The vastness of the Tanqua Karoo with Dave in the foreground

Nature of the Interaction dynamics in the Tanqua Karoo

Fig. 1. The succulent Karoo scrub on the farm with the shearing shed in the far distance.


Fig. 2. Honeybee nest in a deserted aardvark burrow which was pestered by banded bee pirates.

Fig. 3. Honeybee nest in a crevice in a shale outcrop on the farm.


Fig. 4. The succulent Tylecodon paniculatus which grows on the surrounding hills.


Fig. 5. Longhorn beetle larvae in the stem of a rotting Tylecodon paniculatus.


Amphibians

Fig. 6. The Karoo toad, Bufo gariepensis.


Fig. 7. A string of Bufo gariepensis eggs.


Fig. 8. The aggregating tadpoles of Bufo gariepensis.


Fig. 9. The aquatic Platana, Xenopus laevis.


Fig. 10. The Cape honeybee, Apis mellifera capensis, the dominant sub-species on the farm.


Fig. 11. Apis mellifera scutellata visiting the flowers of Eberlanzia ferox.


Fig. 12. The emerald fruit beetle Rhabdotis semipunctata on Vachellia karroo flowers.


Fig. 13. Succulent Tylecodon wallichii plants in flower.


Fig. 14. The carrion flower, Hoodia pilifera var. pilifera which attracts pollinating flies.


Fig. 15. Chewed remains of the roots of a Euphorbia rhombifolia plant uprooted by baboons.


Fig. 16. Sundowners in front of the ‘skeerhok’.


Fig. 17. Asilid robber with a honeybee captured on the Tanqua farm.


Zig-zag emperor moth larvae, Gonimbrasia tyrrhea, on Vachellia karroo.


Brunsvigia bosmaniae.


Haemanthus coccineus growing out of a slope.


The authors: Geoff Tribe, A. David Marais & Karin Sternberg