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  1. Responses of primary producers to mouth closure in the temporarily open/closed Great Brak Estuary in the warm-temperate region of South Africa

    Responses of primary producers to mouth closure in the temporarily open/closed Great Brak Estuary in the warm-temperate region of South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of Aquatic Science • Authors: M Nunes --- Department of Botany, South Africa JB Adams --- Department of Botany, South Africa
    Low river inflow conditions during 2009/2010 resulted in the mouth of the Great Brak Estuary remaining closed for almost two years. The low water level in Wolwedans Dam resulted in no annual environmental flow releases being made, causing mouth closure...
  2. Sublittoral seaweed communities on natural and artificial substrata in a high-latitude coral community in South Africa

    Sublittoral seaweed communities on natural and artificial substrata in a high-latitude coral community in South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of Marine Science • Authors: L Gersun --- Department of Biological Sciences and Marine Research Institute, South Africa RJ Anderson --- Department of Biological Sciences and Marine Research Institute, South Africa JR Hart --- Oceanographic Research Institute, South Africa GW Maneveldt --- Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, South Africa JJ Bolton --- Department of Biological Sciences and Marine Research Institute, South Africa
    Coral mortality may result in macroalgal proliferation or a phase shift into an alga-dominated state. Subtidal, high-latitude western Indian Ocean coral communities at Sodwana Bay on the KwaZulu-Natal coast, South Africa, have experienced some mortality because of warm-water anomalies, storms...
  3. Diatoms associated with two South African kelp species: <em>Ecklonia maxima</em> and <em>Laminaria pallida</em>

    Diatoms associated with two South African kelp species: Ecklonia maxima and Laminaria pallida

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of Marine Science • Authors: NAS Mayombo --- Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, South Africa R Majewska --- Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management, School of Biological Sciences, South Africa AJ Smit --- Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, South Africa
    Kelp forests are believed to host a large biomass of epiphytic fauna and flora, including diatoms, which constitute the base of aquatic food webs and play an important role in the transfer of energy to higher trophic levels. Epiphytic diatom...
  4. Nutrient enrichment as a threat to the ecological resilience and health of South African microtidal estuaries

    Nutrient enrichment as a threat to the ecological resilience and health of South African microtidal estuaries

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of Aquatic Science • Authors: JB Adams --- DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems, South Africa S Taljaard --- DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems, South Africa L van Niekerk --- DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems, South Africa DA Lemley --- DST/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems, South Africa
    Nutrient pollution in South African estuaries is described using a Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response framework. The root cause (‘driver’) of deteriorating water quality is rapid population growth that leads to increasing inputs from wastewater treatment works (WWTWs), stormwater run-off and agricultural return flow...
  5. The grazer <em>Cymbula oculus</em> (Patellogastropoda: Patellidae) serves as an important settlement substrate for several of its macroalgal prey

    The grazer Cymbula oculus (Patellogastropoda: Patellidae) serves as an important settlement substrate for several of its macroalgal prey

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of Marine Science • Authors: W Moosa --- University of the Western Cape, South Africa J Phillips --- University of the Western Cape, South Africa GW Maneveldt --- University of the Western Cape, South Africa
    Intertidal communities are predictably affected by both physical and biological factors, with herbivory as a particularly important factor. Instead of dense beds of macroalgae, which typically characterise the mid-eulittoral zone along the south coast of South Africa, at Kalk Bay...