Perception of climate change impacts, adaptation responses and national response policy outreach by smallholder farmers in Amathole District, South Africa
- Popoola, Oluwaseun Oluwabunmi
- Authors: Popoola, Oluwaseun Oluwabunmi
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Climatic changes -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape Global environmental change Climate change mitigation
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9000 , vital:34181
- Description: The climate is changing, with imminent threats. Projections for increased inconsistencies in climatic elements such as rainfall and temperature have continued to raise concerns particularly amongst farmers. The majority of South African smallholder and resource-poor farmers rely heavily on rain-fed agriculture, making them vulnerable to the vagaries of climate change risks. As sustainability is crucial to the continuous survival of this population, this study assessed the farmers’ perceptions of climate change impacts on agricultural production activities as well as their adaptation responses. The South African national climate change response policy was developed and approved in October 2011 in order to institute a responsive intervention system for the moderation of climate change impacts on South Africa’s citizens. Amongst its priorities is building capacity and resilience in the country’s agricultural sector, with the public agricultural extension system as a principal component for climate change sensitisation, education and capacity-building. With current global climate change conditions, the urgency to provide agricultural knowledge on adaptation has risen. Smallholder farmers, in particular, are challenged in this regard, and face numerous restraining factors. Therefore, this study investigated several key issues related to climate change sensitization activities and response. A multistage sampling procedure was used in the selection of the study sample (n = 301) residing in the rural settlements of Mbahashe Local Municipality, in Amathole District Municipality, Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. A cross-sectional household survey was carried out in eighteen villages surrounding the three major towns in the municipality – Idutywa, Elliotdale and Willowvale. Data was collected using semi-structured questionnaires. Descriptive and inferential statistical tools were used for data analysis. Findings revealed a perceived increase in temperature levels and a drastic decline in rainfall; perceived harsh and aggressive climatic conditions, with attendant problems of drought. There is a perceived increased difficulty in production activities as a result of water scarcity. Poor soil conditions, pest infestations and disease infections, poor vegetation and limited grazing, decreased livestock growth rate, reduced livestock weight, milk production and reproduction rates, reduction in quantity of egg production, egg quality and sizes, are amongst many other perceived challenges. There is a growing threat of unsustainable agricultural production, which may in due course increase poverty levels among the smallholder farmers. Adaptation responses were extremely limited. Findings also revealed that there is an extremely low awareness of the national climate change response policy, and a dearth of sensitisation campaigns and capacity-building training of smallholder farmers in the study area. There is also a significant lack of access to agricultural extension services that might disseminate information and build capacity for an appropriate climate change response. Analysis also revealed that public extension services play a minute role in rural farmers’ climate change knowledge; they get their information elsewhere. The most critical constraint to climate change coping and adaptation in the study area was lack of access to agricultural extension services. The study recommends government intervention in the form of appropriate, functional extension services, particularly for carrying out climate change coping and adaptation education and support. It also strongly endorses the tower gardening concept, practised in a number of countries, including parts of South Africa to facilitate an exigent intervention project to curb declining crop production and sustain the livelihoods of farmers, before major intervention schemes are set up by various governing bodies. There is an immense need to buffer the adaptation capacities of livestock smallholder farmers in rural communities through the implementation of adaptation promotional schemes for rural livestock sustainability. Productivity and efficient commercialization of both indigenous and hybrid poultry production should be beefed up by encouraging poultry breeding programs and breed improvement activities, subsidizing commercial feeds to encourage supplementary feeding, provision of better infrastructure for improved housing and the facilitation of health care systems like vaccination programs. This study also recommends that efforts to create awareness, knowledge and skills in relation to climate change be intensified through an enhanced use of all media. In addition, agricultural extension departments functioning at the local level should be financially and technically capacitated to allow for enhanced performance by their field officers.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Popoola, Oluwaseun Oluwabunmi
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Climatic changes -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape Global environmental change Climate change mitigation
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9000 , vital:34181
- Description: The climate is changing, with imminent threats. Projections for increased inconsistencies in climatic elements such as rainfall and temperature have continued to raise concerns particularly amongst farmers. The majority of South African smallholder and resource-poor farmers rely heavily on rain-fed agriculture, making them vulnerable to the vagaries of climate change risks. As sustainability is crucial to the continuous survival of this population, this study assessed the farmers’ perceptions of climate change impacts on agricultural production activities as well as their adaptation responses. The South African national climate change response policy was developed and approved in October 2011 in order to institute a responsive intervention system for the moderation of climate change impacts on South Africa’s citizens. Amongst its priorities is building capacity and resilience in the country’s agricultural sector, with the public agricultural extension system as a principal component for climate change sensitisation, education and capacity-building. With current global climate change conditions, the urgency to provide agricultural knowledge on adaptation has risen. Smallholder farmers, in particular, are challenged in this regard, and face numerous restraining factors. Therefore, this study investigated several key issues related to climate change sensitization activities and response. A multistage sampling procedure was used in the selection of the study sample (n = 301) residing in the rural settlements of Mbahashe Local Municipality, in Amathole District Municipality, Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. A cross-sectional household survey was carried out in eighteen villages surrounding the three major towns in the municipality – Idutywa, Elliotdale and Willowvale. Data was collected using semi-structured questionnaires. Descriptive and inferential statistical tools were used for data analysis. Findings revealed a perceived increase in temperature levels and a drastic decline in rainfall; perceived harsh and aggressive climatic conditions, with attendant problems of drought. There is a perceived increased difficulty in production activities as a result of water scarcity. Poor soil conditions, pest infestations and disease infections, poor vegetation and limited grazing, decreased livestock growth rate, reduced livestock weight, milk production and reproduction rates, reduction in quantity of egg production, egg quality and sizes, are amongst many other perceived challenges. There is a growing threat of unsustainable agricultural production, which may in due course increase poverty levels among the smallholder farmers. Adaptation responses were extremely limited. Findings also revealed that there is an extremely low awareness of the national climate change response policy, and a dearth of sensitisation campaigns and capacity-building training of smallholder farmers in the study area. There is also a significant lack of access to agricultural extension services that might disseminate information and build capacity for an appropriate climate change response. Analysis also revealed that public extension services play a minute role in rural farmers’ climate change knowledge; they get their information elsewhere. The most critical constraint to climate change coping and adaptation in the study area was lack of access to agricultural extension services. The study recommends government intervention in the form of appropriate, functional extension services, particularly for carrying out climate change coping and adaptation education and support. It also strongly endorses the tower gardening concept, practised in a number of countries, including parts of South Africa to facilitate an exigent intervention project to curb declining crop production and sustain the livelihoods of farmers, before major intervention schemes are set up by various governing bodies. There is an immense need to buffer the adaptation capacities of livestock smallholder farmers in rural communities through the implementation of adaptation promotional schemes for rural livestock sustainability. Productivity and efficient commercialization of both indigenous and hybrid poultry production should be beefed up by encouraging poultry breeding programs and breed improvement activities, subsidizing commercial feeds to encourage supplementary feeding, provision of better infrastructure for improved housing and the facilitation of health care systems like vaccination programs. This study also recommends that efforts to create awareness, knowledge and skills in relation to climate change be intensified through an enhanced use of all media. In addition, agricultural extension departments functioning at the local level should be financially and technically capacitated to allow for enhanced performance by their field officers.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Perceptions of school based support teams about providing support to Foundation Phase Teachers in two Butterworth Primary Schools, Eastern Cape
- Authors: Luningo, Mziwonke
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: School based support--Teams Foundation phase--Teachers--Eastern Cape Education support--Primary schools
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , D Ed
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/1410 , vital:34373
- Description: The policy on Inclusive Education acknowledges that all children can learn if they are given the necessary support. In order to achieve this goal, the Department of Education (DoE) introduced the establishment of SBSTs whose main function is to support teaching and learning in schools. This study used interpretive paradigm to explore perceptions of SBST about providing support to foundation phase (FP) teachers and to interpret what they said. Nonetheless, there seemed to be challenges on how to support learners experiencing barriers to learning among the members of the SBST. The aim of this study was to explore the perceptions of the School-Based Support Teams (SBSTs) about providing support to the foundation phase teachers in two Butterworth Primary Schools in the Eastern Cape. This study used the qualitative mode of inquiry and a case study as a research design. Semi-structured interviews using one on one, observations and document analysis were used to collect the data from the SBSTs about their perceptions of providing support to the FP teachers. Purposeful sampling was used where two mainstream primary schools were conveniently selected with six SBST participants from each school, making a total of six participants. Twelve SBST members were interviewed. Data were analysed and common themes emerged. The findings revealed that the SBSTs did not have enough knowledge and skills to support the FP teachers. Some of the challenges they cited included inadequate training, lack of communication, overcrowding and lack of support from the parents. In an attempt to alleviate the above-raised challenges, a model was proposed. These are some of the recommendations that resulted from the findings: all schools should have SBSTs, they should be composed of all the important stakeholders as proposed by the DoE, frequent SBST meetings should be held and further recommendations are made.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Luningo, Mziwonke
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: School based support--Teams Foundation phase--Teachers--Eastern Cape Education support--Primary schools
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , D Ed
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/1410 , vital:34373
- Description: The policy on Inclusive Education acknowledges that all children can learn if they are given the necessary support. In order to achieve this goal, the Department of Education (DoE) introduced the establishment of SBSTs whose main function is to support teaching and learning in schools. This study used interpretive paradigm to explore perceptions of SBST about providing support to foundation phase (FP) teachers and to interpret what they said. Nonetheless, there seemed to be challenges on how to support learners experiencing barriers to learning among the members of the SBST. The aim of this study was to explore the perceptions of the School-Based Support Teams (SBSTs) about providing support to the foundation phase teachers in two Butterworth Primary Schools in the Eastern Cape. This study used the qualitative mode of inquiry and a case study as a research design. Semi-structured interviews using one on one, observations and document analysis were used to collect the data from the SBSTs about their perceptions of providing support to the FP teachers. Purposeful sampling was used where two mainstream primary schools were conveniently selected with six SBST participants from each school, making a total of six participants. Twelve SBST members were interviewed. Data were analysed and common themes emerged. The findings revealed that the SBSTs did not have enough knowledge and skills to support the FP teachers. Some of the challenges they cited included inadequate training, lack of communication, overcrowding and lack of support from the parents. In an attempt to alleviate the above-raised challenges, a model was proposed. These are some of the recommendations that resulted from the findings: all schools should have SBSTs, they should be composed of all the important stakeholders as proposed by the DoE, frequent SBST meetings should be held and further recommendations are made.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Perceptions of Ulwaluko in a Liberal Democratic State: is multiculturalism beneficial to AmaXhosa women in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa?
