July 8 2010.- Pretoria: Buyelwa Sonjica, Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs and nine MECs responsible for the environment portfolio from Gauteng, North West, Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, Northern Cape, Free State, Kwazulu-Natal and the Western Cape today signed the Grasslands Declaration committing Government to the conservation of grasslands biodiversity.
This is an inclusive programme that also involves the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries as these industries are also dependent on the functioning of the grassland ecosystems.
The Grasslands Declaration commits Government to the conservation of grasslands’ biodiversity. It is an effort to collaborate in good faith to pursue biodiversity targets and objectives in securing and sustaining the ecosystem services of the grasslands biome.
The South African grasslands biome is the second largest biome in South Africa, covering an area of 339 237 km² and it occurs in eight of South Africa’s nine provinces. The grasslands biome is one of the most threatened biomes in South Africa, with 30% irreversibly transformed and only 1.9% of the biodiversity target for the biome formally conserved.
Sonjica said, “Several of South Africa’s priority river catchments occur in the grasslands biome, including the Thukela River catchment. Good management of South Africa’s mountain grasslands will result in more water released back into the river catchment system in the form of 12, 8 cubic meters of water in winter river flows. In rand value, this equates to between R18 million and R88, 7 million per annum.”
Government established the Grasslands Programme to protect and conserve grasslands. The Programme’s unique conservation approach includes working with various production sectors to reach conservation targets. The Grasslands Programme is managed through the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) in collaboration with the Department of Environmental Affairs.
The ecosystem services and biodiversity of the grasslands are found across the biome and cannot be secured only through formal conservation areas. The Grasslands Programme seeks to implement an alternative approach of mainstreaming by working in partnership with the agriculture, forestry, urban development and coal mining sectors to secure and sustain grasslands.
In Wakkerstroom, commercial and communal farmers are committing to manage their land in a way that protects biodiversity through stewardship. The Programme is also working with land reform beneficiaries whose land contains important biodiversity.
The Grasslands Programme and Forestry South Africa (FSA) are working with forestry companies to have set aside 37 sites comprising approximately 42 000 hectares for conservation. This is an important step the commercial forestry sector is taking to conserve biodiversity rich land and protect the water production value of the grasslands. The significance of this action is that collectively these sites will extend the area of the grasslands biome under formal conservation by almost 5%.
To conserve significant sites for biodiversity in urban areas, the Programme is working in partnership with Gauteng’s municipalities, including Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality. The signing of the Grasslands Declaration will strengthen cooperative governance and fast track initiatives underway to protect grasslands in Ekurhuleni. Ekurhuleni still has relatively high ecosystem services value linked to the wetlands in the area. Ekurhuleni is located on the continental divide and is therefore in the upper part of at least 3 water catchment areas.
One of the initiatives that have come off the ground in Ekurhuleni is the Leeupan Regional Park Project in Boksburg just north of the N17. The project is aimed at rehabilitating an existing wetland to a functioning ecosystem. In addition, an environmental education precinct center will be established to create meeting space for surrounding communities and allow them to engage in environmental and recreational activities.
More information: Grassland



