Operation Wildflower Mobi
  • Home
  • Albums
  • Links
    • Botanical Gardens
    • OWF Sites
    • Public Parks, Gardens and Reserves
    • Reference Sites
    • Private Parks, Gardens and Reserves
  • Information
    • About Us
    • Articles
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Glossary
    • Plant Records
      • Aloes
      • Bulbs
      • Climbers
      • Cycads
      • Euphorbias
      • Ferns
      • Grasses
      • Herbs
      • Orchids
      • Parasites
      • Shrubs
      • Succulents
      • Trees
    • Sources of Information
    • Subject Index
Home Home » HABITAT » Habitat diversity » OK, only if left alone!
Back to Category Overview
Total images in all categories: 12,205
Total number of hits on all images: 7,538,099

OK, only if left alone!

OK, only if left alone!
Start View full size
[Please activate JavaScript in order to see the slideshow]
Previous Previous
Image 91 of 143  
Next Next
Image 93 of 143  
  • Macledium spinosum ready for war
  • Main road Many Waters  to Spookberg via Rowerskloof
  • Mesemb competing but also gregarious
  • Mfezi, the Mozambique spitting cobra
  • Mosses in the Little Karoo
  • Narrowness may be imposed
  • Not in rows!
  • Odontophorus marlothii...
  • OK, only if left alone!
  • On top of Table Mountain
  • One kiepersol, many feroxes
  • Oopelta granulosa, a land slug
  • Ornithogalum toxicarium
  • Orthochilus odontoglossus
  • Ozoroa dispar where trees are rare
  • Patches of the same
  • Pelargonium tetragonum draped over its neighbours

Image information

Description

As above-ground plant parts look very different, their root shapes and sizes below-ground also contribute dissimilar features. This adds another reason why biodiversity is important.

Soil stabilisation may easily be lost when delicate ecologies are interfered with. Plant life cycles replenish nutrients in the ground, stimulating new plants to grow. The cohering vegetation functions as one entity in moisture retention, thereby sustaining life.

The known history of a disturbed patch of land sometimes contains fairly small incidents, seemingly innocuous events that caused the land degradation. Recovery may, however, take many years, more than the human perpetrator's lifetime.

Loose soil is particularly vulnerable to erosion from natural processes involving wind and water. The scrub seen here among limestone rocks in the De Hoop Nature Reserve is sparse, but diverse. If it looks this delicate and vulnerable in a well conserved place, imagine what it might look like in a densely populated area where due care is absent.

Not walking in the designated paths in a nature reserve has a similar effect as the overgrazing of farm land.

Hits
401
Photographer
Ivan Latti
Author
Ivan Latti
 
Back to Category Overview
Powered by JoomGallery