- Authors: Gogela, Kholisa B
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Initiation rites -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Circumcision -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Stigma (Social psychology) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Xhosa (African people) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Women -- Attitudes , Multiculturalism -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Women's rights -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Male domination (Social structure) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Sex discrimination against women -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Ulwaluko
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/61780 , vital:28059
- Description: This exploratory qualitative study sought to investigate the views and perceptions of women on their experiences of ulwaluko, a traditional rite practised by amaXhosa in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Ulwaluko is also known as isiko lokwaluka or ukoluka in isiXhosa. The concept refers not only to the act of circumcision that occurs during the initiation ritual but the entire process a boy goes through in observing this practice. Ulwaluko is performed in the belief that it will transform boys into accountable and responsible citizens of the society who are fully committed and dedicated to the tenets and standards of nation building. All amaXhosa boys are expected to undergo this tradition to be considered men. Failure to go to the initiation school usually results in social stigma and complete banishment by the society. There is an abundance of literature on studies that have been conducted on male circumcision (and not ulwaluko) which is performed for hygiene and religious purposes worldwide. With regards to ulwaluko of amaXhosa, research studies that have been conducted appear to lean mainly towards biomedical and public health aspects of the ritual. There seems to be an even bigger proportion of studies whose objective was to examine the relationship between circumcision and HIV/AIDS. From the literature review, it was not difficult to observe the pervasive paucity of research studies on women in relation to initiation (and that of amaXhosa in particular), with regards to their inclusion or exclusion in the practice, their feelings, perceptions, experiences and attitudes towards the custom. It is for this reason that I found it crucial to conduct this study. The main research question I sought to answer in this investigation was: are the human rights and gender equality rights of women, as entrenched in the multicultural principles that underpin South Africa’s liberal, democratic order, adequately protected? In other words, could the individual rights of women (or gender rights) that are endorsed by liberalism, be deferred in the interest of respecting traditions and cultural values associated with ulwaluko? And if they are, I further ask: could the deferral of such rights be legitimate in the face of South Africa’s legal framework? The nature of this study places it in the qualitative paradigm, and interpretive phenomenology was the most appropriate research design to carry out the investigation. Multiculturalism is a principle at the centre of liberalism, and as a framework for this study, I contrast and reconcile it with feminism. While multiculturalism is concerned with protecting traditions and cultures of minority groups, feminism is concerned about women’s emancipation. I used the non-probability purposive sampling to select participants who were rich in information; and I made use of community structures to gain entry into research sites and to seek permission to carry out the investigation. I conducted the pilot study in Mdantsane, a township in the Buffalo City Municipality; and I gathered data in two research sites, namely: Flagstaff in Mpondondoland and Grahamstown in the Makana Local Municipality. I employed two qualitative methods to collect information, namely: focus group discussions (FGDs) and semi-structured in-depth interviews. A total of 70 participants took part in the study. 60 women participated in 8 focus groups and 10 participated in-depth interviews. Their ages ranged between 31 and 82 years. I recorded all the FGDs and semi-structured in-depth interviews that I conducted, for ease of transcription and translation. To interprete and analyze data, I applied the general inductive approach which I later substantiated with the use of NVivo 8, a computer assisted qualitative data analysis (CAQDAS). This resulted in the identification of four themes and their related sub-themes which I compared and contrasted with literature review and the theoretical framework, so as to make sense of the information I generated from the data collection process. I also discussed the results in line with the four goals of the study. The findings of this inquiry suggest a number of factors about ulwaluko, the following being the most significant: that firstly, although the rite is espoused and celebrated by some women as a significant cultural practice among amaXhosa, for others it is synonymous with patriarchy and hegemony. Secondly, women felt largely excluded, claiming that they were relegated to a subordinate position in society. For this reason, as well as because of the biomedical and other socio-political concerns associated with the practice, some women resented the custom. Thirdly, participants were divided about whether the practice should be continued or abolished; and these differences manifested within and between different regions. Fourthly, the results also demonstrated that the norms and values applied in ulwaluko are in contravention of the fundamental principles of a liberal state in that universal human rights are infringed upon through exclusionary practices. In this case the woman’s voice is muted; and this results in the denial of human agency. The study however, also revealed the emergence of shifting patterns in some parts of the province where an effort to include women appears to be taking place. Fifth and last, the enquiry demonstrated that ulwaluko is deeply entrenched among amaXhosa; that it has stood the test of time and is unlikely to be discontinued. Based on the results, I recommend that creative and transformative ways of addressing the evident clash between the provision of individual rights by the state and the recognition of ulwaluko as a cultural practice (which is perceived by some as harmful to women) be sought. To achieve this objective I make the following recommendations: 1) establishment and utilization of gender equality programmes; 2) modification of values and norms of the custom; 3) representation of women in decision-making structures; 4) establishment of collaborative networks; 5) widening of access to services (such as chapter nine institutions and national gender machinery); 6) documentation and sharing of effective and inclusive practices as well as; 7) creating awareness on initiation legislation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Gogela, Kholisa B
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Initiation rites -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Circumcision -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Stigma (Social psychology) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Xhosa (African people) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Women -- Attitudes , Multiculturalism -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Women's rights -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Male domination (Social structure) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Sex discrimination against women -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Ulwaluko
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/61780 , vital:28059
- Description: This exploratory qualitative study sought to investigate the views and perceptions of women on their experiences of ulwaluko, a traditional rite practised by amaXhosa in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Ulwaluko is also known as isiko lokwaluka or ukoluka in isiXhosa. The concept refers not only to the act of circumcision that occurs during the initiation ritual but the entire process a boy goes through in observing this practice. Ulwaluko is performed in the belief that it will transform boys into accountable and responsible citizens of the society who are fully committed and dedicated to the tenets and standards of nation building. All amaXhosa boys are expected to undergo this tradition to be considered men. Failure to go to the initiation school usually results in social stigma and complete banishment by the society. There is an abundance of literature on studies that have been conducted on male circumcision (and not ulwaluko) which is performed for hygiene and religious purposes worldwide. With regards to ulwaluko of amaXhosa, research studies that have been conducted appear to lean mainly towards biomedical and public health aspects of the ritual. There seems to be an even bigger proportion of studies whose objective was to examine the relationship between circumcision and HIV/AIDS. From the literature review, it was not difficult to observe the pervasive paucity of research studies on women in relation to initiation (and that of amaXhosa in particular), with regards to their inclusion or exclusion in the practice, their feelings, perceptions, experiences and attitudes towards the custom. It is for this reason that I found it crucial to conduct this study. The main research question I sought to answer in this investigation was: are the human rights and gender equality rights of women, as entrenched in the multicultural principles that underpin South Africa’s liberal, democratic order, adequately protected? In other words, could the individual rights of women (or gender rights) that are endorsed by liberalism, be deferred in the interest of respecting traditions and cultural values associated with ulwaluko? And if they are, I further ask: could the deferral of such rights be legitimate in the face of South Africa’s legal framework? The nature of this study places it in the qualitative paradigm, and interpretive phenomenology was the most appropriate research design to carry out the investigation. Multiculturalism is a principle at the centre of liberalism, and as a framework for this study, I contrast and reconcile it with feminism. While multiculturalism is concerned with protecting traditions and cultures of minority groups, feminism is concerned about women’s emancipation. I used the non-probability purposive sampling to select participants who were rich in information; and I made use of community structures to gain entry into research sites and to seek permission to carry out the investigation. I conducted the pilot study in Mdantsane, a township in the Buffalo City Municipality; and I gathered data in two research sites, namely: Flagstaff in Mpondondoland and Grahamstown in the Makana Local Municipality. I employed two qualitative methods to collect information, namely: focus group discussions (FGDs) and semi-structured in-depth interviews. A total of 70 participants took part in the study. 60 women participated in 8 focus groups and 10 participated in-depth interviews. Their ages ranged between 31 and 82 years. I recorded all the FGDs and semi-structured in-depth interviews that I conducted, for ease of transcription and translation. To interprete and analyze data, I applied the general inductive approach which I later substantiated with the use of NVivo 8, a computer assisted qualitative data analysis (CAQDAS). This resulted in the identification of four themes and their related sub-themes which I compared and contrasted with literature review and the theoretical framework, so as to make sense of the information I generated from the data collection process. I also discussed the results in line with the four goals of the study. The findings of this inquiry suggest a number of factors about ulwaluko, the following being the most significant: that firstly, although the rite is espoused and celebrated by some women as a significant cultural practice among amaXhosa, for others it is synonymous with patriarchy and hegemony. Secondly, women felt largely excluded, claiming that they were relegated to a subordinate position in society. For this reason, as well as because of the biomedical and other socio-political concerns associated with the practice, some women resented the custom. Thirdly, participants were divided about whether the practice should be continued or abolished; and these differences manifested within and between different regions. Fourthly, the results also demonstrated that the norms and values applied in ulwaluko are in contravention of the fundamental principles of a liberal state in that universal human rights are infringed upon through exclusionary practices. In this case the woman’s voice is muted; and this results in the denial of human agency. The study however, also revealed the emergence of shifting patterns in some parts of the province where an effort to include women appears to be taking place. Fifth and last, the enquiry demonstrated that ulwaluko is deeply entrenched among amaXhosa; that it has stood the test of time and is unlikely to be discontinued. Based on the results, I recommend that creative and transformative ways of addressing the evident clash between the provision of individual rights by the state and the recognition of ulwaluko as a cultural practice (which is perceived by some as harmful to women) be sought. To achieve this objective I make the following recommendations: 1) establishment and utilization of gender equality programmes; 2) modification of values and norms of the custom; 3) representation of women in decision-making structures; 4) establishment of collaborative networks; 5) widening of access to services (such as chapter nine institutions and national gender machinery); 6) documentation and sharing of effective and inclusive practices as well as; 7) creating awareness on initiation legislation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Performance evaluation and cost analysis of subsurface flow constructed wetlands designed for ammonium-nitrogen removal
- Authors: Tebitendwa, Sylvie Muwanga
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Sewage Purification Nitrogen removal , Constructed wetlands , Bioremediation , Sewage lagoons , Coal mine waste
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/61808 , vital:28062
- Description: Subsurface flow constructed wetlands (SSF CWs) is a low-cost, environmentally friendly sanitation technology for on-site treatment of domestic/municipal sewage. However, these systems are apparently unable to produce treated water of a quality suitable for discharge particularly in terms of nitrogen concentration, which has been attributed to design and operation based on biological oxygen demand as the parameter of choice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance, support medium, and techno-economics of a vertical- horizontal (V-H) SSF hybrid CW designed and operated using ammonium-nitrogen (NH4+-N) as the major parameter. Two pilot scale V-H SSF hybrid CWs were designed, constructed, and the performance of each monitored over two seasons and under two phases i.e. an initiation phase, and an optimization phase. Laboratory-scale horizontal SSF CWs were used to evaluate the support medium while the techno-economic study was framed to determine the cost effectiveness of V-H SSF hybrid CWs relative to high rate algal oxidation pond (HRAOP) systems to increase capacity of overloaded and/or under-performing waste stabilization pond (WSP) sewage treatment plants. Results revealed that under optimal operating conditions of hydraulic loading rate, hydraulic retention, and influent NH4+-N loading rate, treated water from the V-H SSF hybrid CWs achieved a quality commensurate with current South African standards for discharge into a surface water resource for all parameters except chemical oxygen demand and faecal coliforms. This suggests that NH4+-N is an important design and operational parameter for SSF CWs treating municipal sewage that is characterised as weak in terms of NH4+-N with a requirement of only simple disinfection such as chlorination to eliminate faecal coliforms. Use of discard coal to replace gravel as support medium in horizontal SSF CWs revealed an overall reduction in elemental composition of the discard coal support medium but without compromising water quality. This result strongly supports use of discard coal as an appropriate substrate for SSF CWs to achieve acceptable water quality. Furthermore, simultaneous degradation of discard coal during wastewater treatment demonstrates the versatility of SSF CWs for use in bio-remediation and pollution control. Finally, a technoeconomic assessment of V-H SSF hybrid CWs and a HRAOP series was carried out to determine the suitability of each process to increase capacity by mitigating dysfunctional and/or overloaded WSP sewage treatment plants. Analysis revealed that the quality of treated water from both systems was within the South African General Authorization standards for discharge to a surface water resource. Even so, each technology system presented its own set of limitations including; the inability to satisfactorily remove NH4+-N and chemical oxygen demand (i.e. for V-H SSF hybrid CWs) and total suspended solids and faecal coliforms (i.e. for HRAOPs), and a requirement for substantial land footprint while, HRAOPs required significantly less capital than V-H SSF hybrid CWs for implementation. The latter suggests that HRAOPs could be preferred over V-H SSF hybrid CWs as a technology of choice to increase the capacity of overloaded WSP sewage treatment plants especially where financial resources are limited. Overall, the results of this thesis indicate the potential to use NH4+-N as a design parameter in constructing SSF CWs treating weak strength municipal sewage (i.e. in terms of NH4+-N concentration) and to supplant gravel as the treatment media with industrial waste material like discard coal to achieve wastewater treatment, bio-remediation, and pollution control. The results of this work are discussed in terms of using SSF CWs as a passive and resilient technology for the treatment of domestic sewage in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Tebitendwa, Sylvie Muwanga
