This strategy includes a national public participation process that will involve landowners, private collectors and communities to conserve critically endangered species.
South Africa is home to 38 cycad species, of which 29 are endemic to the country. This makes South Africa one of the global hot spots for threatened cycads. Cycads are the oldest living seed plants in the world and survived three mass extinction events in earth’s history. There are 308 cycad species on the planet. Three species that are unique to South Africa have been reported as extinct in the wild between 2003 and 2010.
On 9 June, the South African Hunters and Game Conservation Association (SAHGCA) took the lead in facilitating a round table discussion among private cycad growers, government and conservation associations towards developing and implementing a strategy to protect our cycads. Representatives agreed to create a forum to maintain open discussions with government and to involve the private sector in the development of a national cycad Biodiversity Management Plan (BMP) and National Conservation Strategy (NCS).
Stakeholders attending the roundtable discussion included the Department of Environmental Affairs, the South African National Biodiversity Institute, the Scientific Authority, the Cycad Society of South Africa, the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency, the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Limpopo Economic Development and Tourism Department, the Strategic Environment Focus, the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa, the Endangered Wildlife Trust and the South African Nursery Association.
Lizanne Nel, conservation manager at SAHGCA, said the workshop succeeded in establishing a common understanding of the threats to cycads in the wild and determining the role that the different stakeholders can play in the process. “We are convinced that productive partnerships between government and the private sector can have a positive impact on the conservation of South Africa’s cycad species for future generations,” Nel said.
Threats to Cycads
There are numerous reasons for the decline of cycads in the wild, but the biggest threat remains the removal of these plants for private collections. Other reasons are habitat loss; illegal collection and harvesting of plants and seeds from the wild for trade and horticulture purposes; biological invasion and harvesting for traditional use.
The proposed National Management Strategy and Action Plan will include measures to protect cycads from these threats.
These may include:
- marking or micro-chipping plants
- increasing security to prevent illegal collection by filling vacant ranger posts
- improving compliance and enforcements by training enforcement officers
- securing and protecting critical habitat for wild cycads
- re-establishing a national gene bank for cycad to provide representative gene pools for conservation and restoration
- monitoring population status and effectiveness of interventions
- establishing working partnerships to integrate activities from different stakeholders
- developing economic incentives for land owners/communities to protect wild populations
- implementing public awareness campaigns on the cycad crisis and its value to society
- participation by cycad owners to propagate plants to be re-introduced in their natural habitat.
Public involvement in cycad conservation
The Department of Environmental Affairs arranged a series of stakeholder workshops to obtain further input as part of developing a National Biodiversity Management Plan for Cycads. Some of these workshops have already been held, while others in the Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga and Limpopo provinces are still to take place during July on the following dates:
Interested parties can contact Jessica de Beer on 012 349 1307 or e-mail jessica@sefsa.co.za for more information about workshops.
South African Hunters and Game Conservation Association (SAHGCA) is a national organisation for hunters and sportshooters. The Association has more than 37 000 members who participate in hunting, sportshooting and conservation activities at 74 branches countrywide. Phone the national office at 012 808 9300 for more information on a branch near you.