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Popa Falls in Caprivi, Namibia
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Despite being the driest country in southern Africa, Namibia’s biodiversity is
very interesting. The dry environment means that many species are adapted to dry
conditions which creates interesting species and sub-species, according to
Phoebe Barnard, National Co-ordinator of the Namibian National Biodiversity
Programme.
Namibia is also special because of the many different habitats in the country.
It ranges from the tropical swamps of the Caprivi region in the north-east, to
the thorn savannahs and rocky hills of the interior, to the dramatic Namib
desert along the west coast. These varied and scenic natural environments are an
important national asset as they not only support and ensure the existence of
the people and wildlife, but they act as draw cards to tourists who visit
Namibia, contributing money to communities and the country in general.
Since the establishment of the first game reserves in Namibia in 1907 and the
systematic collection of museum species in the mid-1800s, Namibia has been
following progressive programmes in biodiversity, according to Mike Griffin of
the Ministry of Environment and Tourism and Phoebe Barnard, who co-authored an
article entitled: What is This Thing Called Biodiversity?
Namibia’s Programme
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Namib Desert
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In 1992, Namibia’s President Sam Nujoma along with 160 other heads of state
attended the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and signed the Convention on
Biological Diversity. The convention, also known as the Biodiversity Treaty, is
comprised of 41 articles. The guiding principles of these articles is that each
country has the right to exploit its own resources, and that activities within
one country should not damage the environment of another. The treaty places
strong emphasis on promoting the sustainable use of biodiversity and assuring
the equitable distribution of benefits.
Namibia's National Biodiversity Programme was set up in September 1994 to
coordinate, support, guide and stimulate national activities relating to
biodiversity conservation and the sustainable use of biological resources. It is
coordinated from within the Directorate of Environmental Affairs (DEA) of the
Ministry of Environment and Tourism, but works closely with a number of
institutional and individual partners. Its coordination office is comparable to
the National Biodiversity Unit (NBU) of other countries.
Because of its solid traditions and history of scientific enquiry, Namibia is in
a relatively strong position in terms of biodiversity information management.
However, much of that information was poorly accessible: little was
computerized, and even less analyzed for policy-makers. It has thus been a
priority of the National Biodiversity Programme to strengthen, computerize and
make the country's data available for environmental planning and management
purposes.
Biodiversity may be a new term but it is an old concept. We depend on it for
virtually everything we do. People living in rural areas depend directly on
biodiversity for their survival through farming, fishing, forestry,
manufacturing, tourism, water supply, trade and education. Rural people need
diverse ecosystems to exist and farm in a sustainable manner.
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The Brandberg Massif
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Genetic variety is also crucial to food security in Namibia. Some plants have
evolved with genes that are resistant to drought, frost, salinity or disease,
thus ensuring their long-term survival in an arid country.
Scientists have come to realize that the more genetic variation at a species’
disposal, the more evolutionary options it has and the more likely its chances
of surviving major events.
National Museum of Namibia
One of the partners in the National Biodiversity Programme is the National
Museum of Namibia that runs the National Biodiversity Inventory Programme.
The National Museum of Namibia is the custodian of natural history collections
consisting of some 1 - 1.5 million specimens, most of which are insects. The
National Biodiversity Inventory Programme, a Millennium Project of the National
Museum of Namibia, is intended to set an unprecedented and innovative example of
how essential biodiversity information associated with these huge collections
can be rapidly computerized through community-based education initiatives.
The National Museum of Namibia was one of the first African museums to develop a
web site,
http://www.natmus.cul.na, making its cultural and educational resources
available on the World Wide Web in 1997. It is currently the only African museum
with searchable online collection databases.
The National Museum's Biodiversity Inventory Programme is intended as a unique
community self-help exercise by creating opportunities for Namibian schools to
gain computer equipment, skills and Internet access in exchange for community
services at the National Museum of Namibia.
‘Burning Mountain’
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Dâures is named for the fiery orange appearance of its bare granite
slopes
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The Brandberg is a biodiversity site with an extensive database on the Museum’s
webpage.
The dominant topographic feature of the Central Namib landscape between
Walvisbay and the Skeleton Coast Park is the dome-shaped Brandberg Massif. This
granite pluton rises 1900 m above the surrounding desert plains and covers an
area of 650 square kilometers. It can be seen from distances up to 100 km away,
and has the highest peaks in Namibia.