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Sewage Purification Nitrogen removal , Constructed wetlands , Bioremediation , Sewage lagoons , Coal mine waste
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/61808 , vital:28062
- Description: Subsurface flow constructed wetlands (SSF CWs) is a low-cost, environmentally friendly sanitation technology for on-site treatment of domestic/municipal sewage. However, these systems are apparently unable to produce treated water of a quality suitable for discharge particularly in terms of nitrogen concentration, which has been attributed to design and operation based on biological oxygen demand as the parameter of choice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance, support medium, and techno-economics of a vertical- horizontal (V-H) SSF hybrid CW designed and operated using ammonium-nitrogen (NH4+-N) as the major parameter. Two pilot scale V-H SSF hybrid CWs were designed, constructed, and the performance of each monitored over two seasons and under two phases i.e. an initiation phase, and an optimization phase. Laboratory-scale horizontal SSF CWs were used to evaluate the support medium while the techno-economic study was framed to determine the cost effectiveness of V-H SSF hybrid CWs relative to high rate algal oxidation pond (HRAOP) systems to increase capacity of overloaded and/or under-performing waste stabilization pond (WSP) sewage treatment plants. Results revealed that under optimal operating conditions of hydraulic loading rate, hydraulic retention, and influent NH4+-N loading rate, treated water from the V-H SSF hybrid CWs achieved a quality commensurate with current South African standards for discharge into a surface water resource for all parameters except chemical oxygen demand and faecal coliforms. This suggests that NH4+-N is an important design and operational parameter for SSF CWs treating municipal sewage that is characterised as weak in terms of NH4+-N with a requirement of only simple disinfection such as chlorination to eliminate faecal coliforms. Use of discard coal to replace gravel as support medium in horizontal SSF CWs revealed an overall reduction in elemental composition of the discard coal support medium but without compromising water quality. This result strongly supports use of discard coal as an appropriate substrate for SSF CWs to achieve acceptable water quality. Furthermore, simultaneous degradation of discard coal during wastewater treatment demonstrates the versatility of SSF CWs for use in bio-remediation and pollution control. Finally, a technoeconomic assessment of V-H SSF hybrid CWs and a HRAOP series was carried out to determine the suitability of each process to increase capacity by mitigating dysfunctional and/or overloaded WSP sewage treatment plants. Analysis revealed that the quality of treated water from both systems was within the South African General Authorization standards for discharge to a surface water resource. Even so, each technology system presented its own set of limitations including; the inability to satisfactorily remove NH4+-N and chemical oxygen demand (i.e. for V-H SSF hybrid CWs) and total suspended solids and faecal coliforms (i.e. for HRAOPs), and a requirement for substantial land footprint while, HRAOPs required significantly less capital than V-H SSF hybrid CWs for implementation. The latter suggests that HRAOPs could be preferred over V-H SSF hybrid CWs as a technology of choice to increase the capacity of overloaded WSP sewage treatment plants especially where financial resources are limited. Overall, the results of this thesis indicate the potential to use NH4+-N as a design parameter in constructing SSF CWs treating weak strength municipal sewage (i.e. in terms of NH4+-N concentration) and to supplant gravel as the treatment media with industrial waste material like discard coal to achieve wastewater treatment, bio-remediation, and pollution control. The results of this work are discussed in terms of using SSF CWs as a passive and resilient technology for the treatment of domestic sewage in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Play as an indicator of public opinion in online political commentary : a content analysis of online news forums leading up to the 2014 South African General Elections
- Authors: Moyo, Lungisani
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Online journalism Content analysis (Communication)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/10678 , vital:35667
- Description: This study seeks to look at play as an indicator of public opinion in online political commentary of online news forums leading to the 2014 South African general elections. A qualitative content analysis was used to analyse viewers’s comments about 2014 South African general elections posted online. The concepts of critical discourse analysis, frame analysis play theory and network analysis were applied to extend and inform the study. A corpus of all commentary appended to 2014 South African general election news reports published online by Media24, Times Media Group, Mail &Guardian, Independent Newspapers, Caxton CTP, and TNA Media were selected. The study employed a purposive sampling technique and 1000 comments were extracted. The sample began four weeks before the election and ended two weeks after the event. NVIVO 11 was utilized to code these readers’ comments into their respective categories. The core findings of this thesis reflect that online readers do not just engage in play but are more interactive and participative on these online public forums and their political discourse echo political affiliations with different political parties, bearing in mind that South Africa has 13 political parties that participated and are represented in parliament. In addition, the findings revealed that, play cannot be parted with and remains inseparable with "what is real"; instead, play renews the real world by giving it sense and meaning. Play does not "re-present" nor falsify certainty but it enunciates certainty. The findings also revealed that most participants identify themselves with the ANC as the ruling party, the DA as the main opposition, the EFF as the most vocal party and then other parties. The findings further revealed that participants have different perspectives on different economic and socio-political matters such as, entertainment, slate politics, and political affiliation, cadre deployment, political bias, economic meltdown, diaspora, and western influence, abuse of power by those in high places, land reform programme, political power struggles, leadership change and corruption.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Moyo, Lungisani
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Online journalism Content analysis (Communication)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/10678 , vital:35667
- Description: This study seeks to look at play as an indicator of public opinion in online political commentary of online news forums leading to the 2014 South African general elections. A qualitative content analysis was used to analyse viewers’s comments about 2014 South African general elections posted online. The concepts of critical discourse analysis, frame analysis play theory and network analysis were applied to extend and inform the study. A corpus of all commentary appended to 2014 South African general election news reports published online by Media24, Times Media Group, Mail &Guardian, Independent Newspapers, Caxton CTP, and TNA Media were selected. The study employed a purposive sampling technique and 1000 comments were extracted. The sample began four weeks before the election and ended two weeks after the event. NVIVO 11 was utilized to code these readers’ comments into their respective categories. The core findings of this thesis reflect that online readers do not just engage in play but are more interactive and participative on these online public forums and their political discourse echo political affiliations with different political parties, bearing in mind that South Africa has 13 political parties that participated and are represented in parliament. In addition, the findings revealed that, play cannot be parted with and remains inseparable with "what is real"; instead, play renews the real world by giving it sense and meaning. Play does not "re-present" nor falsify certainty but it enunciates certainty. The findings also revealed that most participants identify themselves with the ANC as the ruling party, the DA as the main opposition, the EFF as the most vocal party and then other parties. The findings further revealed that participants have different perspectives on different economic and socio-political matters such as, entertainment, slate politics, and political affiliation, cadre deployment, political bias, economic meltdown, diaspora, and western influence, abuse of power by those in high places, land reform programme, political power struggles, leadership change and corruption.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Population ecology of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins along the south-east coast of South Africa
- Vargas-Fonseca, O. Alejandra
- Authors: Vargas-Fonseca, O. Alejandra
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Bottlenose dolphin -- South Africa -- Western Cape , Bottlenose dolphin -- Ecology -- South Africa -- Western Cape Adaptation (Biology) Population biology -- Research
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/36090 , vital:33890
- Description: In this study, the genetic population structure of the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) was assessed across the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions of South Africa. At the same time, the abundance, distribution and habitat use of T. aduncus was investigated using boat-based surveys along 145 km of coastline from Goukamma Marine Protected Area (MPA) to Tsitsikamma MPA along the south-east coast of South Africa (Agulhas Bioregion). Tursiops aduncus habitat preferences were assessed based on locations of sightings and recorded behaviour, and compared with those of the sympatric Indian Ocean humpback dolphins (Sousa plumbea). Strong patterns of differentiation between two sub-populations of T. aduncus were identified using double digest Restriction Site Associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq). Pairwise FST were significant (p < 0.05) between individuals from the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions and yielded values of 0.033 for all the loci. Resource requirements, specialization and differences in habitat use possibly provided sufficient isolation allowing differentiation between sub-populations of the two ecologically distinct bioregions, despite the lack of any prominent boundary to gene flow. The two identified sub-populations should each be managed as a distinct conservation unit. The abundance estimate of T. aduncus for the study area according to an open population model (POPAN) was 2,295 individuals (95% CI: 1,157 - 4,553). Although closed models were considered inappropriate, such a model was applied for the Plettenberg Bay part of the study area in isolation, to allow for comparison with a previous estimate. The comparison showed a 72.3% decrease in abundance between the two periods: from 6,997 (95% CI: 5,230 - 9,492) in 2002 - 2003 to 1,940 (95% CI: 1,448 - 2,600) in 2014 - 2016. The mean group size also declined from 120 (range: 1 - 500) to 26 (range: 1 - 100). The results highlight the importance of assessing abundance changes at other sites to inform the revision of T. aduncus conservation status in South Africa. Tursiops aduncus were encountered throughout the area. The lowest encounter rate was along rocky and exposed shorelines. These areas were, however, associated with relatively larger group sizes and greater likelihood of travelling behaviour, whereas sandy bottomed areas, where encounter rates were highest (e.g. parts of Plettenberg Bay and the Goukamma MPA), were more likely to be associated with other behaviours (e.g. foraging, socialising). There was a relatively low association of encounters with MPAs, possibly due to the fact that two of the three MPAs in the area (Tsitsikamma and Robberg) were characterised by non-preferred habitat, namely rocky shorelines. Comparison with Sousa plumbea showed similarity in habitat preferences between the species, though S. plumbea also showed an affinity for estuarine habitats. Two areas that were highly utilised by both species were located along Goukamma MPA and the north-east section in Plettenberg Bay including the Keurbooms Estuary. The latter is unprotected and a management measure could be to create a controlled-use zone to reduce disturbance to dolphins there.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Vargas-Fonseca, O. Alejandra
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Bottlenose dolphin -- South Africa -- Western Cape , Bottlenose dolphin -- Ecology -- South Africa -- Western Cape Adaptation (Biology) Population biology -- Research
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/36090 , vital:33890
- Description: In this study, the genetic population structure of the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) was assessed across the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions of South Africa. At the same time, the abundance, distribution and habitat use of T. aduncus was investigated using boat-based surveys along 145 km of coastline from Goukamma Marine Protected Area (MPA) to Tsitsikamma MPA along the south-east coast of South Africa (Agulhas Bioregion). Tursiops aduncus habitat preferences were assessed based on locations of sightings and recorded behaviour, and compared with those of the sympatric Indian Ocean humpback dolphins (Sousa plumbea). Strong patterns of differentiation between two sub-populations of T. aduncus were identified using double digest Restriction Site Associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq). Pairwise FST were significant (p < 0.05) between individuals from the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions and yielded values of 0.033 for all the loci. Resource requirements, specialization and differences in habitat use possibly provided sufficient isolation allowing differentiation between sub-populations of the two ecologically distinct bioregions, despite the lack of any prominent boundary to gene flow. The two identified sub-populations should each be managed as a distinct conservation unit. The abundance estimate of T. aduncus for the study area according to an open population model (POPAN) was 2,295 individuals (95% CI: 1,157 - 4,553). Although closed models were considered inappropriate, such a model was applied for the Plettenberg Bay part of the study area in isolation, to allow for comparison with a previous estimate. The comparison showed a 72.3% decrease in abundance between the two periods: from 6,997 (95% CI: 5,230 - 9,492) in 2002 - 2003 to 1,940 (95% CI: 1,448 - 2,600) in 2014 - 2016. The mean group size also declined from 120 (range: 1 - 500) to 26 (range: 1 - 100). The results highlight the importance of assessing abundance changes at other sites to inform the revision of T. aduncus conservation status in South Africa. Tursiops aduncus were encountered throughout the area. The lowest encounter rate was along rocky and exposed shorelines. These areas were, however, associated with relatively larger group sizes and greater likelihood of travelling behaviour, whereas sandy bottomed areas, where encounter rates were highest (e.g. parts of Plettenberg Bay and the Goukamma MPA), were more likely to be associated with other behaviours (e.g. foraging, socialising). There was a relatively low association of encounters with MPAs, possibly due to the fact that two of the three MPAs in the area (Tsitsikamma and Robberg) were characterised by non-preferred habitat, namely rocky shorelines. Comparison with Sousa plumbea showed similarity in habitat preferences between the species, though S. plumbea also showed an affinity for estuarine habitats. Two areas that were highly utilised by both species were located along Goukamma MPA and the north-east section in Plettenberg Bay including the Keurbooms Estuary. The latter is unprotected and a management measure could be to create a controlled-use zone to reduce disturbance to dolphins there.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Possible futures for agricultural financing in sub-Saharan Africa towards 2055
