Abstract

Southern Africa has been recognised as one of the most interesting and important areas of the world from an ecological and evolutionary point of view. The establishment and development of the National Vegetation Database (NVD) of South Africa enabled South Africa to contribute to environmental planning and conservation management in this floristically unique region. In this paper, we aim to provide an update on the development of the NVD since it was last described, near its inception, more than a decade ago. The NVD was developed using the Turboveg software environment, and currently comprises 46 697 vegetation plots (relevés) sharing 11 690 plant taxa and containing 968 943 species occurrence records. The NVD was primarily founded to serve vegetation classification and mapping goals but soon became recognised as an important tool in conservation assessment and target setting. The NVD has directly helped produce the National Vegetation Map, National Forest Type Classification, South African National Biodiversity Assessment and Forest Type Conservation Assessment. With further development of the NVD and more consistent handling of the legacy data (old data sets), the current limitations regarding certain types of application of the data should be significantly reduced. However, the use of the current NVD in multidisciplinary research has certainly not been fully explored. With the availability of new pools of well-trained vegetation surveyors, the NVD will continue to be purpose driven and serve the needs of biological survey in pursuit of sustainable use of the vegetation and flora resources of the southern African subcontinent.

Highlights

  • It is important for management and conservation in regions with exceptional floristic diversity that databases are developed that are designed to store information on occurrence and co-occurrence of plant taxa, and on vegetation characteristics of the region

  • This paper provides an update on the development of the National Vegetation Database (NVD) of South Africa since it was last described a decade ago.[13]

  • Mucina during an unfunded period until mid-2009 when it was placed under the corporate governance of the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI)

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Summary

Introduction

It is important for management and conservation in regions with exceptional floristic diversity that databases are developed that are designed to store information on occurrence and co-occurrence of plant taxa, and on vegetation characteristics of the region. In early 1997, the budding vegetation database was recognised as a potentially useful tool for supporting the National Vegetation Map project initiated in 199524 and was referred to as the VEGMAP Database.[25] Since September 2000 the NVD was jointly curated by the National Botanical Institute and Stellenbosch University It was in this year[13] when the database received its current name – the National Vegetation Database. Mucina ( associated with the Universities of the North, Free State and Stellenbosch) during an unfunded period until mid-2009 when it was placed under the corporate governance of the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) This decade which saw the successful completion of the major collaborative project on the national vegetation map[19,26,27] was a decade that witnessed a major slump in new vegetation survey projects (Figure 1).

Data availability and geographical coverage
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