Brandberg is also known by its Damara name Dâures, which literally means
"burning mountain" for the fiery orange appearance of its bare granite slopes.
The Brandberg is best known for its rock art. The rich diversity and quality of
the rock art, combined with the high number of sites (62 sites in the Hungarob
ravine alone), has resulted in continued archaeological research interest. Most
of the paintings are situated in the higher parts of the catchment, where they
are concentrated near waterholes and seepages. The Brandberg is being promoted
as a possible World Heritage Site for its rich cultural heritage, though its
unique environment, and the possible scientific importance of its plant and
animal life, has not received much attention.
The Brandberg massif is a relatively young feature of post-Karoo age, and
consists of a single intrusive granite mass surrounded by older country rock of
the Damara Orogen. By virtue of its size, the mountain seems to create a local
low pressure cell that draws moisture-laden air into the desert. As a result,
the higher parts of the mountain receive more rain than the surrounding desert;
and a clear altitudinal variation in plant cover is apparent.
Rainfall is usually trapped in surface pools, or penetrates the sheet joints of
the granite to seep into tiny fissures hidden among the rocks. Such springs,
often no larger than a hand basin, may last several years without replenishment
by rain. Where dykes interrupt the course of tributary streams larger quantities
of water accumulate, safe from evaporation just beneath the sand. These
localities often support dense vegetation cover attracting birds or other
animals to live in their vicinity.
The top of the mountain is often covered in cloud in summer, and when it rains
the northern and eastern slopes of the summit seem to benefit most. The extreme
dryness of the area immediately below the western slopes, indicated by the
almost complete absence of vegetation when compared to the thorn scrub savannah
to the east of the mountain, suggests that it lies within a rain shadow. That
suggests that moist air is drawn from the east. Summer temperatures of around
40°C are usual on the plains, but it is normally quite cool near the summit and
strong winds may blow for several days at a time.
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Klipspringer antelope
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The plains of the Central Namib, which surrounds the Brandberg massif, receive
an average rainfall of only 100 mm per annum in small localised showers. The
vegetation around the mountain closely reflects these conditions, and because
several successive years may pass before rain falls in the same area, the
grasses are mainly annuals and ephemeral perennials with a patchy, shifting
distribution. This is, however, in marked contrast to the mountain's vegetation.
The upper Brandberg is unique in southern Africa in being a high altitude
Savannah outlier, with many perennial grasses, as well as a rich diversity of
tree and shrub species that do not occur on the surrounding gravel plains.
However, due to the inaccessibility and sheer size of the Brandberg, a detailed
floral survey is not yet available.
The mountain oases are effectively out of reach to the antelope and larger
mammals of the plains, mainly because of the steep gradient of the entire
perimeter. The main larger mammals of the upper Brandberg comprise of
klipspringer antelope, rock hyrax, rock hares, dassie-rats, and their main
predator, leopards. No definite information is available on the birds of the
upper Brandberg. The present knowledge of the avifauna is restricted to records
from the lower slopes and surrounding gravel plains and, as could be expected,
comprises of a mixture of desert and escarpment species. The rest of the fauna
is almost completely unknown, apart from isolated records as a result of
incidental collecting, e.g. the endemic Brandberg gecko, Pachydactylus
gaiasensis.
Namibian biologists have systematically inventorized the country's biological
diversity over the past couple of decades. Due to the size of the territory
(823,144 km2), a limited number of trained people, and a poorly
studied environment at the beginning of the programme, inventorization is far
from complete. Inventorization requires repeat visits and extensive deployment
of traps in a study area to establish a comprehensive information base. The
inaccessibility of the upper Brandberg, and thus the cost and complexity of
logistical support, has delayed a detailed investigation of the mountain, even
though the Brandberg is expected to be a center for endemism in western Namibia.
Source :
http://www.islamonline.net/English/Science/2003/05/article09.shtml
Maggi Barnard
was born and bred in Windhoek, Namibia and studied journalism in South Africa.
After working two years for a daily newspaper in Windhoek, she switched to
corporate journalism for seven years. She later returned to newspaper journalism
in 2000 as The Namibian’s representative at the coast. You can reach her at:
maggi672002@yahoo.co.uk.
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