- Authors: Oberholster, Jacobus Hoon
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Agriculture -- Africa, Sub-Saharan -- Finance , Agricultural industries -- Africa, Sub-Saharan , Agricultural productivity -- Africa, Sub-Saharan
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/23069 , vital:30403
- Description: The research developed four possible future scenarios for agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa towards 2055, namely the “Rising Sun”, “Two Wolves”, “The Left Wing and the Right Wing”, and the “Two Moons” scenarios. The scenarios aim to stimulate new thoughts on an inclusive and broader development approach to agricultural financing, and to identify gaps in the knowledge about a broad range of research issues relating to the level of complexity with regard to the decision-making environment in agricultural financing. The scenarios are developed, according to a strict and predetermined process, which is guided by the Six-Pillars approach of futures studies. A conceptual futures study model for agricultural financing was also developed to guide and clarify the way in which the research on agricultural financing can be integrated into the body of existing futures study theory. The research begins with a comprehensive environmental scan, from which various trends and driving forces emerged. The causal-layered analysis (CLA) method is then used in tandem with other futures-study techniques, such as the futures triangle and emerging issues analyses, to guide the process of knowledge creation about the future of agricultural financing. A real-time Delphi study was also conducted to validate and prioritise the megatrends and driving forces that emerged from the research. Subsequently, the research presents four future scenarios that aim to provide a better understanding of the future of agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa over next 40 years. The research presents agriculture as a multi-dimensional sector that fulfils different roles and functions in especially rural communities in Sub-Saharan Africa, which contribute to the perceived riskiness of agricultural financing. The scenarios illustrate how conditions for agricultural development and agricultural financing can develop and change in the region towards 2055. Furthermore, it provides useful insight into the drivers for change and how to anticipate these changes. The Delphibased scenario research also allowed the aggregation of expert knowledge, which can be used to inform decision-makers in the financial-service sector to test the robustness and appropriateness of existing business models and strategies. The scenarios can also be used as a starting point for financial-service providers and other key stakeholders to identify the future challenges and to maximise the emerging business and development opportunities, as offered by the agricultural sector in Sub-Saharan Africa. The research closes a research gap with regard to scenario development in agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa within the context of the globaldevelopment agenda. The research looks at the future of agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa over the next 40 years from a decision-maker’s point of view; and it provides key insights into especially the rural agricultural financial challenge in the region. A cornerstone of the research is to align policy initiatives and the business strategies of financial service providers with the vision of a broadened view of rural finance and increased financial inclusion in agriculture. The scenarios offer a starting point to develop new and more inclusive agricultural financing strategies that have the ability to speed up income convergence and economic diversification, especially with regard to rural economies in Sub-Saharan Africa that are heavily dependent on agriculture and its related industries. The research also makes a meaningful contribution by introducing a forward-looking, systems-thinking approach to agricultural financing, which is necessary to evaluate the sector’s financing needs within the context of modern food systems that are increasingly being characterised by increased levels of chain co-ordination and value creation. Subsequently, disruptive digital technologies and innovations in agricultural value-chain financing emerged as the most significant driving forces for agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa towards 2055.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Oberholster, Jacobus Hoon
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Agriculture -- Africa, Sub-Saharan -- Finance , Agricultural industries -- Africa, Sub-Saharan , Agricultural productivity -- Africa, Sub-Saharan
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/23069 , vital:30403
- Description: The research developed four possible future scenarios for agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa towards 2055, namely the “Rising Sun”, “Two Wolves”, “The Left Wing and the Right Wing”, and the “Two Moons” scenarios. The scenarios aim to stimulate new thoughts on an inclusive and broader development approach to agricultural financing, and to identify gaps in the knowledge about a broad range of research issues relating to the level of complexity with regard to the decision-making environment in agricultural financing. The scenarios are developed, according to a strict and predetermined process, which is guided by the Six-Pillars approach of futures studies. A conceptual futures study model for agricultural financing was also developed to guide and clarify the way in which the research on agricultural financing can be integrated into the body of existing futures study theory. The research begins with a comprehensive environmental scan, from which various trends and driving forces emerged. The causal-layered analysis (CLA) method is then used in tandem with other futures-study techniques, such as the futures triangle and emerging issues analyses, to guide the process of knowledge creation about the future of agricultural financing. A real-time Delphi study was also conducted to validate and prioritise the megatrends and driving forces that emerged from the research. Subsequently, the research presents four future scenarios that aim to provide a better understanding of the future of agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa over next 40 years. The research presents agriculture as a multi-dimensional sector that fulfils different roles and functions in especially rural communities in Sub-Saharan Africa, which contribute to the perceived riskiness of agricultural financing. The scenarios illustrate how conditions for agricultural development and agricultural financing can develop and change in the region towards 2055. Furthermore, it provides useful insight into the drivers for change and how to anticipate these changes. The Delphibased scenario research also allowed the aggregation of expert knowledge, which can be used to inform decision-makers in the financial-service sector to test the robustness and appropriateness of existing business models and strategies. The scenarios can also be used as a starting point for financial-service providers and other key stakeholders to identify the future challenges and to maximise the emerging business and development opportunities, as offered by the agricultural sector in Sub-Saharan Africa. The research closes a research gap with regard to scenario development in agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa within the context of the globaldevelopment agenda. The research looks at the future of agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa over the next 40 years from a decision-maker’s point of view; and it provides key insights into especially the rural agricultural financial challenge in the region. A cornerstone of the research is to align policy initiatives and the business strategies of financial service providers with the vision of a broadened view of rural finance and increased financial inclusion in agriculture. The scenarios offer a starting point to develop new and more inclusive agricultural financing strategies that have the ability to speed up income convergence and economic diversification, especially with regard to rural economies in Sub-Saharan Africa that are heavily dependent on agriculture and its related industries. The research also makes a meaningful contribution by introducing a forward-looking, systems-thinking approach to agricultural financing, which is necessary to evaluate the sector’s financing needs within the context of modern food systems that are increasingly being characterised by increased levels of chain co-ordination and value creation. Subsequently, disruptive digital technologies and innovations in agricultural value-chain financing emerged as the most significant driving forces for agricultural financing in Sub-Saharan Africa towards 2055.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Potential eco-physiological and phytosociological impacts of fracking on the vegetation of the Karoo, Eastern Cape, South Africa
- Authors: Martin, Kristen
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Hydraulic fracturing -- Environmental aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Germination Plant ecology Plant communities
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/31852 , vital:31853
- Description: Hydraulic fracturing or fracking is a technique that is used to extract gas from low permeable rocks. Large volumes of fluids (typically water combined with chemicals and sand) are injected at high pressure into rock formations to fracture them, allowing the gas to be released. A number of criticisms have come to light regarding the potential environmental impacts of this process. One concern is that there will be contamination of groundwater due to the toxicity of the chemicals used in the fracking process. There have been limited studies on the effects of fracking fluid on vegetation and no studies on South African vegetation specifically. The effects of fracking chemicals on the germination success and photosynthetic efficiency of plants was investigated for species common in areas earmarked for possible future hydraulic fracturing in the Karoo, South Africa. Germination of seeds was unaffected by these fracking fluids at application concentration in most species, but dwarf shrub and grass seeds were found to be sensitive to contamination. A single application treatment of plants with fracking fluid resulted in mortality in 50% of the species with reduced photosynthetic efficiency and growth in some of the surviving species. Long term continual treatment with diluted fracking fluids had an even greater effect on mortality and photosynthetic efficiency than a single high dose. The major vegetation types of the proposed fracking footprint were surveyed and analyses of the species, communities and their physiognomy were used to predict the tolerance of the Karoo vegetation to degradation resulting from shale gas development. An understanding of the sensitivity of vegetation was obtained from impacts of livestock on the vegetation. The results indicated that Grassland communities are least tolerant to degradation, Albany Thicket communities more tolerant and Nama-Karoo communities most tolerant. Escarpment Thickets were shown to be Nama-Karoo rather than Albany Thicket elements, and should be grouped with the former when considering the impacts of fracking.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Martin, Kristen
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Hydraulic fracturing -- Environmental aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Germination Plant ecology Plant communities
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/31852 , vital:31853
- Description: Hydraulic fracturing or fracking is a technique that is used to extract gas from low permeable rocks. Large volumes of fluids (typically water combined with chemicals and sand) are injected at high pressure into rock formations to fracture them, allowing the gas to be released. A number of criticisms have come to light regarding the potential environmental impacts of this process. One concern is that there will be contamination of groundwater due to the toxicity of the chemicals used in the fracking process. There have been limited studies on the effects of fracking fluid on vegetation and no studies on South African vegetation specifically. The effects of fracking chemicals on the germination success and photosynthetic efficiency of plants was investigated for species common in areas earmarked for possible future hydraulic fracturing in the Karoo, South Africa. Germination of seeds was unaffected by these fracking fluids at application concentration in most species, but dwarf shrub and grass seeds were found to be sensitive to contamination. A single application treatment of plants with fracking fluid resulted in mortality in 50% of the species with reduced photosynthetic efficiency and growth in some of the surviving species. Long term continual treatment with diluted fracking fluids had an even greater effect on mortality and photosynthetic efficiency than a single high dose. The major vegetation types of the proposed fracking footprint were surveyed and analyses of the species, communities and their physiognomy were used to predict the tolerance of the Karoo vegetation to degradation resulting from shale gas development. An understanding of the sensitivity of vegetation was obtained from impacts of livestock on the vegetation. The results indicated that Grassland communities are least tolerant to degradation, Albany Thicket communities more tolerant and Nama-Karoo communities most tolerant. Escarpment Thickets were shown to be Nama-Karoo rather than Albany Thicket elements, and should be grouped with the former when considering the impacts of fracking.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Pre-service education students’ application of visualisation strategies to solve mathematical word-problems
- Authors: Shaw , Peter
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Mathematics -- Study and teaching
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Education)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/12941 , vital:39406
- Description: This classroom-based action research dissertation examined visualisation strategies used by pre-service Intermediate Phase PGCE education students to solve mathematical word-problems. The setting was an Eastern Cape university. Previous literature indicated a positive correlation between the use of visual scaffolds and success in solving word problems. However, a gap was found insofar as little research had been published on the application of visualisation to word-problems by student teachers in South Africa. This thesis advances our understanding of the role visualisation may play in assisting student teachers to solve word-problems. The theoretic framework was informed by Bruner’s theory of learning. The research was grounded in the hermeneutic tradition. An interpretivist research paradigm was expedited by using an inductive, naturalistic perspective and relativist ontology. Thirtyeight student-teachers participated in the study. Parallel and convergent qualitative and quantitative data gathering instruments were used, thereby facilitating triangulation and examination for microgenesis. It was found that vestiges of past teaching practices initially limited the participants’ knowledge to a deeply-flawed, banking model of routines and an instrumental perception of mathematics. Disruptive calls for social justice impeded progress. Albeit visualisation strategies liberated understanding, many foundational concepts and skills had to be reconstructed. The confluence of time and rehearsal culminated in some measure of expertise. Sustained effort enabled new knowledge to be compressed and consigned to long-term memory. Salient visual representations assisted participants to conceptualise relational mathematical metaconcepts and reduced the cognitive demands imposed by word-problems but that achievement was a hard-won prize.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Shaw , Peter
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Mathematics -- Study and teaching
