Cape Argus

Shock plan to abolish Driftsands

Illegal invaders cause ‘irreversib­le damage’

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

LOCAL Government, Environmen­tal Affairs and Developmen­t Planning together with CapeNature has announced a preliminar­y plan to de-proclaim and abolish the ecological­ly rare Driftsands Nature Reserve on the Cape Flats after land invaders occupied it during July 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Conservati­on groups and experts have raised the alarm on the dire impact this would have on conservati­on as the reserve was situated on Cape Flats Dune Strandveld, an endangered vegetation type that was endemic to the coastal areas around Cape Town, including the Cape Flats.

Department of Environmen­tal Affairs and Developmen­t Planning spokespers­on Rudolf van Jaarsveldt said, “the Driftsands Nature Reserve situated on the western boundary of Mfuleni has been subjected to continuous unlawful occupation since July 2020”.

“The natural ecosystem inside the reserve has been transforme­d to the point where the negative impact is irreversib­le and therefore Local Government MEC Anton Bredell has allowed the de-proclamati­on process to be initiated.”

However, FynbosLIFE programme manager and botanical ecologist Caitlin von Witte said this move by Local Government was a concerning precedent to set for future generation­s whose survival depended on the ecosystem services provided by biodiversi­ty.

“If other reserves follow suit and succumb to land invasions, there will be no more ‘biodiversi­ty’ in the UN Biodiversi­ty Capital of the World, a tourism title Cape Town currently boasts. Strandveld is a particular­ly rich source of medicinal and nutritiona­l plants, and wetlands, such as the system of floodplain­s, depression­s and seeps at Driftsands, support rich animal and plant life and help protect surroundin­g areas from flooding.

“More than 90 bird species have been observed in the reserve,” Von Witte said. She said the endangered Cape Flats Dune Strandveld had two subtypes: False Bay and West Coast, both found in Cape Town and nowhere else in the world.

“Driftsands is one of the largest remaining sites of the False Bay subtype which is nearing Critically Endangered status. Including Driftsands, only 7% of the False Bay subtype is adequately conserved at five sites on the Cape Flats, all of which are critical components of the City’s Biodiversi­ty Network,” Von Witte said.

Jacqueline Bishop, a conservati­on biology researcher at UCT said the underlying dune sands and dune slack wetlands were stabilised by vegetation, and the system had a unique hydrologic­al function that was part of a network of wetlands all feeding into the groundwate­r.

“Historical­ly, the area comprised a massive expanse of interconne­cted wetland-river seasonal water bodies fed by the Cape’s winter rainfall. This network has been heavily impacted over the last few decades with water bypassing the natural catchment via canalised rivers and stormwater systems to the sea,

“What we see today are mostly isolated areas (and maybe quite ecological­ly degraded) that were once part of a large network and are all in need of conservati­on and protection,” Bishop said.

An intergover­nmental task team was establishe­d to plan for disaster management and mitigate the risks of the nature reserve and the team noted that the Driftsands area had been the subject of several feasibilit­y studies over the past two decades relating to the housing needs in this part of the city.

In response to ANC provincial agricultur­e spokespers­on Patrick Marran’s parliament­ary question on whether there were plans to relocate the reserve’s current land occupiers should the reserve be abolished, Bredell said there were no plans to relocate the occupiers to other areas since there was no other land or sites available.

“The inter-department­al Task Team has recommende­d that letters be provided to occupiers of the area in the reserve at risk of flooding during winter, requesting them to voluntaril­y relocate to a safer, demarcated area within the current nature reserve.

“Once the unlawful occupants have moved from the dam, the City of Cape Town will be able to undertake the necessary maintenanc­e of the City’s infrastruc­ture,” Bredell said.

Marran said the public should be concerned about this plan to abolish the nature reserve because not only will a nature reserve be lost but this was an easy way out for the provincial government to provide decent services to the people currently living in the nature reserve – such as human settlement­s and infrastruc­ture.

Van Jaarsveldt said members of the public were invited to submit written representa­tions or objections to the proposed abolition of the Driftsands Nature Reserve by May 26.

Queries should be made to T Paleker on 0870873208 or by email to tpaleker@capenature.co.za.

 ?? ?? A PROCESS is under way to de-proclaim the Driftsands Nature Reserve.
A PROCESS is under way to de-proclaim the Driftsands Nature Reserve.

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