Invasive Alien Plant/Bird/Animal Infestations

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Richprins
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Re: Invasive Alien Plant/Bird/Animal Infestations

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O/ O/ O/


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Richprins
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Re: Invasive Alien Plant/Bird/Animal Infestations

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As the one says, the fences are in ruins.


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Re: Invasive Alien Plant/Bird/Animal Infestations

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Learning from the river guardian who protects Plettenberg Bay’s source of water

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Katot Meyer clears invasive alien trees and bushes. (Photo: Supplied)

For the past 50 years, Katot Meyer has been using his own makeshift tools to clear alien invasive plants from catchment areas to ensure a steady water supply for locals. Now he’s urging others to get involved as he cannot do it alone.
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A humble steward of nature, Katot Meyer at 77 years old is known as the river guardian in Plettenberg Bay. A cowboy of conservation, he has been using his own makeshift but effective tools for clearing invasive alien plants from the Keurbooms River catchment for the past 50 years – safeguarding the water that feeds households in the area.

Meyer works up and down the Keurbooms River catchment, which is approximately 80km long, clearing invasive alien trees and shrubs that reduce the flow of the water feeding households in Plettenberg Bay. He is also pioneering a water-neutral project in the area.

His efforts to rehabilitate the river are having a direct impact on the water supply, but the task is enormous and more involvement from the community, government and private businesses is crucial to safeguarding this water source.

Speaking to Daily Maverick, Meyer said it is critical for people to rethink how they can give back to the ecosystems that sustain them.

Meyer has spent the last 50 years using unique methods to clear high trees and thick bushes of invasive alien species along the tributaries that feed the Keurbooms River. By measuring the flow of water in the river, he has found that removing the alien species has increased river flow dramatically.

“In my lifetime, the flow of water in that specific area and in the Keurbooms, reduced from 100% in 1960 to about 25–30% now. We must reverse that green wheel, but to do that, we need funds and effective rehabilitation.

“The work that I do is a passion, and I have tried to do things very effectively because that’s the way we have to do [it] in future, because it’s mankind that caused all the problems in our catchments. It’s mankind without kindness. Now it’s that same mankind that must bring the solutions, and do it on the ground,” he said.

Daily battle

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Katot Meyer measures water flow along the Keurbooms River. (Photo: Supplied)

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The tractor Katot Meyer uses for clearing invasive alien species. (Photo: Supplied)

A typical day for Meyer starts with him entering a section of the catchment area either on his tractor or in his Land Rover, which he also sleeps in when necessary – with all his equipment attached on a trailer.

If he’s staying for two or three days to do a specific job in a section of the catchment, he’ll go in with a tractor and take his tent. Waking up early, he physically clears invasive alien species until about 11am, working with the tractor during the hottest part of the day. At about 3pm or 4pm, Meyer restarts physically clearing alien invasives until it’s dark.

“It’s nice, you rehabilitate the environment and you can see it. You look at what animals visit that area, and of course, the extra water coming from the catchment. But I can’t do it on my own,” Meyer told Daily Maverick.

Meyer said, however, that spraying herbicide to control alien invasive species is sometimes better as it costs roughly the same as using labourers, and using a drone can be more effective in reaching inaccessible areas.

Conservation while you work
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Katot Meyer in the Pietersrivier Nature Reserve. (Photo: Eden to Addo Corridor Initiative)

Meyer said his focus is to be effective, because there is very little money in this sort of work, almost no time to do it and no labour. He uses what he calls a “while conservation method”, where you do conservation while you are there.

He explained that land users in the catchment area have at least one or two hours free while busy with their normal work – either going to the cattle or working in the veld.

To use that time effectively, Meyer said: “You have to have equipment on you, your bakkie or your trailer, spraying equipment, extra water, herbicide, chainsaw equipment.”

An example of Meyer’s cowboy equipment is a little chainsaw mounted with a herbicide spray gun. That means when he cuts an invasive alien tree, he is spraying it at the same time – “a hundred percent more effective operation”.

Meyer has also equipped the back of his tractor with a slasher (to cut wood). “Why don’t you put water, herbicide, slashers, chainsaws and everything that is used so that when you go into the catchment area, and meander through the work that you have to do, then you have all this equipment with you?”

One man can make a big difference, but if everyone can get on board, Meyer said they could make an even bigger difference.

“You must do it, every day; it’s a normal thing. It’s part of your normal work to do conservation because water is the main thing. We are going to run out of water.”

Meyer has pioneered the Keurbooms River Conservation Corridor, which links two of the bigger protected areas of the Garden Route National Park and is a critical watershed for Plettenberg Bay and the Greater Bitou Municipality. This forms part of the Eden to Addo Corridor Initiative to establish a protected environment.

“If you turn the tap on in Plett, you must think about where the water comes from? How can I support the catchment?” he said.

Much still to be done

Rehabilitating a catchment in South Africa today is not easy, Meyer said, and much remains to be done in the two catchments where he works: the Keurbooms River and Kammanassie River catchments.

In the past six years, drought has hit both the Keurbooms and the Kammanassie catchments. In the Keurbooms, there was just enough water to feed the estuary and the people, Meyer said.

In the Kammanassie, “there was a real disaster”, and all those who rely on the river came together to see if they could rehabilitate it.

“If you are in the Keurbooms, where do we get the money from? There’s no farming or very expensive export – as with the ostrich skin for leather in the Karoo – but if you look at the culprits in the Keurbooms, it’s actually the land users and they can’t come out with any money now,” he said.

Meyer is trying to rehabilitate the catchment by farming with water – making new water that would have been sopped up by invasive alien trees and bushes.

A water-neutral project
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Katot Meyer at the Pietersrivier Nature Reserve. (Photo: Eden to Addo Corridor Initiative)

Meyer runs a water-neutral project in Pietersrivier Nature Reserve, where if one hectare of 100% canopy of invasive alien plants is rehabilitated, an average of 2,400 cubic metres of water per hectare per year will be secured.

“When the exotic trees are in a river; it’s three times that. What I got out of this project, the very interesting thing is it’s about 40 hectares of really packed wattle in a bigger area of 240 hectares of fynbos. There’s about three little rivulets and we cleared 30 metres wide – that’s a bit of money for Conservation at Work, an NGO,” he said.

Pietersrivier is a small tributary of the Keurbooms, roughly in the middle of the catchment, 50km upstream from Plett, so the water in the grid goes down to the small households there.

For three-quarters of a day, Meyer and a group of elderly women, “old aunties over 70”, managed to rehabilitate 75% of a one-hectare stand of about 50% wattle.

“A very interesting thing to think about is that companies on the coast, even individual water users, can become water neutral – where the amount of water that you use, you can get back from the catchment. That means, if they use a certain amount of water over a year, and we calculate that they can fund an area that we clear to match that amount of water,” Meyer said. DM

The Eden to Addo initiative has appealed to all those interested in becoming a river guardian like Katot and contributing to alien clearing strategies in the Keurbooms catchment, to get in touch with the Plett Environmental Forum on info@plettenvironmentalforum.co.za.


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