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Education)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/12941 , vital:39406
- Description: This classroom-based action research dissertation examined visualisation strategies used by pre-service Intermediate Phase PGCE education students to solve mathematical word-problems. The setting was an Eastern Cape university. Previous literature indicated a positive correlation between the use of visual scaffolds and success in solving word problems. However, a gap was found insofar as little research had been published on the application of visualisation to word-problems by student teachers in South Africa. This thesis advances our understanding of the role visualisation may play in assisting student teachers to solve word-problems. The theoretic framework was informed by Bruner’s theory of learning. The research was grounded in the hermeneutic tradition. An interpretivist research paradigm was expedited by using an inductive, naturalistic perspective and relativist ontology. Thirtyeight student-teachers participated in the study. Parallel and convergent qualitative and quantitative data gathering instruments were used, thereby facilitating triangulation and examination for microgenesis. It was found that vestiges of past teaching practices initially limited the participants’ knowledge to a deeply-flawed, banking model of routines and an instrumental perception of mathematics. Disruptive calls for social justice impeded progress. Albeit visualisation strategies liberated understanding, many foundational concepts and skills had to be reconstructed. The confluence of time and rehearsal culminated in some measure of expertise. Sustained effort enabled new knowledge to be compressed and consigned to long-term memory. Salient visual representations assisted participants to conceptualise relational mathematical metaconcepts and reduced the cognitive demands imposed by word-problems but that achievement was a hard-won prize.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Preimages for SHA-1
- Authors: Motara, Yusuf Moosa
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Data encryption (Computer science) , Computer security -- Software , Hashing (Computer science) , Data compression (Computer science) , Preimage , Secure Hash Algorithm 1 (SHA-1)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/57885 , vital:27004
- Description: This research explores the problem of finding a preimage — an input that, when passed through a particular function, will result in a pre-specified output — for the compression function of the SHA-1 cryptographic hash. This problem is much more difficult than the problem of finding a collision for a hash function, and preimage attacks for very few popular hash functions are known. The research begins by introducing the field and giving an overview of the existing work in the area. A thorough analysis of the compression function is made, resulting in alternative formulations for both parts of the function, and both statistical and theoretical tools to determine the difficulty of the SHA-1 preimage problem. Different representations (And- Inverter Graph, Binary Decision Diagram, Conjunctive Normal Form, Constraint Satisfaction form, and Disjunctive Normal Form) and associated tools to manipulate and/or analyse these representations are then applied and explored, and results are collected and interpreted. In conclusion, the SHA-1 preimage problem remains unsolved and insoluble for the foreseeable future. The primary issue is one of efficient representation; despite a promising theoretical difficulty, both the diffusion characteristics and the depth of the tree stand in the way of efficient search. Despite this, the research served to confirm and quantify the difficulty of the problem both theoretically, using Schaefer's Theorem, and practically, in the context of different representations.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Motara, Yusuf Moosa
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Data encryption (Computer science) , Computer security -- Software , Hashing (Computer science) , Data compression (Computer science) , Preimage , Secure Hash Algorithm 1 (SHA-1)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/57885 , vital:27004
- Description: This research explores the problem of finding a preimage — an input that, when passed through a particular function, will result in a pre-specified output — for the compression function of the SHA-1 cryptographic hash. This problem is much more difficult than the problem of finding a collision for a hash function, and preimage attacks for very few popular hash functions are known. The research begins by introducing the field and giving an overview of the existing work in the area. A thorough analysis of the compression function is made, resulting in alternative formulations for both parts of the function, and both statistical and theoretical tools to determine the difficulty of the SHA-1 preimage problem. Different representations (And- Inverter Graph, Binary Decision Diagram, Conjunctive Normal Form, Constraint Satisfaction form, and Disjunctive Normal Form) and associated tools to manipulate and/or analyse these representations are then applied and explored, and results are collected and interpreted. In conclusion, the SHA-1 preimage problem remains unsolved and insoluble for the foreseeable future. The primary issue is one of efficient representation; despite a promising theoretical difficulty, both the diffusion characteristics and the depth of the tree stand in the way of efficient search. Despite this, the research served to confirm and quantify the difficulty of the problem both theoretically, using Schaefer's Theorem, and practically, in the context of different representations.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Prioritisation of spaces and services in on-campus student housing facilities in southern Ghana universities
- Authors: Simpeh, Fredrick
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Student housing -- Ghana , College students -- Housing -- Ghana Student housing , Facility management -- Ghana Building management -- Ghana
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/35637 , vital:33769
- Description: Student housing facilities (SHFs) are an integral part of universities’ physical facilities. Therefore, the management of SHF should be seen as part of broader university facility management. Moreover, it can be argued that by understanding the requirements of occupants, facility managers would be able to effectively prioritise the spaces and services required in the SHFs. However, studies from many parts of the world, including Ghana, show that users’ requirements and expectations are not duly incorporated into the management process of university building facilities. As a result, users’, in this case students requirements are not well prioritised by facility managers. Thus, the facility departments are unable to adequately provide and deliver SHF spaces and services to meet students’ requirements. With this in mind, this research aimed to develop a prioritisation and a standard SHF frameworks to enhance the provisioning and management of the on-campus SHF spaces and services at southern Ghana universities. The overarching research methodology was subjective. The qualitative method was adopted for the study. The research was conducted within the southern part of Ghana and limited to five universities. A total of ten focus group discussions were carried out in the five universities. Other sources of primary data were interviews and site visit. The study found that washrooms (toilet and bath), sleeping spaces, kitchens, study areas, libraries, sick bays, computer labs, bookshops, drying areas and discussion rooms as well as electricity, water, security, internet, cleaning services, maintenance services, generators, ventilation (fans), health services, library services, electric sockets, study furniture, refuse collection, pest control and fire extinguishers are extremely important spaces and services that students expect to have in a SHF. Furthermore, it was found that only 3 spaces out of the 10 rated as extremely important were rated as basic, whilst 10 out of the 15 services rated as extremely important received a basic priority rating. However, the study also found that some of these extremely important spaces and services such as study areas, computer labs, kitchens and internet were not provided in some SHFs. The study also revealed that students were generally not satisfied with some of the spaces and services that were provided in the SHFs; dissatisfaction was expressed with: the infrequent water supply; the poor condition of washrooms, i.e. bath and toilet facilities; the lack of study areas and also the condition, adequacy and availability of chairs and tables in the study rooms; the slow response of maintenance departments; the poor standard/quality of cleaning and availability of cleaners; the lack of adequate kitchens and the lack of stable internet connectivity. The study has achieved its aim by developing a prioritisation framework as well as an ideal SHF framework to enhance the provision and management of the on-campus SHF spaces and services at southern Ghana universities. It is recommended that SHFs which do not meet average students’ expected standards should be upgraded to meet such standards. The frameworks developed in the study could be used by facility managers or departments as a guide for effective on-campus SHF management.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Simpeh, Fredrick
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Student housing -- Ghana , College students -- Housing -- Ghana Student housing , Facility management -- Ghana Building management -- Ghana
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/35637 , vital:33769
- Description: Student housing facilities (SHFs) are an integral part of universities’ physical facilities. Therefore, the management of SHF should be seen as part of broader university facility management. Moreover, it can be argued that by understanding the requirements of occupants, facility managers would be able to effectively prioritise the spaces and services required in the SHFs. However, studies from many parts of the world, including Ghana, show that users’ requirements and expectations are not duly incorporated into the management process of university building facilities. As a result, users’, in this case students requirements are not well prioritised by facility managers. Thus, the facility departments are unable to adequately provide and deliver SHF spaces and services to meet students’ requirements. With this in mind, this research aimed to develop a prioritisation and a standard SHF frameworks to enhance the provisioning and management of the on-campus SHF spaces and services at southern Ghana universities. The overarching research methodology was subjective. The qualitative method was adopted for the study. The research was conducted within the southern part of Ghana and limited to five universities. A total of ten focus group discussions were carried out in the five universities. Other sources of primary data were interviews and site visit. The study found that washrooms (toilet and bath), sleeping spaces, kitchens, study areas, libraries, sick bays, computer labs, bookshops, drying areas and discussion rooms as well as electricity, water, security, internet, cleaning services, maintenance services, generators, ventilation (fans), health services, library services, electric sockets, study furniture, refuse collection, pest control and fire extinguishers are extremely important spaces and services that students expect to have in a SHF. Furthermore, it was found that only 3 spaces out of the 10 rated as extremely important were rated as basic, whilst 10 out of the 15 services rated as extremely important received a basic priority rating. However, the study also found that some of these extremely important spaces and services such as study areas, computer labs, kitchens and internet were not provided in some SHFs. The study also revealed that students were generally not satisfied with some of the spaces and services that were provided in the SHFs; dissatisfaction was expressed with: the infrequent water supply; the poor condition of washrooms, i.e. bath and toilet facilities; the lack of study areas and also the condition, adequacy and availability of chairs and tables in the study rooms; the slow response of maintenance departments; the poor standard/quality of cleaning and availability of cleaners; the lack of adequate kitchens and the lack of stable internet connectivity. The study has achieved its aim by developing a prioritisation framework as well as an ideal SHF framework to enhance the provision and management of the on-campus SHF spaces and services at southern Ghana universities. It is recommended that SHFs which do not meet average students’ expected standards should be upgraded to meet such standards. The frameworks developed in the study could be used by facility managers or departments as a guide for effective on-campus SHF management.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Production and molecular characterization of peroxidases from novel ligninolytic proteobacteria and bacillus strains
- Authors: Falade, Ayodeji Osmund
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Peroxidase Catalase
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9702 , vital:34823
- Description: Inadequate quantity is a major impediment to the industrial application of peroxidase and other industrial enzymes. Consequently, efforts are geared towards increasing peroxidase production by searching for new microbes with enhanced production capacity. In this study, three novel ligninolytic bacteria: Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 (KX640917), Ensifer adhaerens NWODO-2 (KX640918) and Bacillus sp. FALADE-1 (KX640922) were optimized for peroxidase production and their peroxidases characterized using molecular and biochemical approaches. Molecular analysis confirmed the presence of peroxidase genes in the three bacteria. BLAST result and phylogenetic analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences suggested that Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 peroxidase (RaoPrx) belongs to a DyP-type peroxidase family while peroxidases from Ensifer adhaerens NWODO-2 and Bacillus sp. FALADE-1 are catalase-peroxidases. The peroxidase genes are available in the GenBank with MF370527, MF374336 and MF407314 as respective accession numbers. Upon optimization, Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 exhibited the highest peroxidase production at pH 5, 35 oC and 150 rpm. Biochemical characterization showed that RaoPrx had a wide substrate specificity as it was able to oxidize all the tested substrates in this study (ABTS, veratryl alcohol, guaiacol and pyrogallol), except 2, 6-Dimethoxyphenol. However, highest activity by the enzyme was recorded with pyrogallol as substrate. The enzyme had an optimum activity at pH 6 and 50 oC and was very stable at high temperatures (50 oC – 70 oC). Its pH stability was over a pH range of 5.0 – 7.0. Moreover, RaoPrx activity was significantly enhanced by Ag+, Cu2+, Zn2+and Fe2+ while Ca2+, Mg2+, Ba2+, Al3+, Co2+, NaN3 and EDTA inhibited the activity of the enzyme. Nevertheless, RaoPrx exhibited a remarkable dye-decolourizing activity on congo red and melanin, indicating the biotechnological potential of the enzyme in dye decolourization and development of cosmetic agent. Generally, the results from this study suggest that ligninolytic bacteria hold a great potential for enhanced peroxidase production that could meet the increasing industrial demand.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Falade, Ayodeji Osmund
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Peroxidase Catalase
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9702 , vital:34823
