Author:
Beckley Lynnath E.,Hulley P. Alexander,Skelton Paul H.
Abstract
The coast of South Africa is subject to a range of oceanographic conditions
and habitats, and this translates into a wide diversity of fishes. Indigenous
people knew of, and used, some of these fishes long before the arrival of
explorers and naturalists from Europe, who subsequently described many of the
species in the scientific literature. The appointment of J.D.F. Gilchrist as
the marine biologist to the Cape Colony in 1895 started a tradition of
ichthyology in South Africa that was fostered by K.H. Barnard at the South
African Museum. The discovery of the coelacanth in 1938 put South African
ichthyology firmly on the world map, and J.L.B. Smith produced the first
edition of the remarkable volume
Sea Fishes of Southern Africa in 1949. Subsequently, in
1986, with the assistance of numerous local and international contributors,
M.M. Smith and P.H. Heemstra compiled
Smiths’ Sea Fishes, which documented >2000
species from the region. With the information in this volume as a basis, the
coastal and shelf ichthyofauna of South Africa is examined at a biogeographic
level. Diversity and endemism are discussed and complementarity analysis used
to address the suitable location of marine protected areas to conserve the
ichthyofauna of South Africa.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
5 articles.
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