State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals

The Western Cape Province (W.C.P.) of South Africa, one of nine provinces forming the country, is generally regarded in South African terms as being “poor” with respect to the number of its mammals when compared to the other eight provinces. This misconception has its origin in the fact that the Western Cape, essentially a winter rainfall region, lies adjacent to one of the richest spots in the world in terms of mammalian diversity, namely the summer rainfall region of the rest of South Africa. In fact only when compared with the rest of our own country can the Western Cape be regarded as having a “poor” mammofauna in terms of biodiversity. However, some of the other Western Cape vertebrate and many of the invertebrate groups do reflect higher levels of biodiversity, as do the plants; and almost all groups show higher levels of endemism. The misconception regarding mammalian diversity in the Western Cape is partially exacerbated by the relatively low biomass mainly due to the low nutrient status which is fairly characteristic of the fynbos biome. The historic distribution of the larger mammals within the W.C.P. is probably better documented than that of any other faunal group in South Africa (see Skead, 1980; Skead, 1987; and Rookmaker, 1989) and the role that mammals played in the development of nature conservation in the W.C.P. is well summarized by Hey (1977).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lloyd, P.H.
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:Mammals, Biodiversity,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/736
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-7362021-05-19T06:22:05Z State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals Lloyd, P.H. Mammals Biodiversity The Western Cape Province (W.C.P.) of South Africa, one of nine provinces forming the country, is generally regarded in South African terms as being “poor” with respect to the number of its mammals when compared to the other eight provinces. This misconception has its origin in the fact that the Western Cape, essentially a winter rainfall region, lies adjacent to one of the richest spots in the world in terms of mammalian diversity, namely the summer rainfall region of the rest of South Africa. In fact only when compared with the rest of our own country can the Western Cape be regarded as having a “poor” mammofauna in terms of biodiversity. However, some of the other Western Cape vertebrate and many of the invertebrate groups do reflect higher levels of biodiversity, as do the plants; and almost all groups show higher levels of endemism. The misconception regarding mammalian diversity in the Western Cape is partially exacerbated by the relatively low biomass mainly due to the low nutrient status which is fairly characteristic of the fynbos biome. The historic distribution of the larger mammals within the W.C.P. is probably better documented than that of any other faunal group in South Africa (see Skead, 1980; Skead, 1987; and Rookmaker, 1989) and the role that mammals played in the development of nature conservation in the W.C.P. is well summarized by Hey (1977). Published 2005-09-14T08:02:50Z 2005-09-14T08:02:50Z 2000 Report Non-Refereed Western Cape State of Biodiversity 2000 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/736 en 172473 bytes application/pdf Western Cape Province, South Africa
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Mammals
Biodiversity
Mammals
Biodiversity
spellingShingle Mammals
Biodiversity
Mammals
Biodiversity
Lloyd, P.H.
State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
description The Western Cape Province (W.C.P.) of South Africa, one of nine provinces forming the country, is generally regarded in South African terms as being “poor” with respect to the number of its mammals when compared to the other eight provinces. This misconception has its origin in the fact that the Western Cape, essentially a winter rainfall region, lies adjacent to one of the richest spots in the world in terms of mammalian diversity, namely the summer rainfall region of the rest of South Africa. In fact only when compared with the rest of our own country can the Western Cape be regarded as having a “poor” mammofauna in terms of biodiversity. However, some of the other Western Cape vertebrate and many of the invertebrate groups do reflect higher levels of biodiversity, as do the plants; and almost all groups show higher levels of endemism. The misconception regarding mammalian diversity in the Western Cape is partially exacerbated by the relatively low biomass mainly due to the low nutrient status which is fairly characteristic of the fynbos biome. The historic distribution of the larger mammals within the W.C.P. is probably better documented than that of any other faunal group in South Africa (see Skead, 1980; Skead, 1987; and Rookmaker, 1989) and the role that mammals played in the development of nature conservation in the W.C.P. is well summarized by Hey (1977).
format Report
topic_facet Mammals
Biodiversity
author Lloyd, P.H.
author_facet Lloyd, P.H.
author_sort Lloyd, P.H.
title State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
title_short State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
title_full State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
title_fullStr State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
title_full_unstemmed State of Biodiversity: Western Cape Province, South Africa Mammals
title_sort state of biodiversity: western cape province, south africa mammals
publishDate 2000
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/736
work_keys_str_mv AT lloydph stateofbiodiversitywesterncapeprovincesouthafricamammals
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