- Title
- An integrated approach to aspects of coastal dune planning and management along a portion of the Eastern Cape coastal zone
- Creator
- Hellström, Gavin B
- ThesisAdvisor
- Lubke, R.
- Subject
- Coastal zone management -- South Africa
- Subject
- Sand dune ecology -- South Africa
- Date
- 1995
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MSc
- Identifier
- vital:4197
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003766
- Identifier
- Coastal zone management -- South Africa
- Identifier
- Sand dune ecology -- South Africa
- Description
- Ecological evaluation techniques have been used to classify or evaluate the relative conservation worthiness of a portion of the Eastern Cape coastal zone from Cannon Rocks to Port Alfred. A system-based approach, using a basic GIS, was used to compare three aspects of the coastal zone. Two existing planning documents (EMATEK/s Coastal Vegetation Importance Rating plan and CPA's Cape Coastal Conservation plan) were statistically compared - based primarily on the size and number of the landscape fragments (environmental criteria polygons). The resultant plan, an Intermediate Sensitivity Class map, was further integrated with the biophysical aspect of the coastal zone - coastal dunes. The final map is the product of these overlays to be used as a-working overlay for coastal zone decision-making. This is an Environmental Sensitivity map, which has no particular direct reference to any particular biophysical criteria, which categorizes the coastal zone according to the environmental sensitivity or conservation worthiness of the site. The categories are listed according to a sliding-scale of sensitivity or worthiness. There is, however, it strong association between the final map and the vegetation status of the coastline, as a direct result of the vegetation rating map and indirectly from the perception based coastal conservation plan. The formation of most assessment or evaluation plans are based on the vegetation status of the area. This map can be overlayed over the particular stretch of the coastline which it covers and the particular conservation status noted. There are numerous techniques available for assessment and evaluation each having their own specific merits and advantages. This plan, however, is a first attempt at integrating other specific plans into a single working document for the coastal zone manager.
- Format
- 159 p., pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Science, Botany
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Hellström, Gavin B
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