Maybe someone could do a tutorial on this unique ecosystem?
Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
- Richprins
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Whooo, yes! The road passes through the Delagoa bush north-south strip at various points, it is very wide in this area!
Maybe someone could do a tutorial on this unique ecosystem?
Maybe someone could do a tutorial on this unique ecosystem?
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Klipspringer
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
This road covers indeed various ecozones. Leeupan is just where zone G starts.
Last edited by Klipspringer on Sat Apr 11, 2020 10:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Klipspringer
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Here the maps for the ecozones
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
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Klipspringer
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Acacia welwitschii Thickets on Karoo Sediments Gertenbach Landscape 13 - Ecozone G: Delagoa Thorn Thickets on Eca Shale - Delagoa Lowveld
Ironically the prominent species is now no longer Acacia welwitschii, but Senegalia welwitschii.
A narrow band on the Ecca Shales, sandwiched in between the basalts on the eastern side of the Kruger Park and the granites in the west.
Geologically the Kruger National Park can roughly be divided into granite and gneiss in the western half and basalt in the eastern half. Karoo sediments occur where the granite and basalt make contact and this forms a strip that extends from north to south throughout the KNP. The Karoo sediments consist of Cave Sandstone, Red Beds and Ecca-shales. This landscape is limited to the Ecca-shales. The terrain is concave, low lying and reasonably flat with slight slopes.
It extends as a narrow strip from Crocodile Bridge northwards to the vicinity of the Timbavati picnic spot. The thickets are seldom broader than 4 km. Good examples of this landscape can be seen along the tourist roads at Gomandwane and Leeupan.
The general orientation of the spruits and rivers in the KNP are from west to east. Considering that the shales are prone to weathering and erosion it often happens that the spruits running from west to east through granite, turns north or south when reaching the shales. Examples of such spruits in this landscape are the Vurhami, Salitji, Nwaswitsonto and Nsemani. The soils have a strong structure and poor internal drainage with the result that small pans commonly occur. Examples are Leeupan, Nkayapan and Ngumula pan.
The landscape is unique considering that the vegetation is dominated by Senegalia welwitschii subsp. delagoensis, a taxon only found in South Africa, apart from certain stands in Eswatini and in the south of Zimbabwe.
The combination of grasses and the variety of forbs show that this landscape is heavily grazed. The grass cover is therefore usually less dense (between 30 and 60% crown cover) and sometimes disappears altogether with the advent of the dry season. The structure of the woody component is a moderate tree savanna with tall shrubs and sparse low shrubs.
This landscape is differentiated by the following species:
Small trees: Senegalia senegal var. rostrata Bushy Three-hook Thorn, Senegalia welwitschii subsp. delagoensis Delagoa Thorn, Albizia petersiana Multi-stemmed False-thorn, Schotia capitata Dwarf Boer-bean, Spirostachys africana Tamboti, Pappea capensis Jacket Plum.
Tall shrubs: Euclea divinorum Magic Guarri, Maerua parvifolia Dwarf Bush-cherry, Boscia mosambicensis Broad-leaved Shepherd Tree, Dichrostachys cinerea subsp. africana Small-leaved Sickle Bush, Ehretia rigida Forest Puzzle-bush, Flueggea virosa White Berry-bush, Grewia bicolor White Raisin, Searsia gueinzii Thorny Karee.
Low shrubs: Abutilon austro-africanum, Justicia flava, Zanthoxylum humile.
Dominant grass species: Chloris virgata, Panicum coloratum, Panicum maximum, Sporobolus nitens, Aristida congesta, Chloris roxburghiana, Dactyloctenium aegypteum, Tragus berteronianus.
This landscape carries what is possibly the largest biomass of game in the KNP. As a result of the palatable short grazing and open low shrub layer, a large number of impala, wildebeest and zebra are present. Senegalia welwitschii is a good fodder tree and therefore giraffe, kudu, steenbok and duiker are all present. Elephant breeding herds prefer the dense tree veld and buffalo are continuously on the move through the thickets. White rhino have a strong association with this landscape and waterbuck are often encountered at the pans between the trees. As a result of the high density of prey species, lion and hyaena are plentiful while cheetah are regularly seen.
Ironically the prominent species is now no longer Acacia welwitschii, but Senegalia welwitschii.
