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Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations

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dc.contributor.author Van Wilgen, BW
dc.contributor.author Nel, JL
dc.contributor.author Rouget, M
dc.date.accessioned 2008-01-07T07:27:26Z
dc.date.available 2008-01-07T07:27:26Z
dc.date.issued 2007
dc.identifier.citation Van Wilgen, BW, Nel, JL and Rouget, M. 2007. Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations. Freshwater Biology, Vol. 52, pp 711-723 en
dc.identifier.issn 0046-5070
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1824
dc.description Copyright: 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd en
dc.description.abstract Parallel initiatives in South Africa have been addressing the prioritisation and management of invasive alien plant species, the prioritisation of rivers for the conservation of biodiversity, and broad-scale planning for water resource management. This paper has combined aspects of these approaches to develop a composite index of prioritisation of quaternary catchments for alien plant control purposes. A simple composite index that combined estimates of; the number of invasive alien plant species present; the potential number of invasive alien plant species that would be present if they occupied the full range as determined by climatic envelope models; the degree of habitat loss in rivers; and the degree of water stress was calculated. Each of the four components contributed between one and four to the combined index, which had a range of values between four and 16. The authors used a geographic information system to map the distribution of priority catchments for invasive alien plant control. Of the 1911 quaternary catchments in South Africa and Lesotho, just over one-third (650) were in the highest priority category with an index of 13 or more. A relatively small proportion (273, or 14%) of the catchments had the maximum scores of 15 or 16. The approach identified priority areas that have not currently been identified as such, and should provide decision makers with an objective and transparent method with which to prioritise areas for the control of invasive alien plants. Authors anticipate a debate about the way in which components of the index are calculated, and the weight given to the different components, and that this will lead to the transparent evolution of the index. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd en
dc.subject Invasive alien plants en
dc.subject Water resource management en
dc.subject Composite index en
dc.subject Catchment management en
dc.subject Conservation planning en
dc.title Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations en
dc.type Article en
dc.identifier.apacitation Van Wilgen, B., Nel, J., & Rouget, M. (2007). Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1824 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Van Wilgen, BW, JL Nel, and M Rouget "Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations." (2007) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1824 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Van Wilgen B, Nel J, Rouget M. Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations. 2007; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1824. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Van Wilgen, BW AU - Nel, JL AU - Rouget, M AB - Parallel initiatives in South Africa have been addressing the prioritisation and management of invasive alien plant species, the prioritisation of rivers for the conservation of biodiversity, and broad-scale planning for water resource management. This paper has combined aspects of these approaches to develop a composite index of prioritisation of quaternary catchments for alien plant control purposes. A simple composite index that combined estimates of; the number of invasive alien plant species present; the potential number of invasive alien plant species that would be present if they occupied the full range as determined by climatic envelope models; the degree of habitat loss in rivers; and the degree of water stress was calculated. Each of the four components contributed between one and four to the combined index, which had a range of values between four and 16. The authors used a geographic information system to map the distribution of priority catchments for invasive alien plant control. Of the 1911 quaternary catchments in South Africa and Lesotho, just over one-third (650) were in the highest priority category with an index of 13 or more. A relatively small proportion (273, or 14%) of the catchments had the maximum scores of 15 or 16. The approach identified priority areas that have not currently been identified as such, and should provide decision makers with an objective and transparent method with which to prioritise areas for the control of invasive alien plants. Authors anticipate a debate about the way in which components of the index are calculated, and the weight given to the different components, and that this will lead to the transparent evolution of the index. DA - 2007 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Invasive alien plants KW - Water resource management KW - Composite index KW - Catchment management KW - Conservation planning LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2007 SM - 0046-5070 T1 - Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations TI - Invasive alien plants and South African rivers: a proposed approach to the prioritisation of control operations UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1824 ER - en_ZA


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