4.0 Article

Disaggregation and assessment of estuarine pressures at the country-level to better inform management and resource protection - the South African experience

Journal

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF AQUATIC SCIENCE
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 127-148

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.2989/16085914.2022.2041388

Keywords

flow modification; land-use and development; inlet manipulation; artificial breaching pollution; exploitation; biological invasions; artificial breaching; management responses

Funding

  1. DSI CSIR Parliamentary Grant
  2. NMU
  3. DFFE
  4. ORI
  5. DSI/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems [84375]
  6. South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI)
  7. Water Research Commission (WRC)

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Globally, estuaries are facing rapid deterioration in functionality and productivity due to increasing anthropogenic pressures. This study presents a systematic approach to identify, characterize, and rank the global pressures affecting estuaries. The study identifies six main pressure categories and evaluates their effects across different regions and estuary types. It also provides recommendations for management interventions and identifies future research directions.
Globally, the ability of estuaries to sustain functionality and productivity is deteriorating rapidly under ever-increasing anthropogenic pressures. We present a systematic approach to identify, characterise and rank global pressures affecting estuaries. Six main pressure categories are reviewed: freshwater flow modification; pollution; exploitation of fish and invertebrates; land-use and development; manipulation of inlets; and biological invasions (plants and fish). Patterns in pressure effects are evaluated across biogeographic regions and estuary types. Activities contributing to these pressures are identified to prioritise management interventions and assessments of the trajectories of change and data availability are estimated, with associated confidence ratings on these. Approximately 15% of national estuarine area is under severe flow modification pressure. Land-use and development result in severe pressures on 40% of the area. Approximately 15% of inlets are artificially manipulated, which affects 60% of estuarine area. Pollution places 34% of the area under severe pressure and 78% of the area is severely impacted by overfishing. Invasive terrestrial vegetation has infested a third of South African estuaries, and aquatic invasive plant species occur in at least 8% of estuaries. Alien or extralimital (translocated) fish cause severe pressure in 35% of the estuaries. Management responses to mitigate these impacts are recommended for systems under severe pressure and future research directions are identified.

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