- Description: Inadequate quantity is a major impediment to the industrial application of peroxidase and other industrial enzymes. Consequently, efforts are geared towards increasing peroxidase production by searching for new microbes with enhanced production capacity. In this study, three novel ligninolytic bacteria: Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 (KX640917), Ensifer adhaerens NWODO-2 (KX640918) and Bacillus sp. FALADE-1 (KX640922) were optimized for peroxidase production and their peroxidases characterized using molecular and biochemical approaches. Molecular analysis confirmed the presence of peroxidase genes in the three bacteria. BLAST result and phylogenetic analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences suggested that Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 peroxidase (RaoPrx) belongs to a DyP-type peroxidase family while peroxidases from Ensifer adhaerens NWODO-2 and Bacillus sp. FALADE-1 are catalase-peroxidases. The peroxidase genes are available in the GenBank with MF370527, MF374336 and MF407314 as respective accession numbers. Upon optimization, Raoultella ornithinolytica OKOH-1 exhibited the highest peroxidase production at pH 5, 35 oC and 150 rpm. Biochemical characterization showed that RaoPrx had a wide substrate specificity as it was able to oxidize all the tested substrates in this study (ABTS, veratryl alcohol, guaiacol and pyrogallol), except 2, 6-Dimethoxyphenol. However, highest activity by the enzyme was recorded with pyrogallol as substrate. The enzyme had an optimum activity at pH 6 and 50 oC and was very stable at high temperatures (50 oC – 70 oC). Its pH stability was over a pH range of 5.0 – 7.0. Moreover, RaoPrx activity was significantly enhanced by Ag+, Cu2+, Zn2+and Fe2+ while Ca2+, Mg2+, Ba2+, Al3+, Co2+, NaN3 and EDTA inhibited the activity of the enzyme. Nevertheless, RaoPrx exhibited a remarkable dye-decolourizing activity on congo red and melanin, indicating the biotechnological potential of the enzyme in dye decolourization and development of cosmetic agent. Generally, the results from this study suggest that ligninolytic bacteria hold a great potential for enhanced peroxidase production that could meet the increasing industrial demand.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Productivity and resilience of intertidal resources available to extant human foragers on South Africa’s cape south coast: behavioural implications for early Homo sapiens
- Authors: De Vynck, Jan Carlo
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Marine invertebrates -- South Africa -- Prehistory , Shellfish -- South Africa -- Prehistory Fishes -- Behavior
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/30172 , vital:30854
- Description: Studies of pre-historic lifestyles can be limited by a lack of preserved material and sites and resource misinterpretation is augmented by the vagueness of pre-historic subsistence lifestyles. The present can inform the past and this study‟s ethnoarchaeological approach, through modern analogues, examines productivity, resilience and temporal and spatial size variation of intertidal invertebrates on the Cape‟s south coast. O‟Connell (1995) defined the mutualistic relationship between ethnography and archaeology thus: “Archaeology‟s ultimate aim is understanding past human behaviour by patterns in the form and distribution of objects made or modified by humans in the past and knowledge of human behaviour and its material consequences in the present. The first provides direct evidence of past behaviour; the second, a basis for interpreting that evidence”. Coastal archaeology, specifically the contribution of coastal resources to pre-historic subsistence, has gained increased global interest (Erlandson, 2001; Erlandson and Rick, 2008; Codding et al., 2014). Apart from the high representation of preserved shell in coastal archaeological sites, interest in intertidal resources has also been sparked by their economic value compared to terrestrial resource options. Intertidal resources offer low-risk protein acquisition whereas terrestrial protein can be dangerous to procure. However, in the past intertidal subsistence was thought to offer low caloric yields or unfavourable cost-to-benefit relationships until Meehan (1982) convincingly demonstrated the potential caloric „profit‟ possible from coastal foraging; the Anbarra women of northern Australia were contributing significantly to the overall caloric requirements of those people. In South Africa, two possible evolutionary behavioural hypotheses arose from the addition of intertidal resources to pre-historic diets. As background, it is important to note that the oldest global evidence for shellfish procurement [164 000 years ago (ka)] is found on the Cape‟s south coast (Jerardino and Marean, 2010) and the evidence is enriched by other sites from around 110 ka (Voight, 1973; Thackeray, 1988; Henshilwood et al., 2001; Langejans et al., 2012). Furthermore, this period coincides with the emergence of cognitively modern Homo sapiens as evidenced in xx the palaeoarchives from many sites in the region (d‟Errico et al., 2005; Marean et al., 2007; Wurz, 2008; Henshilwood et al., 2009; Watts, 2010; d‟Errico et al., 2012). These features have greatly enhanced the significance and importance of this area to understanding human evolution. The two hypotheses are centred around the effect that intertidal resources could have had on the emergence of our unique species. The addition of a nutritionally beneficial resource to cognitive development is seen by some (Broadhurst et al., 2002; Parkington, 2010) to have driven this cognitive evolution, where others suggest that resources which are both productive and dependable create pro-social proclivities that drive cognitive development (Whitaker and Byrd, 2014; Marean, 2014) and facilitate the migration of humans (Fa, 2008; Codding et al., 2014). Both hypotheses argue that resources on the Cape‟s coast must have been productive and had to be a frequent addition to diet to underpin brain development. The increased frequency of coastal resource procurement or coastal adaptation is therefore seen as an attribute of, or requisite for our species. This thesis attempts to shed light on the contribution of intertidal resources to prehistoric ‒ especially Middle Stone Age (MSA) – subsistence economy on the Cape‟s south coast and the possible effect thereof on human behavioural evolution. The first aim was to investigate the spatial productivity (once-off patch caloric profitability in numerous patches) of intertidal resources and the environmental and behavioural variables affecting it. The second aim was to investigate the resilience of caloric profitability (numerous harvests in the same patch) of these resources to sustained human predation. Productivity itself cannot affect human temporal social dynamics if the resource is swiftly depleted within a specific patch after one or a few harvests. Archaeological records that show the body size of shellfish decreasing over time are usually interpreted to indicate intensive exploitation and the depletion of these resources, but there may be other explanations for such patterns. Therefore, the third aim was to compare temporal and spatial variations in the body size of Turbo sarmaticus in the MSA, Later Stone Age (LSA) and the present day, in order to investigate whether such variations result from human exploitation or environmental changes.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: De Vynck, Jan Carlo
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Marine invertebrates -- South Africa -- Prehistory , Shellfish -- South Africa -- Prehistory Fishes -- Behavior
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/30172 , vital:30854
- Description: Studies of pre-historic lifestyles can be limited by a lack of preserved material and sites and resource misinterpretation is augmented by the vagueness of pre-historic subsistence lifestyles. The present can inform the past and this study‟s ethnoarchaeological approach, through modern analogues, examines productivity, resilience and temporal and spatial size variation of intertidal invertebrates on the Cape‟s south coast. O‟Connell (1995) defined the mutualistic relationship between ethnography and archaeology thus: “Archaeology‟s ultimate aim is understanding past human behaviour by patterns in the form and distribution of objects made or modified by humans in the past and knowledge of human behaviour and its material consequences in the present. The first provides direct evidence of past behaviour; the second, a basis for interpreting that evidence”. Coastal archaeology, specifically the contribution of coastal resources to pre-historic subsistence, has gained increased global interest (Erlandson, 2001; Erlandson and Rick, 2008; Codding et al., 2014). Apart from the high representation of preserved shell in coastal archaeological sites, interest in intertidal resources has also been sparked by their economic value compared to terrestrial resource options. Intertidal resources offer low-risk protein acquisition whereas terrestrial protein can be dangerous to procure. However, in the past intertidal subsistence was thought to offer low caloric yields or unfavourable cost-to-benefit relationships until Meehan (1982) convincingly demonstrated the potential caloric „profit‟ possible from coastal foraging; the Anbarra women of northern Australia were contributing significantly to the overall caloric requirements of those people. In South Africa, two possible evolutionary behavioural hypotheses arose from the addition of intertidal resources to pre-historic diets. As background, it is important to note that the oldest global evidence for shellfish procurement [164 000 years ago (ka)] is found on the Cape‟s south coast (Jerardino and Marean, 2010) and the evidence is enriched by other sites from around 110 ka (Voight, 1973; Thackeray, 1988; Henshilwood et al., 2001; Langejans et al., 2012). Furthermore, this period coincides with the emergence of cognitively modern Homo sapiens as evidenced in xx the palaeoarchives from many sites in the region (d‟Errico et al., 2005; Marean et al., 2007; Wurz, 2008; Henshilwood et al., 2009; Watts, 2010; d‟Errico et al., 2012). These features have greatly enhanced the significance and importance of this area to understanding human evolution. The two hypotheses are centred around the effect that intertidal resources could have had on the emergence of our unique species. The addition of a nutritionally beneficial resource to cognitive development is seen by some (Broadhurst et al., 2002; Parkington, 2010) to have driven this cognitive evolution, where others suggest that resources which are both productive and dependable create pro-social proclivities that drive cognitive development (Whitaker and Byrd, 2014; Marean, 2014) and facilitate the migration of humans (Fa, 2008; Codding et al., 2014). Both hypotheses argue that resources on the Cape‟s coast must have been productive and had to be a frequent addition to diet to underpin brain development. The increased frequency of coastal resource procurement or coastal adaptation is therefore seen as an attribute of, or requisite for our species. This thesis attempts to shed light on the contribution of intertidal resources to prehistoric ‒ especially Middle Stone Age (MSA) – subsistence economy on the Cape‟s south coast and the possible effect thereof on human behavioural evolution. The first aim was to investigate the spatial productivity (once-off patch caloric profitability in numerous patches) of intertidal resources and the environmental and behavioural variables affecting it. The second aim was to investigate the resilience of caloric profitability (numerous harvests in the same patch) of these resources to sustained human predation. Productivity itself cannot affect human temporal social dynamics if the resource is swiftly depleted within a specific patch after one or a few harvests. Archaeological records that show the body size of shellfish decreasing over time are usually interpreted to indicate intensive exploitation and the depletion of these resources, but there may be other explanations for such patterns. Therefore, the third aim was to compare temporal and spatial variations in the body size of Turbo sarmaticus in the MSA, Later Stone Age (LSA) and the present day, in order to investigate whether such variations result from human exploitation or environmental changes.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Promoting healthy and safe school environments : the role of school governance - a study in the East London and Butterworth educational districts of the Eastern Cape, South Africa
- Authors: Napier, Astrid
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: School children -- Health and hygiene -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape School hygiene -- South Africa Environmental risk assessment -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9489 , vital:34356
- Description: This thesis investigated how school governance promoted healthy and safe school environments and focussed on elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe. These elements were spatial density, sanitation, ventilation, visibility, the acoustic element of the school environment, the aesthetic element and the psychosocial school environment. These are very important elements, and the neglect thereof could lead to ill health. The study excluded elements such as violence and substance use, as well as HIV/ AIDS. The research was conducted at six schools in the Butterworth and East London Educational Districts, as well as the district office in each of these two educational districts of the Eastern Cape. The design was a case study, and a qualitative methodology was used. The sample consisted of members from the school governing bodies, that is, the principal, one other member of the school governing body and a member of the school management team, as well as one official from each educational district, totalling twenty participants. A non-probability, purposive sampling method was used. The instrument was semi-structured interviews and document analyses. The researcher also made use of photographic evidence. Findings indicated that although support services were in place, promoting a healthy and safe school environment was a challenge at all of the schools. Various contributing factors such as the lack of support from the Department of Basic Education (DBE) for schools and district officials, non – implementation of policies, lack of infrastructure, lack of human and other resources, lack of security personnel and vandalism, prohibited the promotion of healthy and safe school environments. It is recommended that the DBE pays urgent attention to these elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe; that the DBE fills the gap that exists between the national, provincial and district offices that hamper the flow of infrastructure and the supply of human and other resources. There is also a need for workshops on policy writing and implementation thereof. A workshop focussing on these elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe would also be beneficial.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Napier, Astrid
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: School children -- Health and hygiene -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape School hygiene -- South Africa Environmental risk assessment -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9489 , vital:34356
- Description: This thesis investigated how school governance promoted healthy and safe school environments and focussed on elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe. These elements were spatial density, sanitation, ventilation, visibility, the acoustic element of the school environment, the aesthetic element and the psychosocial school environment. These are very important elements, and the neglect thereof could lead to ill health. The study excluded elements such as violence and substance use, as well as HIV/ AIDS. The research was conducted at six schools in the Butterworth and East London Educational Districts, as well as the district office in each of these two educational districts of the Eastern Cape. The design was a case study, and a qualitative methodology was used. The sample consisted of members from the school governing bodies, that is, the principal, one other member of the school governing body and a member of the school management team, as well as one official from each educational district, totalling twenty participants. A non-probability, purposive sampling method was used. The instrument was semi-structured interviews and document analyses. The researcher also made use of photographic evidence. Findings indicated that although support services were in place, promoting a healthy and safe school environment was a challenge at all of the schools. Various contributing factors such as the lack of support from the Department of Basic Education (DBE) for schools and district officials, non – implementation of policies, lack of infrastructure, lack of human and other resources, lack of security personnel and vandalism, prohibited the promotion of healthy and safe school environments. It is recommended that the DBE pays urgent attention to these elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe; that the DBE fills the gap that exists between the national, provincial and district offices that hamper the flow of infrastructure and the supply of human and other resources. There is also a need for workshops on policy writing and implementation thereof. A workshop focussing on these elements that make the school environment unhealthy and unsafe would also be beneficial.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Provision of psychosocial support to vulnerable learners by peer led groups in secondary schools in Amathole West Education District, Eastern Cape
- Authors: Chinyama, Nyarayi
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Psychosocial support -- Education, Secondary -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape Education, Secondary -- Study and teaching -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9341 , vital:34333
