SA’s protected areas growing at a healthy rate, report reveals

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SA’s protected areas growing at a healthy rate, report reveals

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By Ethan van Diemen• 6 October 2021

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Illustrative image | Sources: EPA/NIC BOTHMA | Warren Little/Getty Images | Gallo Images/ Foto24 / Werner Hills | Gallo Images/Misha Jordaan | Deaan Vivier | Gallo Images/GO!/Mark Johnston |

At 11,280,684 hectares, if South Africa’s protected land was a province, it would be bigger than North West, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga or Gauteng. It would also be roughly the size of Cuba and bigger than Denmark.

A full 9.2% of South Africa’s total land area is protected and managed for biodiversity conservation. A ray of sunshine in an increasingly dire environmental context, “the extent of the land-based protected area estate increased… by nearly 1.2 million ha, representing an 11.7% increase in the protected area estate”.

This is according to Statistics South Africa’s (Stats SA’s) recently published “Natural Capital 2: Accounts for Protected Areas, 1900 to 2020” report. The report uses an accounting framework to systematically measure and report on South Africa’s environmental assets and natural capital. Looking at data that span back to 1900, the report is South Africa’s most recent, comprehensive accounting of its protected areas.

“Protected areas”, the report explains, are those areas of land and sea that are protected by law and managed primarily for biodiversity conservation. Nature reserves and national parks are but two of the several different types of protected areas.

According to Section 9 of the Protected Areas Act, there are several types of protected areas in South Africa. These include national parks, nature reserves and protected environments which “are declared in terms of the Protected Areas Act, while Forest Nature Reserves, Forest Wilderness Areas, Mountain Catchment Areas and World Heritage Sites are declared in terms of other legislation and recognised by the Protected Areas Act”, a section of the report reads.

As of 2020, protected areas in South Africa amounted to 11,280,684 hectares (ha), meaning that the “land-based protected area estate” covered 9.2% of the mainland surface area of South Africa. Put differently, for every 100m2 of land across the country, a little more than 9m2 are protected and managed for biodiversity conservation.

Summary of the land-based protected area estate by type of protected area in 2020.

Protected areas are areas of land or sea that are protected by law and managed primarily for biodiversity conservation

Based on the South African Protected Areas Database, the closing stock of protected areas in 2020 was 11 280 684 ha or 9,2% of the mainland surface area.

A Flourish chart: https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article ... t-reveals/

Source: Accounts for Protected Areas, 1900 to 2020, 2020 • Visualisation by Ethan van Diemen

The Natural Capital report explains that “the National Environmental Management: Protected Areas Act (Act No 57 of 2003) is the central piece of legislation for the establishment and management of the protected area estate in both the terrestrial and the marine environments.

“It provides for National Parks, Nature Reserves, Special Nature Reserves, Protected Environments and Marine Protected Areas. Other legislation that is also relevant includes the Mountain Catchment Areas Act (Act No 63 of 1970), the National Forests Act (Act No 84 of 1998) and the World Heritage Convention Act (Act No 49 of 1999).”

According to a study by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, South Africa is one of the most biodiverse countries in the world, with a “high rate of endemism and diverse ecosystems.

“While it occupies only 2% of the world’s land surface area, South Africa is home to over 95,000 species, contributing a significant proportion to world plant species (6%), reptile species (5%), bird species (8%) and mammal species (6%), with more species regularly discovered and described,” the study notes.

It continues that South Africa “harbours around 15% of the world’s marine species. Endemism rates reach 56% for amphibians, 65% for plants, 49% for freshwater fish, 48% for reptiles, 36% for sea breams, and up to 70% for invertebrates.”

Key findings of the Stats SA report include:

  • The closing stock of protected areas in 2020 was 11,280,684 ha, meaning that the land-based protected area estate covered 9.2% of the mainland surface area of South Africa.
  • At the end of 2020, nature reserves accounted for 4.1% of the mainland area and made up 44.5% of the protected area estate.
  • At the end of 2020, national parks made up 3.5% of the mainland area and contributed 37.4% to the protected area estate.
  • In the accounting period 2015 to 2020, the extent of the land-based protected area estate increased more than it had in the previous 15 years combined. It increased by nearly 1.2 million ha, representing an 11.7% increase in the protected area estate.
  • The most extensively protected province in terms of the proportion of the province protected was Mpumalanga, with just under 1.7 million ha and 22% of the province protected at the end of 2020.
  • Limpopo province makes up 10.3% of the South African mainland and at the end of 2020, 2,429,536 ha had been protected. In absolute terms, Limpopo had the largest extent of protected area across all provinces and contributed 21.5% to the country’s total protected area estate and protected 19.3% of the province.
  • The proportion of each biome protected has increased over time.

On the importance of protected areas, the report says that protected areas “form a central part of South Africa’s biodiversity conservation strategy, which is set out in the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP) 2015–2025. The protected area network aims to protect ecologically viable areas that represent South Africa’s biodiversity and its natural landscapes and seascapes.”

South Africa's protected area estate by province
These charts show the extent of SA's protected area estate by type of protected area and by province in 2020: https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article ... t-reveals/

Source: Accounts for Protected Areas, 1900 to 2020 • Visualisation by Ethan van Diemen

It continues that, “collectively, protected areas should conserve representative samples of all ecosystem types as well as critical habitats for species and the ecological and evolutionary processes that allow biodiversity to persist over time.

