Abstract
The white-winged flufftail is listed as critically endangered, and limited knowledge about the species' ecology has been identified as a limiting factor to effectively conserving the bird. Little is known about the vegetation inhabited by the white-winged flufftail, which hampers the identification and management of its habitat. This study presents a fine-scale classification and description of the vegetation of wetland sites where the bird is known to be present. A plant phytosociological study was conducted to describe the plant communities and vegetation structure of the habitat. Three sites were selected at Verloren Valei Nature Reserve and two at Middelpunt Wetland, Mpumalanga, South Africa, shortly after the white-winged flufftail breeding season. A total of 60 sample plots were placed within the study sites, where all plant species present were recorded and identified. Other aspects such as plant height, water depth and anthropogenic influences were also documented. A modified TWINSPAN analysis resulted in the identification of three sub-communities that can be grouped into one major community. The Cyperaceae, Asteraceae and Poaceae families dominate the vegetation, with the sedges Carex austro-africana and Cyperus denudatus being dominant, and the grasses Leersia hexandra and Arundinella nepalensis co-dominant. The broad habitat structure consisted of medium to tall herbaceous plants (0.5–0.7 m) with shallow slow-flowing water.
Highlights
The white-winged flufftail (Sarothrura ayresi) is listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and faces a high risk of extinction [1,2,3]
Since there were no records of the birds breeding in South Africa, the general belief was that this cryptic species breeds in Ethiopia in the northern summer and migrates 4000 km south to South Africa during the austral summer [4]
The species with constancy values higher than 60% in all sub-communities are Cyperus denudatus (83%), Persicaria decipiens (70%), Carex austro-africana (63%) and Senecio inornatus (60%)
Summary
The white-winged flufftail (Sarothrura ayresi) is listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and faces a high risk of extinction [1,2,3]. The white-winged flufftail was first discovered breeding in the Ethiopian highlands at Sululta in the late 1990s, with a new breeding site found in the Berga wetlands in 1997 and a small population at Bilacha in 2005 [2]. A recent camera-trap study conducted in 2018 in the Middelpunt Wetland near the town of Dullstroom in South Africa confirmed the first breeding record of white-winged flufftail in the Southern Hemisphere [5]. This record established that, apart from the known breeding population in Ethiopia, a breeding population exists in the highlands of South Africa
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