1954
DOI: 10.1080/00359195409518983
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The Ecology of South African Estuaries

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Cited by 36 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Faunal lists from St Lucia (DAY et al, 1954;MILLARD and BBOEKHUYSEN, 1970) were compared with the three other major Natal estuarine systems, Kosi Bay (BROEKHUYSEN and TAYLOR, 1959;WHITFIELO, 1980), Richards Bay (MILLARD and HARRISON, 1954) and Durban Bay (DAY and MORGANS, 1956) (Table 2). Durban Bay, although now severely impacted by harbour development, was at one stage very much richer in species than other Natal coastal bodies of water.…”
Section: -Species Diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Faunal lists from St Lucia (DAY et al, 1954;MILLARD and BBOEKHUYSEN, 1970) were compared with the three other major Natal estuarine systems, Kosi Bay (BROEKHUYSEN and TAYLOR, 1959;WHITFIELO, 1980), Richards Bay (MILLARD and HARRISON, 1954) and Durban Bay (DAY and MORGANS, 1956) (Table 2). Durban Bay, although now severely impacted by harbour development, was at one stage very much richer in species than other Natal coastal bodies of water.…”
Section: -Species Diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Before harbour construction the system functioned as an estuarine lake, according to the classification by Whitfield (1992), and had a 'normal salinity gradient' from the mouth to the river inlets (Millard and Harrison 1954). Grindley and Wooldridge (1974) reported similar conditions during the period 1970-1971, just before construction of the harbour commenced.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two smaller rivers, the Bhizolo and Manzinyama, opened into the western end of the original estuary. The rivers drained through extensive reed swamps (Millard and Harrison 1954).…”
Section: Manuscript Received January 2006; Accepted October 2007mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both are considered artificial owing to extensive dredging activities at the harbour mouths and within the harbour areas (Whitfield 1998). Richards Bay was regarded as an estuarine lake (Millard and Harrison 1954), but after the development of the commercial harbour its characteristics changed to those of a marine-dominated estuarine embayment (Begg 1978). This change affected the fauna and flora of the harbour by reducing the shallow areas, nutritive substrates, marginal vegetation, eelgrass beds and mangroves, and the widening of the harbour mouth also allowed an increase in tidal flow into the harbour (Begg 1978).…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%