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Outreach

We intend to play an active role in sharing our findings, knowledge and experience of fynbos ecohydrology with both the scientific community and public at large.

Plant Monitoring Day

In 2006, in collaboration with Custodians of Rare and Endangered Wildflowers (CREW) project of the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) we initiated Plant Monitoring Day.

Plant Monitoring Day is an annual regional educational exercise aimed at making students and teachers aware of the rich diversity of plants in their local surroundings, develop skills in field botany as well as scientific inquiry. Furthermore, the exercise is important not only as an educational experience but also as a source of gathering useful data for conservationists.

Plant Monitoring Day is conducted in the first week of September each year, which coincides with Arbor Week. CREW coordinates the activity through provision of experts and involves its extensive volunteer network .

The project started with 6 schools from the three provinces of the Cape (Western, Eastern and Northern) in 2006. As of 2008, Plant Monitoring Day has been launched nationally.

Plant Monitoring Day Report

Scientific Meetings

  • Fynbos Forum, Citrusdal, South Africa (2010 invited)
  • SAEON Summit, Kirstenbosch, South Africa (2010 invited)
  • British Ecological Society Annual Meeting - Oxford (2006); Glasgow (2007) and Hatfield (2009 invited); Leeds (2010)
  • Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting -Milwaukee, WI(2008) and Albuquerque, NM (2009 invited)
  • International Association of Vegetation Science Annual Meeting - Stellenbosch, South Africa (2008)
  • Wetland and Aquatic Ecosystems: their functions and values - Worcester College, University of Oxford (2008)

Publications

We aim to disseminate our work via printed and online media.

Click the microphone to hear Dr. Araya describe the project.

A popular science article "Understanding how water resources shape our flora" has been published in Veld and Flora, 95(2):96-97(Journal of the South African Botanical Society).

We have undertaken interview with local Cape Town Afrikaans daily broadsheet: Die Burger. This will be available shortly.

We also share our work on the BBC/Open University partnership website (www.open2.net). A most recent article was "Can bushfire be good for nature?" Link given below.

We also are working on a number of scientific papers. Published papers include:

"Variation in delta 13-C among species and sexes in the family Restionaceae along a fine-scale hydrological gradients". Austral Ecology.DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2009.02089.x

"A fundamental, eco-hydrological basis for niche segregation in plant communities". New Phytologist. DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2010.03475.x

Silvertown, J. Y. Araya, P. Linder, and D. Gowing (in press) Experimental investigation of the origin of fynbos plant community structure after fire. Annals of Botany

James Ayuk, our SANBI based PhD student has given a seminar entitled "Water needs and the likely response to hydrological change of fynbos plants" at the Student Conference for Conservation Science, University of Cambridge in March 2011.

OU/BBC Science, Nature, Technology Blog (Bushfire)

Contact us

The Open University:

Prof. Jonathan Silvertown
Prof. David Gowing
Dr. Yoseph Araya
Prof. Edward Youngs
https://www.open.ac.uk

South African National Biodiversity Institute:

Dr. Guy Midgley
Dr. Nick Walker (2008)
James Ayuk
Deryck De Witt
http://www.sanbi.org

Cape Nature:

Dr. Ernst Baard
http://www.capenature.co.za

University of Zurich:

Prof. Peter Linder
http://www.unizh.ch

Els Dorratt Haaksma

Project Leader/Contact

Prof. Jonathan Silvertown
Department of Life Sciences
The Open University, Walton Hall
Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA
United Kingdom
Prof. Jonathan Silvertown's website