r
1. Define the following:
(3)
(a) Benchmarks
(b) Heterogeneous rangeland
(c) Veld reinforcement
2. Name any 5 pitfalls to look out for when identifying plants.
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•Plants vary a lot - look at many specimens, not just one
• Young plants I growth often different from mature - look at both
• Beware of two species growing close together
• Parasites and climbers
• Many species have lookalikes
• Don't just look at one character and think you know the species
3. Suppose that during a drought, and grass species A is still alive in both the benchmark and the
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surroundings, grass species Bis found to have died in both the benchmark and the continuously
grazed surroundings, grass species C is found to have died out in the surroundings but survived
in the benchmark:
a. Which species is resistant to continuous grazing? A
b. Which is likely to be a mesophyte? A
c. Which species is likely to be a palatable xerophyte? C
d. Which species is likely to be an unpalatable xerophyte? A
e. Which species would you collect seeds from to re-establish in the surrounding areas after the
introduction of good grazing management? C
4. A farm in Otjimbingwe is composed by the following habitats:
Habitat type
% of total area
% of time spent by
covered
animals
(importance)
Foothills
30
25
Pans
15
10
Steep slopes
30
5
Plains
25
60
Total
100
100
(4J
Number of sampling
effort allocated
If your study has 20 points that you need to sample overall to cover this farm, indicate how the
20 points will be spread across habitats.
5. Discuss in detail the 4 determinants in measuring rangeland condition.
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6.
Suppose a farmer with rangeland of 6000ha estimates at the end of the growing season that [6]
a representative square with sides of 25m is required by one LSUday and that the dry season
will last for 300 days
1. Estimate the grazing capacity?
2. Determine the number of LSUthat the farmer should stock?
7. Distinguish between advantages and disadvantages of Continuous grazing and Rotational
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