Termite species richness, composition and diversity on five farms in southern Kunene region, Namibia

Article

Termite species richness, composition and diversity on five farms in southern Kunene region, Namibia

Published in: African Zoology
Volume 37 , issue 1 , 2002 , pages: 7–11
DOI: 10.1080/15627020.2002.11657148
Author(s): J. Zeidler Integrated Environmental Consultants Namibia, Namibia , S. Hanrahan Department of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, South Africa , M. Scholes Department of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, South Africa

Abstract

A survey was conducted on five farms in former Damaraland, a communal farming area in arid northwestern Namibia. The aims of the survey were to establish termite inventories for each site and to investigate whether termite diversity is determined by land-use history and land-use intensity. Overall, termite diversity in western Namibia is low. The Shannon Index ranged from 0–1.46. Diversity was generally higher at sites under relatively low land-use intensity. On the farm with the most arid climatic conditions, this relationship was reversed, probably as dung and other resource inputs were relatively high at the higher land-use intensity site. Termite species assemblages differed between the various farms, as wellas across the land-use intensity gradients. Whether this was attributable to differing environmental parameters or land-use histories was not clearly discernible.

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