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CapeNature's ongoing battle against biodiversity crime in South Africa
CapeNature's ongoing battle against biodiversity crime in South Africa

IOL News

time28-07-2025

  • IOL News

CapeNature's ongoing battle against biodiversity crime in South Africa

CapeNature collaborates with partners to tackle biodiversity crime head-on. Pictured: Avonia sp and Conophytum sp seized from a trafficker at the airport. Image: Supplied CapeNature continues the fight against biodiversity crime, which is often overlooked, but its impact is devastating. This comes after the government entity registered more than 10 cases in three months. According to CapeNature, biodiversity crime harms South Africa's unique ecosystems. Illegal plant trade in the Western Cape, poaching, and even picking wildflowers in protected areas without a permit all contribute to the degradation of biodiversity and the loss of crucial natural resources. Between April and June 2025, CapeNature officials registered 12 cases (eight flora, four fauna) and issued 23 fines. Four fines related to contraventions of the Marine Living Resources Act, and 19 for contraventions of the Nature Conservation Ordinance (15 for wild animals and the others for flora). 'These statistics reflect the seriousness of biodiversity crime in the province and our ongoing efforts to strengthen compliance and enforcement along with our partners,' said Western Cape Provincial Minister of Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development Planning, Anton Bredell. 'Every action we take to stop the illegal harvesting and trade of species contributes to conserving the Western Cape's globally significant ecosystems. We are especially appreciative of the many partnerships we have with other government agencies, conservation partners, industry groups, and communities who assist us in these efforts.' Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ The Cape Floristic region, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the world's six floral kingdoms, is in the Western Cape. Despite this, over 50% of the province's ecosystems and nearly 16% of its species are classified as threatened. CapeNature said illegal activity places additional pressure on already vulnerable landscapes, impacting biodiversity, local economies, and food security. In the Western Cape, CapeNature collaborates with partners to combat biodiversity crime, encompassing both flora and fauna. The entity has been involved in various operations recently in support of the South African Police Service and the Hawks. Specifically on the illegal succulent trade, CapeNature collaborates extensively with various conservation partners. Joint operations between CapeNature, the Northern Cape Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, SANParks, the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), and SAPS Stock Theft and Endangered Species units are also conducted, focusing on addressing the illegal trade in reptiles and succulents. Education and awareness drives have been implemented among local communities situated in bio crime hotspot areas. The public can support biodiversity crime prevention by being vigilant and reporting suspicious activities to nature conservation authorities and the SAPS. Meanwhile, four foreign nationals - Mark Daddy, 43, Raphael Mhashu, 25, Simbarashe Charanelura, 33, and Elton Ngwanati, 34 - were sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment for poaching 303 specimens of the critically endangered Clivia mirabilis in the Namakwa region. The Clivia mirabilis, also known as the miracle bush lily or Oorlogskloof bush lily, is a rare species native to parts of the Northern and Western Cape. Highly coveted in the illegal global plant trade, its black-market value is estimated to be between R6 million and R30 million. DFFE Minister Dr Dion George noted that the conviction shows organised crime is exploiting more of SA's rare plants, beyond succulents, due to high international, especially Asian, demand. These crimes threaten biodiversity, disrupt ecosystems, and push already vulnerable species closer to extinction. 'This conviction is a critical milestone in our fight against environmental crime,' George said. 'It sends a clear message: those who profit from exploiting our natural heritage will face serious consequences.' He said the department will continue to strengthen enforcement, build international partnerships, and work closely with police and prosecutors to stop the illegal trade in wildlife and plants.

Unique fauna and flora under siege on South Africa's west coast
Unique fauna and flora under siege on South Africa's west coast

