-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- PubMed
-
Related articles
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me when this article is corrected
|
Aquat. Living Resour. 18 (2005) 275-289
DOI: 10.1051/alr:2005032
Fishes and freshwater in southern African estuaries - A review
Alan K. WhitfieldSouth African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, Private Bag 1015, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa
(Received 11 February 2005; Accepted 9 June 2005)
Abstract
The functioning of estuaries relies on a natural dynamism imposed
on these systems by riverine and marine influences. The increasing
abstraction of fresh water from both large and small river catchments in
southern Africa has had the effect of forcing some estuaries into artificial
cycles, i.e. natural successions now have human imposed trajectories that
are changing estuarine variability and forcing some systems into extreme
states. The ichthyofauna has responded to these changes in a variety of
ways. Where river flow has declined considerably, or ceased altogether for
extended periods, fish recruitment has shown a considerable decrease. This
can be related to the collapse in planktonic productivity which negatively
affects zooplanktivorous fishes, as well as decreased amounts of olfactory
cues entering the sea for the attraction of larval and juvenile marine
fishes into these estuaries. Hypersaline conditions can result in both a
reduced species diversity and abundance. However, where estuaries lose their
normal estuarine salinity gradient and become "arms" of the sea, there is
often an increase in fish species diversity due to stenohaline marine taxa
entering the estuary. Unfortunately the gain in small numbers of marine
stragglers is insufficient to compensate for the decline in estuarine
dependent fishes that usually dominate these systems. Conversely, major
river flooding often causes temporary decreases in both species diversity
and abundance due to a rapid decline in salinity, increased suspended
sediments, reduced dissolved oxygen levels, and a collapse in the
availability of pelagic and benthic food resources. However, the "resetting"
of estuaries by episodic events is part of the essential cycle that
maintains and enhances estuarine productivity and habitat diversity.
Recovery by estuary associated fishes from such events is usually rapid and
linked to a variety of factors, especially estuary morphometry which has a
direct influence on the flushing or retention of estuarine biota. Freshwater
flows interact directly and indirectly with the fishes that inhabit
estuaries, e.g. river floods directly influence estuarine morphometry, water
temperature, salinity, pH, turbidity, nutrient status, organic inputs,
dissolved oxygen concentrations and olfactory cues; and indirectly affect
mouth status, tidal prism, habitat diversity, primary and secondary
productivity, fish recruitment, food availability and competition. Depletion
or removal of components of river flow to an estuary have major short and
long-term negative impacts on the ichthyofauna, some of which can be
ameliorated by the provision of an environmental freshwater allocation that
is appropriate to that particular system.
Résumé
Le fonctionnement des estuaires dépend de la dynamique naturelle
imposée à ces systèmes par les influences fluviales et marines.
L'accroissement des détournements d'eau douce, prises d'eau de
rivières ou de fleuves en Afrique du Sud a eu pour effet d'imposer des
cycles artificiels à certains estuaires, c'est-à-dire des successions de
trajectoires naturelles imposées par l'homme qui modifient la
variabilité de l'estuaire et forçant certains à des états
extrêmes. L'ichtyofaune a répondu à ces modifications de
façon fort variée. Là où le courant a diminué
considérablement ou cessé lors de longues périodes, le
recruitement en poissons a montré une diminution considérable. Ceci
peut être lié à la chute de la productivité planctonique qui
affecte négativement les poissons zooplanctonophages, ainsi que la
baisse des indicateurs olfactifs venant de la mer qui servent d'attraction
aux larves et juvéniles des poissons marins dans les estuaires. Des
conditions hypersalines peuvent conduire à la fois à une diminution
de la diversité des espèces et à leur abondance. Cependant,
où les estuaires perdent leur gradient normal de salinité et
deviennent des "bras" de mer, il y a souvent une augmentation de la
diversité des espèces due à l'entrée de taxons marins
sténohalins. Malheureusement, le gain en retardataires marins est
insuffisant pour compenser le déclin des poissons estuariens qui
dominent habituellement dans ces systèmes. Réciproquement,
d'importantes décharges d'eau douce causent une diminution temporaire
à la fois en diversité d'espèces et abondance due à la chute
rapide de la salinité, à l'accroissement des sédiments en
suspension, réduisant les niveaux d'oxygène dissous, et à
l'effondrement des ressources en nourriture benthique et pélagique.
Cependant, le réenclenchement des estuaires par périodes
épisodiques est une part du cycle essentiel qui maintient et relance la
productivité estuarienne et la diversité de l'habitat. La
reconstitution des poissons associés aux estuaires, après de telles
épreuves, est habituellement
Key words: River flow / Salinity / Fish / Estuary / South Africa
Corresponding author: A.Whitfield@ru.ac.za
© EDP Sciences, IFREMER, IRD 2005
| What is OpenURL? |


Document
BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
