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Effect of vegetation removal on airflow patterns and dune dynamics in the southwest Kalahari desert

✍ Scribed by G. F. S. Wiggs; I. Livingstone; D. S. G. Thomas; J. E. Bullard


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
808 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
1085-3278

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Vegetation is a major control of dune surface activity. To assess the effect of removing vegetation from otherwise largely inactive sand‐dune surfaces, two field experiments were undertaken in the southwest Kalahari Desert of southern Africa. In the first, wind velocity profiles were measured on two flat surfaces, one vegetated and one where vegetation had been removed by fire. In the second, levels of dune surface activity were measured on burnt and vegetated sites over a ten week period. The data indicate a striking increase in the near‐surface wind velocity allied to a decrease in shear stress after the destruction of the vegetation canopy as a result of burning, grazing or drought. Measurements on the consequences of such changes in the airflow patterns on dune dynamics suggest a three‐fold increase in dune surface activity after vegetation clearance. The dunes therefore have a staggered response to the contemporary environment, being largely inactive relicts for much of the time, but becoming more active as vegetation is episodically removed.


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