo lalifutshane kakhulu ukuvavanya unciphiso kwisityalo se-cactus sesine. Izibonelelo zabasebenzisi bomhlaba zaye zavavanywa kusetyenziswa uhlobo lwemibuzo. Abasebenzisi bomhlaba balubona ukusetyenziswa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control njengendlela yolawulo olusebenzayo, yi81% yabasebenzisi bomhlaba echaze ukuba izityalo ze-cactus zecuthekile emva kokukhutshwa kwezinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control emhlabeni wabo. Amashumi amane anesithoba eepesenti zabasebenzisi bomhlaba bakholelwa ukuba impembelelo ezingalunganga ze-cactus zincitshisiwe kwaye baxhamle kakhulu kumhlaba wabo okoko lwaphunyenzwa. Oludliwano-ndlebe belwenziwe kubasebenzisi bomhlaba kwisithuba seminyaka emine emva kokuba kukhutshwe izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control, kulindeleke ukuba ipesenti yabasebenzisi bomhlaba abathe bafumana izibonelelo kwi-biological control lonyuke kwixesha elizayo. Amashumi alithoba anesixhenxe ekhulwini abasebenzisi bomhlaba bachaze ukuba izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control zikhuselekile kwaye khange zidle kuzo naziphi na ezinye izityalo ezingezi eze-cactus ebekujoliswe kuzo okanye zineempembelelo eyingozi. Ezi mbono ziyabonisa ukuba abasebenzi bomhlaba bayithatha i-biological control njengendlela ekhuselekileyo nesebenzayo yokulawula izityalo ze-cactus zamanye amazwe. Olu phononongo luqinisekisa ukuba ulawulo olusebenzisa izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control yindlela esebenzayo nekhuselekileyo yokulawula iCactaceae yamanye amazwe. Ikwangolokuqala ukuvavanya ezinye zezibonelelo ezizuzwe ngabasebenzisi bomhlaba ngenxa ye-biological control yezityalo ze-cactus. Nangona kunjalo kucacile ukuba ukwandisa inzame zokukhulisa nokukhupha ngobuninzi izinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control kuyafuneka ukuze uMzantsi Afrika ufumane izibonelelo eziphakamileyo enokubakho ngokusetyenziswa kwe zinambuzane ezizixhobo ze-biological control zokulawula ukhula lwe-cactus olukhoyo kweli lizwe. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology, 2022
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- Date Issued: 2022-04-08