Abstract
From 1992 to 1994 the physico-chemical conditions of two systems on the east
coast of southern Africa shifted from estuarine to freshwater as a result of
mouth closure during the prevailing drought. Although there was gradual
colonization by freshwater benthic invertebrates, both systems were dominated
by estuarine benthic infauna. The upper reaches of the Siyaya Estuary were
entirely characterized by freshwater taxa (95%) by 1994, whereas
Nhlabane Estuary showed a smaller increase in the number of these fauna.
Non-metric multidimensional scaling plotted benthic populations as separate
groups each year. These groups were not the result of a gradual shift in
benthic fauna from an estuarine towards a freshwater bias. Rather, the upper
estuarine reaches were dominated by taxa characteristic of freshwater
environments, despite similar water quality conditions along all reaches.
Three quarters of the zoobenthic communities (expressed as density
m–2) were still estuarine in nature. The two
populations were comparable to those occurring in nearby freshwater coastal
lakes, which have been subject to marine influence in geological history. It
was concluded that assessment of the biological component in addition to the
physico-chemical properties should be considered when defining water quality
in such systems.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
15 articles.
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