Title of article :
What limits the distribution of subtidal macrobenthos in permanently open and temporarily open/closed South African estuaries? Salinity vs. sediment particle size
Author/Authors :
Peter R. Teske، نويسنده , , Tris H. Wooldridge، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Thirteen estuaries in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa, were assigned to one of four types of estuaries (river-dominated
permanently open, marine-dominated permanently open, medium-sized temporarily open/closed and small temporarily open/
closed), and macrobenthic zonation patterns were compared using multivariate statistics. Three major habitat zones were identified:
two relating to substrate (a sand zone and a mud zone), and a third zone characterised by water of low salinity ( 2.2). These zones
are inhabited by four major groups of macrobenthos. The distribution of two of these (estuarine endemic sand fauna and estuarine
endemic mud fauna) is limited by the nature of the substratum, whereas the distribution of the other two (fauna originating from the
marine habitat and oligohaline fauna) is limited by salinity. Estuarine endemics were present in all four types of estuaries. Marine
fauna was numerically important only in permanently open systems, while oligohaline fauna was abundant only in the upper reaches
of river dominated open systems. Medium-sized temporarily open/closed estuaries lacked both marine and oligohaline forms, but
these were present to a limited extent in small temporarily open/closed estuaries. Hence, salinity is not the primary environmental
variable determining zonation patterns in Eastern Cape estuaries, and particularly in temporarily open/closed estuaries, it is of minor
importance.
Keywords :
zonation patterns , estuarine endemic fauna , salinity , Substrate , Estuary , South Africa , Macrobenthos
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science