Abstract
The long-term conservation of viable ecosystems requires a broader understanding of the ecological processes involved. Because ecosystems react differently to different management practices, it is important to have a description and classification of the vegetation of an area available. As part of a vegetation survey programme for the newly acquired farms to be incorporated into the Mountain Zebra National Park, the vegetation of the Ebenhaezer section was investigated. A hierarchical classification, vegetation map, description and ecological interpretation of the plant communities of the study area are presented. A TWINSPAN classification, refined by Braun-Blanquet procedures revealed eight distinct plant communities. Habitat factors associated with differences in vegetation include topography, soil form and grazing. Descriptions of the plant communities include diagnostic species as well as prominent and less conspicuous species of the tree, shrub and herbaceous layers.
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de Klerk, J., Brown, L. R., & Bezuidenhout, H. (2003). Plant communities of the Ebenhaezer section of the Mountain Zebra National Park. Koedoe, 46(2), 9–20. https://doi.org/10.4102/koedoe.v46i2.47
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