Site selection for subtropical thicket restoration: mapping cold-air pooling in the South African sub-escarpment lowlands

PeerJ. 2020 Apr 23:8:e8980. doi: 10.7717/peerj.8980. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Restoration of subtropical thicket in South Africa using the plant Portulacaria afra (an ecosystem engineer) has been hampered, in part, by selecting sites that are frost prone-this species is intolerant of frost. Identifying parts of the landscape that are exposed to frost is often challenging. Our aim is to calibrate an existing cold-air pooling (CAP) model to predict where frost is likely to occur in the valleys along the sub-escarpment lowlands (of South Africa) where thicket is dominant. We calibrated this model using two valleys that have been monitored during frost events. To test the calibrated CAP model, model predictions of frost-occurrence for six additional valleys were assessed using a qualitative visual comparison of existing treelines in six valleys-we observe a strong visual match between the predicted frost and frost-free zones with the subtropical thicket (frost-intolerant) and Nama-Karoo shrubland (frost-tolerant) treelines. In addition, we tested the model output using previously established transplant experiments; ∼300 plots planted with P. afra (known as the Thicket-Wide Plots) were established across the landscape-without consideration of frost-to assess the potential factors influencing the survival and growth of P. afra. Here we use a filtered subset of these plots (n = 70), and find that net primary production of P. afra was significantly lower in plots that the model predicted to be within the frost zone. We suggest using this calibrated CAP model as part of the site selection process when restoring subtropical thicket in sites that lie within valleys-avoiding frost zones will greatly increase the likelihood of restoration success.

Keywords: Digital elevation model; Ecological restoration; Frost; Nama-Karoo; Portulacaria afra; South Africa; Spekboom; Subtropical thicket; Thicket-Wide Plot experiment.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Research Foundation (Nos. 95992 and 91452) and the Natural Resource Management Programmes: Department of Environmental Affairs. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.