Work With Us
Find out how to get involved and make a difference.
LIMCOM's current ongoing interventions being undertaken include:
The impacts of human activities on biodiversity can be broadly characterised as:
The main human activities driving these impacts are:
These two aspects of human influence are discussed below, along with the preliminary assessment of ecological status of the Limpopo River basin.
DESPITE EFFORTS TO CONSERVE BIODIVERSITY, THE DRIVE FOR SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONTINUES TO THREATEN THESE CRITICAL NATURAL RESOURCES.
SOURCE: ©ISTOCKPHOTO/GENIS 2009
Water quality is known to play a prominent role in determining the distribution of aquatic organisms. According to UNDP-GEF 2008, changes in Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) can affect aquatic organisms at three levels:
Aquatic biota is also affected by the presence of heavy metals, Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) and other chemical pollutants. They may reduce biodiversity (species richness) and change species composition – even selectively eliminating less tolerant species.
Agricultural effluents and return-flows can be unnaturally high in nutrients, causing eutrophication. This is manifest through an accelerated and unbalanced growth of aquatic plants, reducing the availability of oxygen in the water and destroying the natural balance between plant and aquatic animal life in the water body.
Reduction in streamflow for irrigation and water supply results in an overall reduction in the availability of water in the downstream ecosystems. As water is a fundamental building block of aquatic life, reduction in streamflow has a direct impact on the biodiversity resources, limiting growth in all organisms.
Furthermore, attention of season flows caused by flow regulation of storage dams can have a negative effect on aquatic and riparian ecosystems. Seasonal fluctuations in water availability are often a fundamental part of the growth cycle of plants, particularly those adapted to living in the riparian zone and on the floodplains of a river the size of the Limpopo.
Alien invasive species often do not have natural enemies in the invaded region. They can however compete with indigenous species for space, nutrients and sunlight. Dense invasions of aquatic plants can alter the flow of rivers and streams, disrupting the aquatic ecosystem. Reduction of light penetration reaching the deep portions of the water systems, and changes in bank vegetation resulting in erosion, alter and affect the aquatic environment.
Invasion by alien species has important socio-economic consequences (UNDP-GEF 2008).
Socio-economic Consequences of Increased Invasion of Alien Species.
Source: UNDP-GEF 2008
One measure of the impact of human activities on the landscape is reflected in the Human Footprint Index, undertaken by SEDAC at Columbia University in the United States (Last of the Wild Data Version 2, 2005b), shown in the map below. This analysis shows the direct impact of human activities on the WWF biomes, clearly illustrating the wide scale transformation of the western Limpopo River basin through urbanisation and agriculture.
HUMAN FOOTPRINT INDEX FOR THE LIMPOPO RIVER BASIN.
SOURCE: LAST OF THE WILD DATA VERSION 2, 2005B
Agriculture has a series of known impacts on biodiversity:
Mining has a series of known impacts on biodiversity:
Industry has a series of known impacts on biodiversity:
Infrastructure developments have a series of known impacts on biodiversity:
Urbanisation has a series of known impacts on biodiversity:
A preliminary assessment of the ecological status of the sub-basins of the Limpopo River basin is shown in the map below. This subject is discussed in more depth in the Environmental Flows section of this chapter.
ECOLOGICAL STATUS OF THE SUB-BASINS OF THE LIMPOPO RIVER BASIN.
SOURCE: LBPTC 2010
LIMCOM's current ongoing interventions being undertaken