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An ecological assessment of the Holsloot River, Western Cape, South Africa

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dc.contributor.advisor Brand, M. E. (Bokkie)
dc.contributor.advisor Brown, Leslie R.
dc.contributor.author Le Roux, Anso
dc.date.accessioned 2013-07-25T11:18:54Z
dc.date.available 2013-07-25T11:18:54Z
dc.date.issued 2013-02
dc.identifier.citation Le Roux, Anso (2013) An ecological assessment of the Holsloot River, Western Cape, South Africa, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10194> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10194
dc.description.abstract Human related activities have influenced the rivers of the southern Western Cape since as early as the 1700’s. As there is no detailed information available on ecological status of the Holsloot River, a tributary of the Breede River, this study aimed to gain insight into the effect of impacts associated with human activities on the habitat integrity of this river. The study intended to understand how seasonal changes, catchment characteristics and events are reflected in the ecological status of habitats along the river by applying bio-monitoring and river health measurements at selected sites in the upper, middle and lower reaches of the Holsloot River and compare the results to that of an undisturbed reference site. Results obtained in this study are compared with data gathered in 2008/2009 to determine if the ecological status of the river had changed in the period between the two sampling times. The study included assessment of the ecological status of the river based on standard bio-monitoring protocol (SASS5, IHI, IHAS and VEGRAI) as well as in situ water quality analysis (pH, dissolved oxygen, electrical conductivity and total dissolved solids). The construction of the instream Stettynskloof Dam changed the configuration of the riparian zone and river channel in the upper catchment area. Agricultural- and other human related activities, with consequent water abstraction, non-point-source pollution, loss of riparian vegetation, as well as dense stands of alien invader plants influence flow patterns and affects river ecology, especially in the dry summer months. Providing sufficient stream flow and adequate water levels, human related activities can create a larger variety of habitat types available that can support larger biodiversity and higher productivity. The level of inundation and stream flow, influenced by water abstraction as well as irrigation return-flow from extensive drainage systems especially in the dry months, contribute to the loss of biodiversity in the middle and lower reaches of the river. Where the upper reaches of the river are largely natural with few modifications, the habitat integrity deteriorates in the middle reaches so much so that ecosystem functioning are collectively impaired in lower reaches due to human related impacts. Sensitive macro-invertebrates found at lower seriously impacted parts of the river however, were in all probability washed down from lower impacted upstream habitats and may expectedly be able to again occupy habitats downstream if water quality and habitat availability improves. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvii, 208 leaves) : color illustrations, color maps, color graphs en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.rights University of South Africa en
dc.subject Holsloot River en
dc.subject Ecological status en
dc.subject Habitat integrity en
dc.subject Catchment characteristics en
dc.subject Bio-monitoring en
dc.subject Water quality en
dc.subject Agriculture en
dc.subject Water abstraction en
dc.subject Pollution en
dc.subject Alien plant invasion en
dc.subject Loss of riparian vegetation en
dc.subject.ddc 577.6427096873
dc.subject.lcsh Stream ecology -- South Africa -- Western Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Environmental impact analysis -- South Africa -- Western Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Environmental risk assessment -- South Africa -- Western Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Ecological assessment (Biology) -- South Africa -- Western Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Holsloot River (Western Cape, South Africa) en
dc.title An ecological assessment of the Holsloot River, Western Cape, South Africa en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Environmental Sciences en
dc.description.degree M. Sc. (Environmental Science)


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