Fish community of a small, temperate, urban river in South Africa

Authors

  • C Muller Zoology Department, PO Box 77000, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth 6031, South Africa
  • NA Strydom Zoology Department, PO Box 77000, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth 6031, South Africa
  • OLF Weyl 1. South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), Private Bag 1015, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa; 2. Centre for Invasion Biology, SAIAB, Private Bag 1015, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/wsa.v41i5.17

Keywords:

Baakens River, migration barrier, weir, alien fish, endangered fish

Abstract

Freshwater and marine-spawned fishes were sampled from the Baakens River, a small urban river that runs through the city of Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. Using fyke nets, 8 sites were sampled along the river course over a 4-month period (January – April 2014). Catches were comprised of indigenous freshwater, marine migrant and alien fishes. Marine migrant fishes, including catadromous species dependent on freshwater for early life-history strategies, were significantly affected by instream barriers which prohibited upstream migration of all species except Anguilla mossambica. The freshwater fish fauna was dominated by Tilapia sparrmanii and Pseudocrenilabrus philander, species that are alien to the Baakens River. While indigenous Barbus pallidus and Sandelia capensis were both abundant and widely distributed in the river, only two Pseudobarbus afer were sampled from one survey site. The low abundance and narrow distribution of this endangered species is of concern and human-mediated impacts on this species require urgent evaluation and mitigation.

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Published

2015-10-29

Issue

Section

Research paper

How to Cite

C Muller, NA Strydom and OLF Weyl (2015) “Fish community of a small, temperate, urban river in South Africa”, Water SA, 41(5 October). doi:10.4314/wsa.v41i5.17.