Abstract: Zones of nutrient enrichment beneath shrubs, the so called 'fertile islands', are the result of a range of interacting physical and biotic concentrating mechanisms. These concentrating mechanisms lead to specific spatial patterns of soil properties across a landscape and it has been suggested that disruption of the normal patterns into more aggregated 'fertile islands' might be a useful index of desertification in semi-arid regions. The objective of this paper was to determine whether 'fertile islands' are as characteristic a feature of succulent deserts as they are of shrub dominated deserts. Keywords: Mesembryanthemaceae, nutrients, organic matter, soils.