Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa

Coal mining involves the removal of natural vegetation, heavy excavation; combustion and ignition accompanied by a release of coal dust to the atmosphere that drastically reduce the ecosystem services. A study was conducted to assess of veld grasses around a coal mine in Emalahleni in Mpumalanga. Si...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mangwane, M., Madakadze, I.C., Nherera-Chokuda, F.V., Dube, Sikhalazo, Mndela, M., Tjelele, J., Pule, H.T.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179402
_version_ 1855518383409201152
author Mangwane, M.
Madakadze, I.C.
Nherera-Chokuda, F.V.
Dube, Sikhalazo
Mndela, M.
Tjelele, J.
Pule, H.T.
author_browse Dube, Sikhalazo
Madakadze, I.C.
Mangwane, M.
Mndela, M.
Nherera-Chokuda, F.V.
Pule, H.T.
Tjelele, J.
author_facet Mangwane, M.
Madakadze, I.C.
Nherera-Chokuda, F.V.
Dube, Sikhalazo
Mndela, M.
Tjelele, J.
Pule, H.T.
author_sort Mangwane, M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Coal mining involves the removal of natural vegetation, heavy excavation; combustion and ignition accompanied by a release of coal dust to the atmosphere that drastically reduce the ecosystem services. A study was conducted to assess of veld grasses around a coal mine in Emalahleni in Mpumalanga. Six 100 m line transects were established on rehabilitated site and natural veld in Kleinkopje coal mine. Plant identification, leaf and tiller counting, and biomass harvesting were conducted on each of five 1 m2 sampling quadrats placed at intervals of 20 m along the transect. Nineteen (19) grass species, some (07) forbs and (03) sedges were recorded. Therefore, Eragrostis curvula (31.5%) was the most frequent on the natural veld, followed by Cynodon dactylon (28.36%) and Panicum maximum (22.25%) on the rehabilitated. On the natural veld, Aristida congesta had higher tiller production (17 tillers per plant) while E. curvula averaged 11 tillers per plant on the rehabilitated site. On the rehabilitated site, U. mosambicensis produced averaged 94 leaves per plant than all other species on both sites. Basal cover, species diversity and richness did not differ (p > 0.05) between rehabilitated site and natural veld. Rehabilitated site had a generally higher biomass production of 4.35 kg DM ha− 1 than natural veld with 3.24 kg DM ha− 1. E. curvula and C. dactylon had higher contribution to the total biomass production on both sites. However, their biomass production was insignificantly different (p > 0.05) from that of Urochloa mozambicensis and P. maximum on rehabilitated site and Heteropogon contortus on natural site. Our results indicated that E. curvula and C. dactylon are highly persistent and productive hence they are ideal for mine rehabilitation.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace179402
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1794022026-01-05T18:02:19Z Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa Mangwane, M. Madakadze, I.C. Nherera-Chokuda, F.V. Dube, Sikhalazo Mndela, M. Tjelele, J. Pule, H.T. vegetation grasses forage Coal mining involves the removal of natural vegetation, heavy excavation; combustion and ignition accompanied by a release of coal dust to the atmosphere that drastically reduce the ecosystem services. A study was conducted to assess of veld grasses around a coal mine in Emalahleni in Mpumalanga. Six 100 m line transects were established on rehabilitated site and natural veld in Kleinkopje coal mine. Plant identification, leaf and tiller counting, and biomass harvesting were conducted on each of five 1 m2 sampling quadrats placed at intervals of 20 m along the transect. Nineteen (19) grass species, some (07) forbs and (03) sedges were recorded. Therefore, Eragrostis curvula (31.5%) was the most frequent on the natural veld, followed by Cynodon dactylon (28.36%) and Panicum maximum (22.25%) on the rehabilitated. On the natural veld, Aristida congesta had higher tiller production (17 tillers per plant) while E. curvula averaged 11 tillers per plant on the rehabilitated site. On the rehabilitated site, U. mosambicensis produced averaged 94 leaves per plant than all other species on both sites. Basal cover, species diversity and richness did not differ (p > 0.05) between rehabilitated site and natural veld. Rehabilitated site had a generally higher biomass production of 4.35 kg DM ha− 1 than natural veld with 3.24 kg DM ha− 1. E. curvula and C. dactylon had higher contribution to the total biomass production on both sites. However, their biomass production was insignificantly different (p > 0.05) from that of Urochloa mozambicensis and P. maximum on rehabilitated site and Heteropogon contortus on natural site. Our results indicated that E. curvula and C. dactylon are highly persistent and productive hence they are ideal for mine rehabilitation. 2025-12-29 2026-01-05T17:29:28Z 2026-01-05T17:29:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179402 en Open Access Mangwane, M., Madakadze, I.C., Nherera-Chokuda, F.V., Dube, S., Mndela, M., Tjelele, J. and Pule, H.T. 2025. Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Scientific Reports 15:44814.
spellingShingle vegetation
grasses
forage
Mangwane, M.
Madakadze, I.C.
Nherera-Chokuda, F.V.
Dube, Sikhalazo
Mndela, M.
Tjelele, J.
Pule, H.T.
Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title_full Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title_fullStr Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title_short Assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around Kleinkopje opencast coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
title_sort assessment of herbaceous vegetation species composition growing around kleinkopje opencast coal mine mpumalanga province south africa
topic vegetation
grasses
forage
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179402
work_keys_str_mv AT mangwanem assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT madakadzeic assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT nhererachokudafv assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT dubesikhalazo assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT mndelam assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT tjelelej assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica
AT puleht assessmentofherbaceousvegetationspeciescompositiongrowingaroundkleinkopjeopencastcoalminempumalangaprovincesouthafrica