Daily Maverick

time17-07-2025

  • Science
  • Daily Maverick

Unique fauna and flora under siege on South Africa's west coast

The smallest tortoise in the world lives on South Africa's west coast, and a button-shaped succulent endemic to a tiny area of the Northern Cape can be found nowhere else in the world. But the area's unique fauna and flora are under threat from poaching, mining, farming and climate change. South Africa's west coast, and the hinterland it borders, looks harsh and desolate, but a mere 30 years ago, if you were a naturalist seeking fauna and flora species endemic to specific regions, you would have unearthed a bubbling abundance in a vast, arid ecosystem. Scanning the veld, you would have found a wonderland of curious dwarf succulents from the genus Conophytum, some covered in a fine film of fur like a baby's bottom (' baba boude ' in Afrikaans). You would have found living pebbles pushed into crevices – others in the form of 'waterblasies' (water blisters), dumplings, cubes, cones or tiny bowls. Back then, if you stopped and sat for a while in the Richtersveld and parts of the Karoo – an ancient Khoi/San word that means 'dry' or 'thirsty place', you might have seen the smallest tortoise in the world amble past, ploughing a path through the plants in its bid to eat the little shrubs it likes. Looking up, you might have seen giant tree-like plants stooped on the side of a koppie like a battalion of twisted wraiths from Lord of the Rings. Say hello to the half mens (half person) or Pachypodium namaquanum. The first word, denoting Genus, is Latin for 'big feet', due to the way the plant thickens at its base. If you craned your neck further and looked up, you'd see – wheeling in a stark sky seared by the summer sun – the graceful looping arc of a bird of prey: the unmistakable sky dance of a male black harrier (Circus maurus) trying to attract a female. Now the encroachment of mining and agriculture has denuded this bird to a mere 1,000 adults alive in the wild. With extra patience in your repose, 30 years ago, perhaps in unison with the undulating breath of ancient Earth, a treasure trove of creatures and plants would slowly appear among the quartz-strewn vlakte (plains), such as bizarre bulbs busting out from rocky cracks, seemingly fused to the Earth by the blowtorch of an alien joker. Larger four-legged predators and prey, such as leopard and gemsbok, might morph into view in the distance. And you'd spy, with your little eye, other creatures beginning with a lot of letters at your feet – an evolutionary carnival procession of insects and lizards scurrying about their business: feeding, procreating and avoiding being eaten – not always successfully. In this unforgiving place, the food chain is a relentless dance of the hunted and the hunter. All species of fauna – eight, six, four or two-legged – are in it to win it, all the way up to the intemperate and nasty creature that lords over them all: humankind. Many noteworthy species of fauna and flora have suffered critically damaging ailments caused by this apex predator. Thirty years from when you parked off on a rock in the vlakte, marvelling at a wondrous collection of oddities, you must now wander increasingly bigger areas to find fauna and flora endemic to these spaces – many are rapidly becoming rare, if not extinct. These life forms took millions of years to adapt to this unyielding land baked by ungodly heat, blasted by endless wind, and plunged into icy winter nights, and yet they now fall victim to the single-use greed of gangly, gormless two-legged man, with his cruel machinations and stinky machines. Let's allow the sexist 'trope' of assuming the protagonist is male for a moment, because in this forsaken place that is so out of (over)sight and out of mind, it is mostly men who are responsible for the three main threats that face the west coast, the strip that lies along the western edge of this huge hinterland. There is the black market theft of fauna and flora. There is the grim reality of climate change. There is habitat loss from the relentless metastasising of mining and agriculture. The ad hoc nature of multiple heavy mineral sand mining, and threats posed by diamond and phosphate mines, fragment the habitat that sustains life. So does overgrazing and agricultural activity. If a mining company has cleared away a patch of veld that houses the plant Doll's Roses (genus Hermannia) favoured by our tiny tortoise, it would have nothing to eat. That's the problem with sensitive ecosystems. They're prone to collateral damage that sends ripples through the trophic levels of the food web, and that spells catastrophe if the delicate interconnection of things is severed. A small thing becomes a BIG thing. Take the relatively confined area of the west coast beachside farm Waterval (Strandfontein 559) just north of the border between the Western and Northern Cape. The owners, Braam and Theresa Niewoudt, are fighting off attempts by Richwill Diamonds to mine on their farm. Their farm is a habitat where our dwarf tortoise can be found – but not if its food foraging range is erased. And what impact do the much bigger mines have? The mind boggles at the sheer scale of, say, Tronox Namakwa Sands, whose mining concession was more than 19,000 hectares in 2022, according to their annual report that year. According to the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, when at full capacity, Tronox mines 18 million metric tonnes of ore per annum. The extent of the mine at Tronox is one of the most profoundly disturbing images you will see, barring possibly the ruined landscape south of the Orange River at Alexkor towards Port Nolloth, or the devastation you see at Trans Hex mines along and near the Orange River and elsewhere – vast moonscapes of upturned earth. What chance do the little critters have against such a large-scale