Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Side 63

Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Side 63
RALA Reportno. 200 Desertification in Botswana Mitchael B.K. Darkoh Department of Environmental Science, University of Botswana, Private Bag 0022, Gaborone. Botswana Tel: (267) 3552522: Fax: (267) 356591: E-mail: dark.ohmb@noka.ub.bw ABSTRACT In terms of desertification, Botswana is one of the most seriously affected countries in the Kalahari Region of Southem Affica. Problems include overstocking, large-scale vegetation depletion and changes, especially around water points, and accelerated soil erosion by wind, sheetwash and gully- ing. Part of the desertification problem is natural in such a semi-arid and drought-prone environment. But the greater part is due to pressure of commercial exploitation of a fragile ecosystem. Owing to the increasing pressure of the already crowded communal grazing areas of the east, owners of large herds have, in the iast three decades, been moving westwards, establishing permanent cattle posts in the Kalahari sandveld and spreading conditions of overstocking and degradation of vegetation on a large scale. The move into the Kalahari sandveld has been facilitated by the Tribal Grazing Lands Policy (TGLP), introduced in 1975, which encouraged owners of large herds to move them out of the crowded settlement areas, to the sandveld where they would be' given exclusive rights to land to es- tablish fenced commercial ranches. Impetus was also provided by the impact of modem science and technology that provided veterinary care and new sources of water by means of deep drilling bore- holes. Recent satellite imagery reveals that there has been considerable uncontrolled development of cattle posts in areas set aside for wildlife management, resulting in the emergence of land use conflicts and extensive degradation of the tree savannas. Key words: Botswana, desertifícation, Kalahari ecosystem, rangeland degradation. General features Botswana straddles the Tropic of Cap- ricom (Figure 1). It is a land-locked country with an area of 582,000 km“, 80% of which is covered by the Kala- hari Desert. The dominance of the latter gives a misleading impression of Bot- swana as a country covered by an un- productive and expansive desert. The Kalahari, however, is not a true desert. It is in fact covered by a vegetation mantle that ranges from woodland and close-tree savannah in the north, to low tree and shrub savannah in the south and west. Four main ecological regions are recognized in the country: the hard- veld occupying most of the eastem part of the country, the sandveld covering most of the Kalahari desert, the alluvial plains of the Okavango-Chobe system; and the lacustrine plains of the Makga- dikgadi Pans (Figure 2 and Table 1). There is no tme desert in Botswana, but areas covered with sand dunes do oc- cur, especially in the west and south-
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