Kogelberg Nature Reserve

Coordinates: 34°18′S 18°54′E / 34.3°S 18.9°E / -34.3; 18.9
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Kogelberg Nature Reserve
Map
  Kogelberg Nature Reserve
  Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve
LocationNear Gordon's Bay and Kleinmond, South Africa
Coordinates34°18′S 18°54′E / 34.3°S 18.9°E / -34.3; 18.9
Area3,000 ha (7,400 acres)
Kogelberg Nature Reserve is located in South Africa
Kogelberg Nature Reserve
Kogelberg Nature Reserve (South Africa)
Kogelberg Nature Reserve is located in Western Cape
Kogelberg Nature Reserve
Kogelberg Nature Reserve (Western Cape)

Kogelberg Nature Reserve is a

Kogelberg Mountain Range, to the east of Cape Town, South Africa
.

With about 1600 plant species, it contains a floral diversity per unit area that is greater than anywhere else in the world.[1]

Ecology

"Waboom protea" (Protea nitida) in the Kogelberg mountains

Located in the

Kogelberg Mountains, along the mountainous coast on the eastern edge of Cape Town, this 3,000-hectare (7,400-acre) nature reserve protects a significant portion of Kogelberg Sandstone Fynbos. Among the enormous range of plants in this local vegetation type are hundreds of species of Erica, a wide range of Protea species and a great many plant families which are endemic
. The Kogelberg mountains are known as the heart of the Fynbos, and have a floral diversity per unit area that is greater than anywhere else in the world.[2]

In addition to its unique mountain fynbos, other ecosystems include wetlands, as well as the riparian vegetation of the Palmiet River, which is the most untouched in the south western Cape and are home to forests of indigenous trees such as Wild almond, Butter-spoon, Rapanea and Yellowwoods. Shady montane forests exist in several spots - like Louwsbos, Platbos and Oudebos - where relic Southern Afrotemperate Forests grow in the ravines and river valleys.[3]

History

R44
that runs along it.

The aboriginal inhabitants of the

Khoi herders, whose shell-middens and burial areas can still be found. During the early colonial era, explorers occasionally penetrated the mountains and reported on the area's unusual beauty and teeming wildlife, however no permanent settlements were made, as the landscape was considered far too extreme and inaccessible for farming. The Kogelberg region therefore remained almost pristine. In the early 19th century the whole area was designated "Crown Land" by the government of the Cape Colony, and over a hundred years later, in 1935, the rugged area finally became accessible, when a road was built. This brought about rapid change, as the Department of Forestry took over the region in 1937 and declared its intention of using the area for state timber plantations.[4][5]

The idea of turning the region into a nature reserve was first brought up by local landowner

Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens
. Later in the decade, his dream was finally realised when his financial grant secured the establishment of the Kogelberg preserve, comprising the land lying south of the N2 and west of the
Palmiet River - with necessary infrastructure, fencing and biological surveys. [6][7]

In 1987, this conservation area was transferred to Cape Nature Conservation, and formally became a nature reserve by the more specific standards of that body. Later developments include the construction of new visitors facilities in 2012, as well as the steady expansion of the surrounding "biosphere reserve".[8]

Greater Biosphere Reserve

A male chacma baboon (Papio ursinus) in the Steenbras Nature Reserve

The 1,000-square-kilometre (390 sq mi)

Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve
includes the nature reserve as part of its "core conservation area". As such, the nature reserve is surrounded by buffer zones of natural vegetation and environmentally friendly recreational areas, as well as transitional zones of environmentally aware farms and towns.

The Kogelberg Nature Reserve itself, as the core conservation area, is exceptionally untouched. The mountain slopes are closed to the public and strictly protected. However, there is a portion that is open for hiking, along the valleys and waterfalls of the Steenbras River Gorge.

The

R44 road is a scenic road that skirts the mountainous coast of the Kogelberg reserve. Whales and dolphins can also frequently be seen from this road.[9]

Gallery

  • Kogelberg Nature Reserve ocean view.
    Kogelberg Nature Reserve ocean view.
  • Kogelberg Nature Reserve plant life.
    Kogelberg Nature Reserve plant life.
  • Kogelberg Nature Reserve rock formations.
    Kogelberg Nature Reserve rock formations.
  • Kogelberg Nature Reserve path.
    Kogelberg Nature Reserve path.
  • Kogelberg Nature Reserve.
    Kogelberg Nature Reserve.

See also

References

  1. ^ "City of Cape Town Nature Reserves. Free Booklet" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-22.
  2. ^ "Flora of the Western Cape".
  3. ^ "CapeNature". Archived from the original on 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2014-03-07.
  4. ^ E. Mossop: Old Cape Highways. Maskew Miller: Cape Town. 1928.
  5. ^ W. Burchell: Travels in the Interior of Southern Africa. Batchford Press: London. 1953.
  6. ^ E.H. Burrows: Overberg Odyssey. Swellendam Trust: Swellendam. 1994.
  7. ^ "Projects | Architecture Coop".
  8. ^ "Environmental resources and downloads. City of Cape Town. Environmental Resource Management Dept". Archived from the original on 2012-12-23.

External links