Dc. Le Maitre et al., The impact of invading alien plants on surface water resources in South Africa: A preliminary assessment, WATER SA, 26(3), 2000, pp. 397-408
The impacts of the widespread invasions by alien plants in South Africa are
increasingly recognised. Most of the past concern has been about the impac
ts on conservation areas. other areas of natural vegetation. and on agricul
tural productivity. The potential impact of invading alien woody plants on
water resources was known to be serious but there has been no information a
vailable to evaluate the significance of these water losses across the whol
e country. This paper reports on the results of a preliminary survey aimed
at obtaining an overview of the extent. impacts and implications of alien p
lant invasions at a national and regional level for South Africa and Lesoth
o. Data on the extent and location of the invaded areas were obtained from
a variety of sources including detailed field mapping, mainly at a 1:250 00
0 scale with some at 1:50 000 and 1:10 000, and generalised information on
species and densities. The density class of each species in each polygon wa
s mapped and used to derive the condensed areas (the equivalent area with a
canopy cover of 100%). Each of the invading species was classified as a ta
ll shrub, medium tree or tall tree - based on growth form and likely water
use - and its biomass was estimated from a function based on vegetation age
. The incremental water use (i.e. the additional water use compared with th
e natural vegetation) was calculated using the following equation: Water us
e (mm) = 0.0238 x biomass (g/m(2)) which was derived from catchment studies
.
Alien plants, mainly trees and woody shrubs, have invaded an estimated 10.1
million ha of South Africa and Lesotho, an area larger than the province o
f KwaZulu-Natal. The equivalent condensed area is 1.7 million ha which is g
reater than the area of Gauteng Province. The Western Cape is the most heav
ily invaded at about a third of the total area, followed by Mpumalanga, Kwa
Zulu-Natal and Northern Province. The catchments of the Berg and Breede Riv
ers are the most heavily invaded followed by the George-Tsitsikamma region,
Port Elizabeth coastal region and the Drakensberg escarpment in Mpumalanga
. The total incremental water use of invading alien plants is estimated at
3 300 million m(3); of water per year, equivalent to about 75% of the virgi
n MAR of the Vaal River system. About a third of the estimated total water
use, by volume, is accounted for by alien invaders in the Western Cape, fol
lowed by KwaZulu-Natal (17%), the Eastern Cape (17%) and Mpumalanga(14%). T
he greatest reduction, as a percentage of MAR, was found in the arid Northe
rn Cape (17%), followed by the Western Cape (15%) and Gauteng (10%). For pr
imary catchments, the greatest percentage reductions were in the Namaqualan
d coast (catchment F, 91%) followed by the Eastern Cape Coast (P, 42%) and
the south-western Cape (G, 31%). The extent and density of the invasions an
d thus the impact on water resources could increase significantly in the ne
xt 5 to 10 years, resulting in the loss of much, or possibly even all, of t
he available water in certain catchment areas.
Alien plant control is expensive but it has been shown that control program
mes are cost-effective compared with alternative water supply schemes. This
preliminary assessment needs to be interpreted with caution because the re
sults are based on a data set that contains some important uncertainties. T
he water-use estimates also involve some critical assumptions. Nevertheless
, the scale of the invasions, the magnitudes of the impacts, and the rapid
expansion we are observing are such that a national control programme is es
sential if the country's water resources are to be protected.