Tsolwana Nature Reserve

Tsolwana Nature Reserve is an 8,500 hectare nature reserve situated on the edge of the Winterberg Mountain range. It is located 60 km west of Queenstown, and 30 km south- east of Tarkastad[1] in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa and is managed by Eastern Cape Parks Board. Its western boundary is formed by the upper Black Kei River. The reserve's name originates from the Xhosa word for "spike", due to the presence of the cone-shaped hill, Spitskop.

Tsolwana Nature Reserve
Location in the Eastern Cape
LocationWinterberg Mountains
Nearest cityTarkastad
Coordinates32°10′14″S 26°30′01″E
Area8,500 Ha
Governing bodyEastern Cape Parks

History

Proclaimed in 1979, Tsolwana Nature Reserve was the final result of the state-subsidised stock reduction schemes that were introduced by the government in the severe drought of the late sixties to help protect the soil against erosion. The decreased stock numbers eventually led to an increase of indigenous animals. The area eventually became a conservation area and finally, in 2005, the Eastern Cape Parks Board became responsible for the management of Tsolwana.[2]

Climate

Tsolwana Nature Reserve marks the start of the Karoo. The climate can be extreme, with greatly varying temperatures and unpredictable heavy summer rainstorms and even hail. Rainfall peaks between January and March. In winter snow falls frequently while cold, wet southerly wind spells can cause wildlife losses, particularly in the plains antelope species. Tsolwana lies within a summer rainfall region, but rainfall is unpredictable and often falls in heavy storms, throughout the year, particularly in November. Seasonal temperatures differ greatly. Daytime temperatures reach 38 °C in summer while frost occurs in winter. Strong north-westerly winds can be expected from July to September, while frequent south-westerly winds bring rain in summer.[1]

Wildlife

Located in the Karoo, the reserve is home to many animal species including the white rhino, giraffe, eland, blesbok, mountain reedbuck, Cape mountain zebra, dassie, ant bear (aardvark), bat-eared fox, black backed jackal, baboon, gemsbuck, kudu, lynx, orynx, mongoose and springbok.[3]

Birdlife

Tsolwana Game Reserve is home to South Africa's national bird, the Blue Crane, as well as the Cape Vulture and Ostrich.

Environment

Susceptible to soil erosion and land degradation, its altitude sits at 1350m in the lowland regions and 1800m in the mountainous area. Located in the Karoo, the vegetation at the nature reserve is mostly made up of grassy plains and acacia thornveld.

Economic impact

Tsolwana Nature Reserve is located near villages such as Tentergate, Thornhill, Waverley and Khwezi and provides employment for people living in these areas.[3]

gollark: > Starting next week, we’ll begin to use our in-product screens and our blog to raise awareness of anti-racist causes and encourage you to take concrete action, such as calling on local officials to advocate for police reform.If they *actually* add political nag screens to Discord-the-application and not just Discord-the-blog, I am probably going to need to... adjust my adblocker rules?
gollark: That's basically half of what Discord's about!
gollark: It talks about using "technology" to "proactively identify bad actors".
gollark: T&S is presumably not waiting for invites or... actually joining, just reading messages.
gollark: It says so in the blog post.

See also

References

  1. "Tsolwana Nature Reserve". Night Jar Travel. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  2. "Tsolwana Nature Reserve". Plak. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  3. "Tsolwana Nature Reserve". Lukhanji Municipality. Retrieved 23 June 2017.


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