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Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park

There have been no quantitative studies of fish species associated with the submarine canyons of the north east coast of South Africa. These canyons offer protection to coelacanths Latimeria chalumnae, fish of commercial importance, and a number of protected and endemic species. A fish survey was co...

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Main Author: Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
Other Authors: Attwood, Colin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
author2 Attwood, Colin
author_browse Attwood, Colin
Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
author_facet Attwood, Colin
Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
author_sort Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
collection Thesis
description There have been no quantitative studies of fish species associated with the submarine canyons of the north east coast of South Africa. These canyons offer protection to coelacanths Latimeria chalumnae, fish of commercial importance, and a number of protected and endemic species. A fish survey was conducted by remotely operated vehicle (ROV) that captured video footage at depths between 60 m and 160 m. Seven canyons (Island Rock, South Island Rock, Wright, Jesser, Diepgat, Leadsman and Chaka) and one deep reef (Diepgat Deep Reef) spread along 78 km of shelf break were surveyed. Fish were identified and counted in 1143 30-second video segments. Patterns in diversity and abundance were investigated with respect to canyon, depth, and habitat type. The survey found 52 fish species from 23 families. The families Serranidae and Sparidae were well represented. The first submarine images of the critically endangered Seventy†Four seabream are particularly noteworthy. Only three Myliobatidae species represented the Chondrichthyans. Variation in Shannon-Wiener species diversity (H') was influenced by the diversity of habitat (Kruskall†Wallis p<0,0001) and depths (Kruskall†Wallis p<0,0001). Mann†Whitney post hoc tests showed cave to have a higher H' than sandy plain (p<0,001) and wall (p<0,001). H' for margin was greater than sandy plain (p=0,001) and wall (p<0,001). H' for rock outcrop was greater than sandy plain (p=0,006). Fish diversity increased with increasing depth until 90m, thereafter diversity decreased with subsequent depths. Habitat (Permanova p=0,0031) had the strongest influence on fish community composition. No north†south separation in terms of fish diversity (H') among canyons was detected. The results were consistent with similar studies. All canyons were adequately sampled as the rate of discovery of additional species per sample was ≤1%. A minimum of 80 30-second samples per canyon is recommended to survey fish. The survey methods employed during this study are recommended for surveying deep reef fish to allow for meaningful comparative studies.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15512
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:40:16.181Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
publisherStr Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15512 Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park Geldenhuys, Dale Adam Attwood, Colin Sink, Kerry J Applied Marine Science There have been no quantitative studies of fish species associated with the submarine canyons of the north east coast of South Africa. These canyons offer protection to coelacanths Latimeria chalumnae, fish of commercial importance, and a number of protected and endemic species. A fish survey was conducted by remotely operated vehicle (ROV) that captured video footage at depths between 60 m and 160 m. Seven canyons (Island Rock, South Island Rock, Wright, Jesser, Diepgat, Leadsman and Chaka) and one deep reef (Diepgat Deep Reef) spread along 78 km of shelf break were surveyed. Fish were identified and counted in 1143 30-second video segments. Patterns in diversity and abundance were investigated with respect to canyon, depth, and habitat type. The survey found 52 fish species from 23 families. The families Serranidae and Sparidae were well represented. The first submarine images of the critically endangered Seventy†Four seabream are particularly noteworthy. Only three Myliobatidae species represented the Chondrichthyans. Variation in Shannon-Wiener species diversity (H') was influenced by the diversity of habitat (Kruskall†Wallis p<0,0001) and depths (Kruskall†Wallis p<0,0001). Mann†Whitney post hoc tests showed cave to have a higher H' than sandy plain (p<0,001) and wall (p<0,001). H' for margin was greater than sandy plain (p=0,001) and wall (p<0,001). H' for rock outcrop was greater than sandy plain (p=0,006). Fish diversity increased with increasing depth until 90m, thereafter diversity decreased with subsequent depths. Habitat (Permanova p=0,0031) had the strongest influence on fish community composition. No north†south separation in terms of fish diversity (H') among canyons was detected. The results were consistent with similar studies. All canyons were adequately sampled as the rate of discovery of additional species per sample was ≤1%. A minimum of 80 30-second samples per canyon is recommended to survey fish. The survey methods employed during this study are recommended for surveying deep reef fish to allow for meaningful comparative studies. 2015-12-02T12:03:38Z 2015-12-02T12:03:38Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15512 eng application/pdf Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Applied Marine Science
Geldenhuys, Dale Adam
Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
title_full Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
title_fullStr Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
title_short Quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park
title_sort quantitative fish survey of the submarine canyons of the isimangaliso wetland park
topic Applied Marine Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15512
work_keys_str_mv AT geldenhuysdaleadam quantitativefishsurveyofthesubmarinecanyonsoftheisimangalisowetlandpark