- Description: This study sought provision of psychosocial support to vulnerable learners by school based peer-led groups in secondary schools. Using the Ecological Systems Theory and the Psychosocial Support Interactive Process Model, the study specifically sought how vulnerable learners were identified, how participants understood vulnerability and psychosocial support, how peer led groups were selected and the strategies used to provide psychosocial support by peer led groups. The study also sought the support and monitoring strategies used by different stakeholders including the department of education inorder to assit the peer led groups in their endevour to provide psychosocial support to vulnerable learners. The study employed qualitative research methods using interviews, focus groups and document analysis. Purposive sampling was used to select a District Education Officer, four principals, four group members and all of whom took part in interviews, then twenty four peer group members who participated in focus group discussions. The study found out that various methods were used to identify vulnerable learners, but these were inadequate due to limited professional support to the peer-led groups. The strategies employed to assist vulnerable learners included the buddy system, scripture unions, boys and girls education movements and home visits. However there were also challenges of shortage of human and material resources such as counselling rooms, transport. Also none cooperation of parents still hampers psychosocial support by peer led groups. Therefore, the study concludes that there are still a lot of vulnerable learners who are not reached by peer-led groups because of the above mentioned challenges. In this light the study proposed a framework for providing psychosocial support. The study therefore, recommends that the psychosocial programme be part of the large school curriculum which has a specific budget to sustain all the identification, support and monitoring needs of the vulnerable learners and to ensure the psychosocial support strategies are successful.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Chinyama, Nyarayi
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Psychosocial support -- Education, Secondary -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape Education, Secondary -- Study and teaching -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/9341 , vital:34333
- Description: This study sought provision of psychosocial support to vulnerable learners by school based peer-led groups in secondary schools. Using the Ecological Systems Theory and the Psychosocial Support Interactive Process Model, the study specifically sought how vulnerable learners were identified, how participants understood vulnerability and psychosocial support, how peer led groups were selected and the strategies used to provide psychosocial support by peer led groups. The study also sought the support and monitoring strategies used by different stakeholders including the department of education inorder to assit the peer led groups in their endevour to provide psychosocial support to vulnerable learners. The study employed qualitative research methods using interviews, focus groups and document analysis. Purposive sampling was used to select a District Education Officer, four principals, four group members and all of whom took part in interviews, then twenty four peer group members who participated in focus group discussions. The study found out that various methods were used to identify vulnerable learners, but these were inadequate due to limited professional support to the peer-led groups. The strategies employed to assist vulnerable learners included the buddy system, scripture unions, boys and girls education movements and home visits. However there were also challenges of shortage of human and material resources such as counselling rooms, transport. Also none cooperation of parents still hampers psychosocial support by peer led groups. Therefore, the study concludes that there are still a lot of vulnerable learners who are not reached by peer-led groups because of the above mentioned challenges. In this light the study proposed a framework for providing psychosocial support. The study therefore, recommends that the psychosocial programme be part of the large school curriculum which has a specific budget to sustain all the identification, support and monitoring needs of the vulnerable learners and to ensure the psychosocial support strategies are successful.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Psychological capital, psychological empowerment and organisational citizenship behaviour among nurses in public hospitals in Eastern Cape, South Africa
- Chamisa, Shingirayi Florence
- Authors: Chamisa, Shingirayi Florence
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Organizational behavior--South Africa Nurses--Employment--South Africa--Eastern Cape Organizational effectiveness--South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , Industrial Psychology
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/15441 , vital:40408
- Description: The current task environment in the South African public hospitals has reconfirmed the importance of researching on the psychological environment and its influence on individual employee performance. The motivation of this study is to examine the relationship between psychological capital and psychological empowerment on the one hand and organisational citizenship behaviour on the other hand among nurses within selected public hospitals in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. This contributes to the theoretical conceptual knowledge on how performance can be enhanced through the appropriate provision of psychological resources in the workplace and the promotion of competence, efficiency and sustainability of organisations. Survey questionnaires were used to collect data. Inferential analysis from SPSS was carried out to understand the antecedents and consequences of organisation citizenship behaviour. An overall model of the study was also identified through AMOS using structural equation modeling. Findings from the selected South African public hospitals indicate that there is a significant positive relationship between psychological capital and psychological empowerment on the one hand and organisational citizenship behaviour on the other hand among nurses within the selected public hospitals. The results validate certain aspects of the Conservative frame work and the Job Demands Resources Model. The study recommends that hospital managers and supervisors should determine the social networks in their hospitals as a strategy to promote performance and organisational citizenship behaviour. Individual employees who are located at the fringes of the network must be recognised and empowered. This allows for the comparison evaluation of both individual and organisational characteristics on organisational citizenship behaviour and the promotion of slack resources which are important in maintaining a steady organisational performance which further widens organisational capacity.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Chamisa, Shingirayi Florence
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Organizational behavior--South Africa Nurses--Employment--South Africa--Eastern Cape Organizational effectiveness--South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , Industrial Psychology
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/15441 , vital:40408
- Description: The current task environment in the South African public hospitals has reconfirmed the importance of researching on the psychological environment and its influence on individual employee performance. The motivation of this study is to examine the relationship between psychological capital and psychological empowerment on the one hand and organisational citizenship behaviour on the other hand among nurses within selected public hospitals in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. This contributes to the theoretical conceptual knowledge on how performance can be enhanced through the appropriate provision of psychological resources in the workplace and the promotion of competence, efficiency and sustainability of organisations. Survey questionnaires were used to collect data. Inferential analysis from SPSS was carried out to understand the antecedents and consequences of organisation citizenship behaviour. An overall model of the study was also identified through AMOS using structural equation modeling. Findings from the selected South African public hospitals indicate that there is a significant positive relationship between psychological capital and psychological empowerment on the one hand and organisational citizenship behaviour on the other hand among nurses within the selected public hospitals. The results validate certain aspects of the Conservative frame work and the Job Demands Resources Model. The study recommends that hospital managers and supervisors should determine the social networks in their hospitals as a strategy to promote performance and organisational citizenship behaviour. Individual employees who are located at the fringes of the network must be recognised and empowered. This allows for the comparison evaluation of both individual and organisational characteristics on organisational citizenship behaviour and the promotion of slack resources which are important in maintaining a steady organisational performance which further widens organisational capacity.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Re-interpreting the history of 'the rural' visual in the Eastern Cape, 1948-1976
- Authors: Steele, Candice Alexandra
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Medical photography -- South Africa -- Exhibitions Photography in ethnology -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/11064 , vital:37027
- Description: The thesis engages with the photographic collection of Dr Pauline Ingle, an amateur photographer who lived and worked in the former Transkei as a medical doctor from 1948-1976. As a visual history project situated within critical visual studies, the thesis is concerned to attend to the disciplinary optics that have conditioned seeing and constituted genres; but also the ways in which these genres have constituted subjects and corralled them into positions commensurate with the spatialised demarcations of the rural and the urban, and the attendant associations of tradition and modernity. The thesis begins by exploring the biography of Pauline Ingle and tracks the movement of the photographs from a private collection into the public realm and its constitution as an archive. The thesis then moves into a discussion of the key determinants of the ethnographic genre and its entwinement with the discipline of anthropology, as a foundation against which to investigate the limits of reading her images within this genre and the disruptions that are discernible through an aesthetics of proximity and forms of image-making that do not control the visual field. Through a theorisation that proposes the image as an act, various readings are brought to bear on the images through the lens of the social and political. Mobilising the concepts of social acts and acts of citizenship, allows for a reading that breaks with the disciplinary conditioning that has fixed subject positions into ‘the native subject’ and the ‘liberal subject’ and calls into question the construction of the human. By proposing the subject as migrant, is to signal that the question of the human/subject is more complex and convoluted than previously thought.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Steele, Candice Alexandra
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Medical photography -- South Africa -- Exhibitions Photography in ethnology -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/11064 , vital:37027
- Description: The thesis engages with the photographic collection of Dr Pauline Ingle, an amateur photographer who lived and worked in the former Transkei as a medical doctor from 1948-1976. As a visual history project situated within critical visual studies, the thesis is concerned to attend to the disciplinary optics that have conditioned seeing and constituted genres; but also the ways in which these genres have constituted subjects and corralled them into positions commensurate with the spatialised demarcations of the rural and the urban, and the attendant associations of tradition and modernity. The thesis begins by exploring the biography of Pauline Ingle and tracks the movement of the photographs from a private collection into the public realm and its constitution as an archive. The thesis then moves into a discussion of the key determinants of the ethnographic genre and its entwinement with the discipline of anthropology, as a foundation against which to investigate the limits of reading her images within this genre and the disruptions that are discernible through an aesthetics of proximity and forms of image-making that do not control the visual field. Through a theorisation that proposes the image as an act, various readings are brought to bear on the images through the lens of the social and political. Mobilising the concepts of social acts and acts of citizenship, allows for a reading that breaks with the disciplinary conditioning that has fixed subject positions into ‘the native subject’ and the ‘liberal subject’ and calls into question the construction of the human. By proposing the subject as migrant, is to signal that the question of the human/subject is more complex and convoluted than previously thought.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Roads and their effects in fynbos of the south-eastern Cape: implications for conservation and management of road verge vegetation
- Authors: Grobler, Barend Adriaan
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Plant ecology -- South Africa , Ecology -- South Africa Ecology -- Research -- South Africa Conservation biology -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/30105 , vital:30825
- Description: Roads are some of the most conspicuous and pervasive conduits of human influence in modern landscapes. Over the past three decades, there has been a growing interest in the ecological effects of roads. These effects are numerous and generally deleterious, but much of our current knowledge on the matter stems from research conducted in North America, Britain, and Europe, where the focus has been on animal components of ecosystems. There is, however, a need for a plant dimension in road ecology, especially in those areas where plant biodiversity, and threats to this biodiversity, are concentrated. The research presented in this thesis aimed to further our understanding of road effects on the plant component of fynbos ecosystems in the megadiverse Cape Floristic Region (CFR). The exceptional plant diversity of the Cape and the presence of an extensive road network in the region present an ideal system for studying the interactions of roads and plants. Road verges have been emphasised as valuable habitats for plants. However, to assess the viability of road verges as habitats for fynbos plants, we first need to understand how these communities are influenced by the disturbances that exist in these environments. To this end, I investigated fynbos plant communities along roads and showed that road-mediated changes in the soil environment can bring about subtle changes in their composition while key components of the communities persist in road verges. Even though fynbos community patterns remain intact in road verges, the ecological processes that facilitate the persistence of plant species may be disrupted in these environments. As such, I studied the pollination of an ornithophilous plant in road verges and fynbos fragments of a highly transformed landscape. Here, landscape context was an important determining factor in the visitation rate of birds to plants in verges, with those occurring next to transformed land experiencing reduced visitation rates. Furthermore, I studied the pollination and fecundity of a highly threatened entomophilous plant and showed that, while there were no impacts on reproductive output of plants, road effects bolstered the reproductive growth of plants near the road. ii Finally, I implement the road-effect distances identified in the above studies to estimate the proportion of extant fynbos vegetation that may be impacted by roads. While the proportion of vegetation affected by roads is small, a substantial proportion is in close proximity to roads, potentially rendering large areas vulnerable to road-mediated human impacts. I further highlight the fact that several plant species of conservation concern in the Cape are affected by roads, and that many of these constitute a significant proportion of South Africa’s threatened flora. A case study from the N2 national road in the south-eastern Cape, where vegetation in road verges is in a better condition than that of adjacent, demonstrates the potential conservation value of road verges for fynbos vegetation in the region.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Grobler, Barend Adriaan