A narrow band on the Ecca Shales, sandwiched in between the basalts on the eastern side of the Kruger Park and the granites in the west.
Geologically the Kruger National Park can roughly be divided into granite and gneiss in the western half and basalt in the eastern half. Karoo sediments occur where the granite and basalt make contact and this forms a strip that extends from north to south throughout the KNP. The Karoo sediments consist of Cave Sandstone, Red Beds and Ecca-shales. This landscape is limited to the Ecca-shales. The terrain is concave, low lying and reasonably flat with slight slopes.
It extends as a narrow strip from Crocodile Bridge northwards to the vicinity of the Timbavati picnic spot. The thickets are seldom broader than 4 km. Good examples of this landscape can be seen along the tourist roads at Gomandwane and Leeupan.
The general orientation of the spruits and rivers in the KNP are from west to east. Considering that the shales are prone to weathering and erosion it often happens that the spruits running from west to east through granite, turns north or south when reaching the shales. Examples of such spruits in this landscape are the Vurhami, Salitji, Nwaswitsonto and Nsemani. The soils have a strong structure and poor internal drainage with the result that small pans commonly occur. Examples are Leeupan, Nkayapan and Ngumula pan.
The landscape is unique considering that the vegetation is dominated by Senegalia welwitschii subsp. delagoensis, a taxon only found in South Africa, apart from certain stands in Eswatini and in the south of Zimbabwe.
The combination of grasses and the variety of forbs show that this landscape is heavily grazed. The grass cover is therefore usually less dense (between 30 and 60% crown cover) and sometimes disappears altogether with the advent of the dry season. The structure of the woody component is a moderate tree savanna with tall shrubs and sparse low shrubs.
This landscape is differentiated by the following species:
Small trees: Senegalia senegal var. rostrata Bushy Three-hook Thorn, Senegalia welwitschii subsp. delagoensis Delagoa Thorn, Albizia petersiana Multi-stemmed False-thorn, Schotia capitata Dwarf Boer-bean, Spirostachys africana Tamboti, Pappea capensis Jacket Plum.
Tall shrubs: Euclea divinorum Magic Guarri, Maerua parvifolia Dwarf Bush-cherry, Boscia mosambicensis Broad-leaved Shepherd Tree, Dichrostachys cinerea subsp. africana Small-leaved Sickle Bush, Ehretia rigida Forest Puzzle-bush, Flueggea virosa White Berry-bush, Grewia bicolor White Raisin, Searsia gueinzii Thorny Karee.
Low shrubs: Abutilon austro-africanum, Justicia flava, Zanthoxylum humile.
Dominant grass species: Chloris virgata, Panicum coloratum, Panicum maximum, Sporobolus nitens, Aristida congesta, Chloris roxburghiana, Dactyloctenium aegypteum, Tragus berteronianus.
This landscape carries what is possibly the largest biomass of game in the KNP. As a result of the palatable short grazing and open low shrub layer, a large number of impala, wildebeest and zebra are present. Senegalia welwitschii is a good fodder tree and therefore giraffe, kudu, steenbok and duiker are all present. Elephant breeding herds prefer the dense tree veld and buffalo are continuously on the move through the thickets. White rhino have a strong association with this landscape and waterbuck are often encountered at the pans between the trees. As a result of the high density of prey species, lion and hyaena are plentiful while cheetah are regularly seen.
Last edited by Klipspringer on Sat Apr 11, 2020 11:13 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Richprins
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
We will still call them acacias! 
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
I also don't enjoy all these name changes, specially with the birds.
Sometimes it’s not until you don’t see what you want to see, that you truly open your eyes.
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Kruger Sightings
@LatestKruger
Leeupan Tsokwane Feb 2020.
This Tawny sat and posed on a tree stump only meters away for over 30 minutes. When it yawned it game you a great insight into the last thing it’s prey would see.
Tnged by Gerry
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Klipspringer
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Here the vegetation around Leeupan
- Richprins
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Re: Flavour of the Month - April/May 2020 H1-2 Skukuza - Tshokwane (incl all dams)
Kruger Sightings
@LatestKruger
October 1973
Lion seen on my first trip to the Kruger, 47 years ago!
Seen on the H1-2, just after the 2nd low level bridge after leaving Skukuza, on the embankment on the right hand side
Tinged by Leonard
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