Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape

Estuarine systems are characterised by relatively high levels of salinity due to their connection with the sea. Zandvlei has been victim too much manipulation for the sake of flood prevention, recreation and water level regulation. One of the largest impacts on the system is the rubble weir placed a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hawley, Greer
Other Authors: Bolton, John J
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26027
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-260272020-07-22T05:07:35Z Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape Hawley, Greer Bolton, John J Botany Estuarine systems are characterised by relatively high levels of salinity due to their connection with the sea. Zandvlei has been victim too much manipulation for the sake of flood prevention, recreation and water level regulation. One of the largest impacts on the system is the rubble weir placed at the mouth of the outlet channel that was built to maintain water levels in the drier summer months. There is evidence that the salinity in the estuary is declining, as the weir inhibits sufficient tidal ingress. Resultant consequences include encouraging the growth of alien invasive weeds, the decline of indigenous aquatic fauna and flora, and a shift in ecosystem functioning. Plans to increase the circulation of seawater have already been proved to be necessary, but the process needs to be monitored. Diatoms are used regularly in Europe to monitor water quality in terms of eutrophication and pollution. This study attempts to describe the change in diatom composition after the mouth has been manually opened, in terms of the influencing factors, namely salinity and temperature. The species response was found to be a shift in species dominance rather than a species turnover. Key indicator species were distinguished by the response to salinity. Diatoms can also be informative of the stability of the Vlei and therefore act as a valuable tool for monitoring purposes. 2017-11-07T09:57:41Z 2017-11-07T09:57:41Z 1999 2017-02-22T12:36:28Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26027 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Botany
spellingShingle Botany
Hawley, Greer
Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
description Estuarine systems are characterised by relatively high levels of salinity due to their connection with the sea. Zandvlei has been victim too much manipulation for the sake of flood prevention, recreation and water level regulation. One of the largest impacts on the system is the rubble weir placed at the mouth of the outlet channel that was built to maintain water levels in the drier summer months. There is evidence that the salinity in the estuary is declining, as the weir inhibits sufficient tidal ingress. Resultant consequences include encouraging the growth of alien invasive weeds, the decline of indigenous aquatic fauna and flora, and a shift in ecosystem functioning. Plans to increase the circulation of seawater have already been proved to be necessary, but the process needs to be monitored. Diatoms are used regularly in Europe to monitor water quality in terms of eutrophication and pollution. This study attempts to describe the change in diatom composition after the mouth has been manually opened, in terms of the influencing factors, namely salinity and temperature. The species response was found to be a shift in species dominance rather than a species turnover. Key indicator species were distinguished by the response to salinity. Diatoms can also be informative of the stability of the Vlei and therefore act as a valuable tool for monitoring purposes.
author2 Bolton, John J
author_facet Bolton, John J
Hawley, Greer
author Hawley, Greer
author_sort Hawley, Greer
title Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
title_short Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
title_full Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
title_fullStr Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
title_full_unstemmed Diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, Zandvlei, in the southern Cape
title_sort diatoms : indicators of tidal influx in a hydraulically regulated estuary, zandvlei, in the southern cape
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26027
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