Latitudinal gradients and poleward expansion of mangrove ecosystems in South Africa: 50 years after Macnae’s first assessment

Review

Latitudinal gradients and poleward expansion of mangrove ecosystems in South Africa: 50 years after Macnae’s first assessment

Published in: African Journal of Marine Science
Volume 40 , issue 2 , 2018 , pages: 101–120
DOI: 10.2989/1814232X.2018.1466728
Author(s): N Peer DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow-Water Ecosystems, South Africa , A Rajkaran Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, South Africa , NAF Miranda DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow-Water Ecosystems, South Africa , RH Taylor Department of Hydrology, South Africa , B Newman CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment, South Africa , F Porri South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), South Africa , JL Raw Department of Botany, South Africa , SP Mbense Department of Botany, South Africa , JB Adams Department of Botany, South Africa , R Perissinotto DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow-Water Ecosystems, South Africa

Abstract

Mangroves occur in South African estuaries at their poleward distribution limits, extending into temperate habitats. In 1963, William Macnae published the first comprehensive assessment of mangrove swamps in South Africa and made firsthand observations of these mangrove ecosystems. This article reassesses South African mangrove habitats, highlighting changes since Macnae’s assessment, through a literature review of research done in the past 50 years and using the results of a dedicated mangrove survey spanning 2012–2017. Until now, changes have been recorded mostly for mangrove vegetation, including a change in mangrove cover and a poleward shift of mangrove species. While some mangrove-associated fauna have disappeared from most sites (e.g. the gastropod Terebralia palustris), others, such as fiddler crabs, have spread farther south. The effects of decreasing diversity with an increase in latitude were not observed along the South African coast. Instead, habitat quality and estuarine mouth state seem to exert greater influence on species diversity in the mangroves, and a poleward shift in species distribution is now evident not just for the mangrove flora but for the fauna as well. South African mangrove research needs to include a continuous monitoring plan, especially if we are to contribute to global knowledge on blue carbon, the effects of sea-level rise, and the resilience of the mangrove ecosystem.

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