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Plant ecology -- South Africa , Ecology -- South Africa Ecology -- Research -- South Africa Conservation biology -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/30105 , vital:30825
- Description: Roads are some of the most conspicuous and pervasive conduits of human influence in modern landscapes. Over the past three decades, there has been a growing interest in the ecological effects of roads. These effects are numerous and generally deleterious, but much of our current knowledge on the matter stems from research conducted in North America, Britain, and Europe, where the focus has been on animal components of ecosystems. There is, however, a need for a plant dimension in road ecology, especially in those areas where plant biodiversity, and threats to this biodiversity, are concentrated. The research presented in this thesis aimed to further our understanding of road effects on the plant component of fynbos ecosystems in the megadiverse Cape Floristic Region (CFR). The exceptional plant diversity of the Cape and the presence of an extensive road network in the region present an ideal system for studying the interactions of roads and plants. Road verges have been emphasised as valuable habitats for plants. However, to assess the viability of road verges as habitats for fynbos plants, we first need to understand how these communities are influenced by the disturbances that exist in these environments. To this end, I investigated fynbos plant communities along roads and showed that road-mediated changes in the soil environment can bring about subtle changes in their composition while key components of the communities persist in road verges. Even though fynbos community patterns remain intact in road verges, the ecological processes that facilitate the persistence of plant species may be disrupted in these environments. As such, I studied the pollination of an ornithophilous plant in road verges and fynbos fragments of a highly transformed landscape. Here, landscape context was an important determining factor in the visitation rate of birds to plants in verges, with those occurring next to transformed land experiencing reduced visitation rates. Furthermore, I studied the pollination and fecundity of a highly threatened entomophilous plant and showed that, while there were no impacts on reproductive output of plants, road effects bolstered the reproductive growth of plants near the road. ii Finally, I implement the road-effect distances identified in the above studies to estimate the proportion of extant fynbos vegetation that may be impacted by roads. While the proportion of vegetation affected by roads is small, a substantial proportion is in close proximity to roads, potentially rendering large areas vulnerable to road-mediated human impacts. I further highlight the fact that several plant species of conservation concern in the Cape are affected by roads, and that many of these constitute a significant proportion of South Africa’s threatened flora. A case study from the N2 national road in the south-eastern Cape, where vegetation in road verges is in a better condition than that of adjacent, demonstrates the potential conservation value of road verges for fynbos vegetation in the region.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Rural-urban migration and its impact on rural development in Nigeria
- Authors: Abizu, Odion Stanley
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Rural development Rural-urban migration -- Nigeria Rural poor
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/13815 , vital:39714
- Description: This thesis focuses on the developmental impact of rural-urban migration in Nigeria. While, recognising the negative impact of rural-urban migration, the study argues that in order to benefit internal migrants as well as rural development, there must be a paradigm shift to focus on how the benefits of migration on development can be achieved. It is proposed that rural-urban migration occurs as a response to economic, education, health, social and environmental factors. The challenges confronting rural areas are urban bias development paradigm pursued by the successive governments resulting in rural underdevelopment that exacerbates the rural urban disparity. And the neglect of agriculture in rural areas resulting from the discovery of oil in Nigeria. The study revealed that flawed policies adopted by successive Nigerian governments led to joblessness, entrenched social inequality and opportunities. One of the outcomes of these short-sighted policies was rural underdevelopment, which accelerated rural-urban migration in Nigeria. However, the study also demonstrates that the income flows from the migrants to the various rural households has contributed to improvement in the living standard of the households. The fragmentary approaches to rural development that is currently the case in Nigeria would not generate the required level of development and growth needed in the rural communities to improve the living standard. Thus, there is need for a policy framework in Nigeria, which would encourage the private sector to play a vital role in contributing their part in the provision of infrastructural facilities in the rural communities. Although this thesis is a case study of the impact of rural-urban migration on rural development in Nigeria, it can serve to appreciate the role migration can play in promoting development both in rural and urban areas in Nigeria and other Saharan Africa countries.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Abizu, Odion Stanley
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Rural development Rural-urban migration -- Nigeria Rural poor
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/13815 , vital:39714
- Description: This thesis focuses on the developmental impact of rural-urban migration in Nigeria. While, recognising the negative impact of rural-urban migration, the study argues that in order to benefit internal migrants as well as rural development, there must be a paradigm shift to focus on how the benefits of migration on development can be achieved. It is proposed that rural-urban migration occurs as a response to economic, education, health, social and environmental factors. The challenges confronting rural areas are urban bias development paradigm pursued by the successive governments resulting in rural underdevelopment that exacerbates the rural urban disparity. And the neglect of agriculture in rural areas resulting from the discovery of oil in Nigeria. The study revealed that flawed policies adopted by successive Nigerian governments led to joblessness, entrenched social inequality and opportunities. One of the outcomes of these short-sighted policies was rural underdevelopment, which accelerated rural-urban migration in Nigeria. However, the study also demonstrates that the income flows from the migrants to the various rural households has contributed to improvement in the living standard of the households. The fragmentary approaches to rural development that is currently the case in Nigeria would not generate the required level of development and growth needed in the rural communities to improve the living standard. Thus, there is need for a policy framework in Nigeria, which would encourage the private sector to play a vital role in contributing their part in the provision of infrastructural facilities in the rural communities. Although this thesis is a case study of the impact of rural-urban migration on rural development in Nigeria, it can serve to appreciate the role migration can play in promoting development both in rural and urban areas in Nigeria and other Saharan Africa countries.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Scale-specific processes underlying the genetic population structure of seabirds in the tropical western Indian Ocean
- Authors: Danckwerts, Daniel Keith
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Sea birds -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Behavior -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Mortality -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Mortality -- Prevention , Sea birds -- Reproduction , Bird declines -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Indian Ocean -- Effect of human beings on , Sooty tern , Red-footed booby , Pterodroma
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/63944 , vital:28513
- Description: Global seabird populations have declined by 70%, since 1950, largely in response to human mediated threats. Identifying the pressures that the remaining populations face has therefore become a top priority. Many breeding colonies are now monitored annually, though others have been almost completely neglected. Considerable bias also exists towards higher latitude species, while fewer studies have been conducted on tropical groups. Beyond tracking population sizes, numerous knowledge gaps also exist that severely restrict conservation efforts. This includes the understanding of seabird meta-population structure and the processes underlying population divergence. The importance of these studies lies in the fact that the preservation of biodiversity requires the conservation of diversification processes. Generating this knowledge is therefore an important first step towards recognising responses to episodic disturbance and long-term environmental change, as well as recovery potential. In this context, the present study employed microsatellite analysis and ringing information to investigate the processes underlying the metapopulation structure of seabirds in the tropical western Indian Ocean. Three species were selected as proxies to cover a range of population sizes, distributional ranges, and intrinsic behavioural (e.g. migratory behaviour) and morphological (e.g. polymorphism) characteristics. These were the Sooty Tern (Onychoprion fuscatus), Red-footed Booby (Sula sula), and Barau’s Petrel (Pterodorma baraui). The overall objective was to provide insight into the mechanisms underlying divergence across a range of scales. Microsatellite information highlighted that genetic populations of the Red-footed Booby and Barau’s Petrel were weakly, though significantly, structured. For the Barau’s Petrel, this was supported by ringing information that indicated extreme colony fidelity. Some gene flow appears to occur among the breeding colonies of the Red-footed Booby, though the scale and frequency of this remains uncertain as banding information is insufficient at this stage. Nevertheless, though populations of both species were genetically structured, the processes underlying divergence were different. Extreme natal philopatry appears to have driven divergence between the two colonies of the Barau’s Petrel, while local selective forces (e.g. kleptoparasitism risk and/or selection against immigrants) appear to have isolated the three studied breeding colonies of the Red-footed Booby. Conversely, microsatellite information identified a total lack of genetic structure among breeding colonies of the Sooty Tern in the western Indian Ocean, and between colonies in the western Indian and Eastern Pacific Oceans. This accords with banding recoveries, which illustrate considerable inter-colony exchange of individuals among most islands of the Seychelles and between breeding colonies in the western Indian and West Pacific Oceans. The processes underlying the genetic population structure (or, in this case, lack thereof) in the Sooty Tern therefore appear to operate at extremely large scales. The species’ low natal philopatry and high dispersal capabilities, combined with an importance of social stimulation and a reliance on seasonally favourable marine conditions, appears to influence the decisions of where and when individual Sooty Terns choose to breed. Anthropogenic disturbance at breeding sites, particularly that related to egg harvesting activities, also appears to drive dispersal in the Sooty Tern. These results improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the genetic population structure in seabirds at low latitudes. However, numerous questions remain unanswered and warrant further study. Clear conservation implications were also identified for the three studied species. Nevertheless, caution should still be applied when extrapolating this information across other species.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Danckwerts, Daniel Keith
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Sea birds -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Behavior -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Mortality -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Mortality -- Prevention , Sea birds -- Reproduction , Bird declines -- Indian Ocean , Sea birds -- Indian Ocean -- Effect of human beings on , Sooty tern , Red-footed booby , Pterodroma
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/63944 , vital:28513
- Description: Global seabird populations have declined by 70%, since 1950, largely in response to human mediated threats. Identifying the pressures that the remaining populations face has therefore become a top priority. Many breeding colonies are now monitored annually, though others have been almost completely neglected. Considerable bias also exists towards higher latitude species, while fewer studies have been conducted on tropical groups. Beyond tracking population sizes, numerous knowledge gaps also exist that severely restrict conservation efforts. This includes the understanding of seabird meta-population structure and the processes underlying population divergence. The importance of these studies lies in the fact that the preservation of biodiversity requires the conservation of diversification processes. Generating this knowledge is therefore an important first step towards recognising responses to episodic disturbance and long-term environmental change, as well as recovery potential. In this context, the present study employed microsatellite analysis and ringing information to investigate the processes underlying the metapopulation structure of seabirds in the tropical western Indian Ocean. Three species were selected as proxies to cover a range of population sizes, distributional ranges, and intrinsic behavioural (e.g. migratory behaviour) and morphological (e.g. polymorphism) characteristics. These were the Sooty Tern (Onychoprion fuscatus), Red-footed Booby (Sula sula), and Barau’s Petrel (Pterodorma baraui). The overall objective was to provide insight into the mechanisms underlying divergence across a range of scales. Microsatellite information highlighted that genetic populations of the Red-footed Booby and Barau’s Petrel were weakly, though significantly, structured. For the Barau’s Petrel, this was supported by ringing information that indicated extreme colony fidelity. Some gene flow appears to occur among the breeding colonies of the Red-footed Booby, though the scale and frequency of this remains uncertain as banding information is insufficient at this stage. Nevertheless, though populations of both species were genetically structured, the processes underlying divergence were different. Extreme natal philopatry appears to have driven divergence between the two colonies of the Barau’s Petrel, while local selective forces (e.g. kleptoparasitism risk and/or selection against immigrants) appear to have isolated the three studied breeding colonies of the Red-footed Booby. Conversely, microsatellite information identified a total lack of genetic structure among breeding colonies of the Sooty Tern in the western Indian Ocean, and between colonies in the western Indian and Eastern Pacific Oceans. This accords with banding recoveries, which illustrate considerable inter-colony exchange of individuals among most islands of the Seychelles and between breeding colonies in the western Indian and West Pacific Oceans. The processes underlying the genetic population structure (or, in this case, lack thereof) in the Sooty Tern therefore appear to operate at extremely large scales. The species’ low natal philopatry and high dispersal capabilities, combined with an importance of social stimulation and a reliance on seasonally favourable marine conditions, appears to influence the decisions of where and when individual Sooty Terns choose to breed. Anthropogenic disturbance at breeding sites, particularly that related to egg harvesting activities, also appears to drive dispersal in the Sooty Tern. These results improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the genetic population structure in seabirds at low latitudes. However, numerous questions remain unanswered and warrant further study. Clear conservation implications were also identified for the three studied species. Nevertheless, caution should still be applied when extrapolating this information across other species.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018