onslaught? Apart from the giant excavations mining creates, there are smaller, but equally negative byproducts. Sand mines are crisscrossed with wide roads that carve up the veld to transport mined material to processing plants. Back and forth these giant machines thunder, their tyres as big as small houses, belching smoke and dust, disturbing vegetation and cleaving species habitats apart. This becomes a potential suicide mission for fauna species, particularly if you're a very slow-moving tortoise, or an endangered red lark (Calendulauda burra) trying to breed in a dust bowl, your chirpy mating calls drowned out by the guttural roar of 16-cylinder behemoths. According to Cape Nature, Van Zyl's golden mole (Cryptochloris zyli), exists in coastal dunes and sandy tracts in the temperate Succulent Karoo strandveld. These are the sands that heavy mineral and coastal diamond miners target. No wonder this mole is classified as endangered. In one ray of hope, De Winton's golden mole (Cryptochloris wintoni) – an elusive mole that 'swims' through sand – was lost to science for 87 years until it was rediscovered in November 2023 by the Endangered Wildlife Trust. It survives precariously, threatened by ongoing mining near Port Nolloth. The danger of the 'digging-up-sand' mining technique is scary when you consider that the Succulent Karoo, which spans the sandy climes of Northern and Western Cape, 'hosts a staggering 40% of plant species endemic to South Africa, with about 40% being unique to this region', according to the World Wildlife Fund. Look at what a company called Fish by the Sea wants to do to beaches next door to the Tronox mine. Ignoring the almost sinister irony of the name, it has made an application to 'bulk sample' for diamonds, which is also adjacent to a declared Critically Biodiverse Area. Its earlier application was deemed inadequate, so it is trying again. Sit back and digest the horror movie numbers it proposes. To 'prospect' for diamonds, it will dig up to 20 'prospecting pits', each comprising almost 6,000 cubic metres of beach sand, gravel and coastal topsoil. But that's a fraction of the four trenches backed towards the intertidal zone it will dig – each 10-15 metres deep, 300m long and 150m wide, comprising at least 450,000m³ in sand and soil, and a 'sand overburden' berm 5m high to keep the sea out. Urgent message to golden moles De Winton and Van Zyl: Get the heck out of Dodge City! While the nonprofit, Protect the West Coast, focuses on mining, in particular heavy sand and diamond mining, because of its uniquely negative impact on the environment, other threats are piling up. Habitat loss also comes from farming and overgrazing. Take the red lark as an example. According to BirdLife SA, this native to the Northern Cape and Richtersveld, also known as the ferruginous lark, is classified as Vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). This means it faces a high risk of extinction in the wild due to habitat loss and degradation, primarily caused by overgrazing. Specifically, a mere 5% of its range contains suitable habitat. Then there is climate change, which manifests in many ways as the natural world struggles to induce an evolutionary response that can keep up with the speed of the impact. Succulents do need some moisture, even if occasional mist, and heaven forbid, a spot of rain every year or three. But endless heat they cannot abide. And of course, there is the scourge of poaching, which has already driven species to the edge of extinction, and in the case of some: well, they're gone forever. According to South African conservationist and author of The End of Eden Adam Welz, writing on the Yale University website: 'Because of poaching, at least eight species of Conophytum are now considered 'functionally extinct', which means that a tiny number may still survive in the wild, but there are too few to sustain the species' population or fulfill their previous role in their ecosystem. All Conophytum species have been reclassified in higher IUCN Red List threat categories since 2019.' According to this article in The Times of London, illicit sales of Conophytum rocketed during the Covid lockdown and continue unabated. The strange and otherworldly shaped succulents, some like 'cute little alien peas', are easily packaged due to their size, and are all the rage around the world. 'Search Reddit and you will find scores of fans showing off specimens bought for eye-watering sums,' cites The Times, with one species, Conophytum minimum (found near Lesotho), going for $325 on eBay (almost R6,000). In one sting operation near the Richtersveld town of Steinkopf in April 2022, according to the article, police seized 22,000 individual Conophytum species from the area, with more than a million succulents intercepted generally by law enforcement over the past four years. A year earlier, police arrested a resident of the town for illegal possession of eight boxes of Conophytum worth R300,000 on the South African market (let alone overseas). In a scary coincidence for this writer, and proof of the sheer fragility of some Conophytum species, the incredibly rare Conophytum crateriforme or 'dumpling', or 'bowl button' ('knoppie' in Afrikaans ) has literally ONLY been found in a 12km² area near Steinkopf, the very town The Times mentioned above, and the town that we have driven past many times on our mission to Protect the West Coast. You don't find this plant anywhere else on Earth, and soon, you won't find it here either. DM Over a journalism career spanning 40 years, Steve Pike has written, designed and edited for newspapers, magazines and websites in South Africa, Hong Kong and Melbourne. Over the last 20, he has managed the Wavescape Surf & Ocean Festival and is a keen conservationist who currently writes for nonprofit Protect the West Coast.

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