“Protected areas are vital not only for conserving biodiversity but also for ecological sustainability more broadly and for climate change adaptation. They serve as nodes in South Africa’s ecological infrastructure network, protecting ecosystems that deliver important services to people such as the production of clean water, flood moderation, prevention of erosion, carbon storage and the aesthetic value of the landscape.” DM/OBP


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Re: SA’s protected areas growing at a healthy rate, report reveals

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Re: SA’s protected areas growing at a healthy rate, report reveals

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Securing critical water sources and grassland habitat for protection in the Free State, South Africa

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Murphy's Rest Wetlland and surrounding community. Photo credit: Rick Dillon

28 January 2022

BirdLife South Africa, the Endangered Wildlife Trust, and the Department of Small Business Development, Tourism, and Environmental Affairs (DESTEA) in the Free State, together with support from the Ingula Partnership, a collaboration between Eskom Holdings (SOC) Ltd, Middelpunt Wetland Trust, and BirdLife South Africa, recently added 24,078 hectares to the network of land dedicated to conserving high-altitude grasslands and wetlands through the declaration of the Upper Wilge Protected Environment (UPWE).

With only ca. 2% of South Africa’s grasslands formally protected and a range of threats leading to increased overutilization, destruction and transformation within these critical ecosystems, the addition of new protected areas in this biome is crucial.

Located between Harrismith, Van Reenen and Verkykerskop, the new UWPE will conserve about 24,000 hectares of natural high-altitude, sourveld grassland and wetland ecosystems in the Eastern Free State. The wetlands within the Protected Environment form part of South Africa’s Strategic Water Source Areas, namely the Northern Drakensberg Water Source Area, meaning that the protected area makes a considerable contribution to conserving this critical water source, which is used by millions of people, including the residents of Gauteng’s major metropoles.

The declaration of the UWPE will greatly enhance conservation of these habitats which are essential for endemic grassland specialist birds like the Yellow-breasted Pipit, and provide extensive corridors for species requiring large areas of suitable foraging habitat, including cranes, Secretarybird, Southern Bald Ibis, Denham’s Bustard and White-bellied Korhaan. ”If we fail to conserve the natural habitats our threatened birds rely on, no amount of threat mitigation will save these species from extinction. Biodiversity Stewardship provides a critical mechanism to preserve these natural landscapes for all biodiversity and future generations of South Africans.” – Dr Melissa Whitecross, Landscape Conservation Programme Manager, BirdLife South Africa.

Furthermore, the UWPE also protects other critically important biodiversity, including the Vulnerable Sungazer Lizard. The Sungazer is endemic to South Africa and is found in the highland grasslands of the northeastern Free State and a small population in southwestern Mpumalanga province. It is the largest of the girdled lizards in South Africa and stays in burrows in short grassland, where they’re often seen basking in the sun. Sungazers are threatened due to very low reproduction rates and habitat destruction due to conversion of grassland to farmland (maize, sunflower, and other crop farming), illegal collecting for the pet trade, and collection for the muti-industry. It has been recorded that animals do not seem to return to previously ploughed land.

“All three species of South Africa’s cranes – Blue, Grey Crowned, and Wattled are found in the UWPE, inhabiting the natural grasslands and wetlands that this area has to offer. With the majority of Sungazers and cranes (approximately 99% of them) occurring on privately-owned farms in South Africa, their conservation is in the hands of landowners. The UWPE is an example of how species such as these can benefit from the establishment of a protected environment.” Bradley Gibbons, Senior Field Officer, the Endangered Wildlife Trust.

The UWPE also provides a critical, well-managed buffer zone for Eskom’s Ingula Pumped Storage Scheme and Ingula Nature Reserve, recently designated under the International Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance - an international treaty for the conservation and sustainable use of wetlands. “Biodiversity conservation remains an integral part of the sustainable livelihoods of South Africa’s communities ensuring ecosystem services are maintained and enhanced over time. The Upper Wilge Protected Environment declaration will safeguard the long-term ecological integrity of Eskom’s Ingula Nature Reserve and Ramsar site, securing valuable ecosystem services for the region”, Mr. Kishaylin Chetty, Senior Environmental Advisor, Biodiversity Centre or Excellence, Generation Division.

South Africa strives to protect areas of particular importance for biodiversity and ecosystem services through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically representative, and well-connected systems of protected areas that are integrated into the wider landscapes. Currently, only 16% of grasslands in South Africa are adequately protected. Declaring an additional 24,078 hectares of grassland and wetland habitat in the UWPE will address this shortcoming and contribute towards the South African government’s National Protected Areas Expansion Strategy (NPAES), and therefore also meeting its obligations to the Convention on Biological Diversity’s Aichi Biodiversity Target 11.

For more information:

Bradley Gibbons
Endangered Wildlife Trust’s African Crane Conservation Programme: Senior Field Officer
bradleyg@ewt.org.za

Carina Pienaar
BirdLife South Africa: Ingula and Grasslands Conservation Project Manager
carina.pienaar@birdlife.org.za


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