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Distribution of epifauna in offshore benthic environments along the west and south coast of South Africa

Marine unconsolidated sediments, such as sand, gravel and muds, constitute the most extensive benthic ecosystems globally. Biological data for these ecosystems are frequently sparse which can hinder the success and implementation of marine management strategies for benthic ecosystems. There are limited studies in South Africa on benthic epifauna. This study investigates the composition and distribution of epibenthic invertebrate assemblages along the west and south coast of South Africa (sampled using depth-stratified demersal trawls) to inform marine environmental management. Sample depth varied from 36m to 899m. Multivariate tools (PRIMER and PERMANOVA+) were used to analyse spatial (west vs south coast) and temporal (2011 vs 2017) patterns in epifauna. This study also investigated an overlap region between the west and south coast. A group average linkage cluster analysis defined biotopes using significant branching (p< 0.05). Biotopes were compared against the
2012 National Biodiversity Assessment (NBA) benthic habitat map to investigate
whether epifaunal biotopes identified, align with the existing classification. A significant
difference among epifauna between region and depth was found, where the west
coast had a higher average number of individuals and species per station.
Sympagarus dimorphus and Pelagia noctiluca were characteristic species for west
and south coast respectively. Epifauna was found to be significantly different between
2011 and 2017, with a notable increase in the abundance of Crossaster penicillatus in
2017. The majority of the biotopes aligned with the current NBA classification, in
particular the Agulhas Sandy Shelf Edge ecosystem type on the south coast and South
Atlantic Upper Bathyal and Namaqua Muddy Inner Shelf ecosystem types on the west
coast. This thesis contributes to the mapping and description of offshore ecosystem
types to inform marine environmental impact assessments, marine spatial planning
and marine protected area expansion.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uct/oai:localhost:11427/29715
Date22 February 2019
CreatorsShah, Aliya
ContributorsAtkinson, Lara, Sink, Kerry, Reed, Cecile
PublisherUniversity of Cape Town, Faculty of Science, Department of Biological Sciences
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeMasters Thesis, Masters, MSc
Formatapplication/pdf

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