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  Journal > Kluwer Publishers - Table of Contents > Volume 5 Issue 1 > Abstract
 


A qualitative procedure for the assessment of the habitat integrity status of the Luvuvhu River (Limpopo system, South Africa)

C. J. Kleynhans

Institute for Water Quality Studies, Department of Water Affairs and Forestry,
Private Bag X 313, Pretoria 0001, South Africa

Received 1 November 1994; accepted in revised form 15 September 1995

Abstract

  The riparian zone and instream habitat integrity of the Luvuvhu River were assessed based on a qualitative rating of the impacts of major disturbance factors such as water abstraction, flow regulation, bed and channel modification, etc. A system was devised to assess the impact of these factors on the relative frequency and variability of habitats on a spatial and temporal scale gauged against habitat characteristics that could have been expected to occur under conditions not anthropogenically influenced. It was found that deterioration of habitat integrity can be ascribed primarily to water abstraction. This has resulted in the cessation of surface flow in a naturally perennial river during the dry season and during droughts with consequent tree deaths and a loss of fast flowing instream habitat types in the main stem of the river. The relatively small high rainfall area in the catchment, the highly variable rainfall pattern and the occurrence of sporadic severe droughts exacerbate the impact of water abstraction on the instream and riparian habitats with expected detrimental consequences for the associated biota. The effect of water abstraction is particularly severe in the lower part of the river which flows through the Kruger National Park as no perennial tributaries join the Luvuvhu River in this section. Other factors which affect the habitat integrity of the river are the removal of indigenous riparian vegetation in some river sections, encroachment by exotic vegetation, bank erosion and stream bed modification.


Keywords: biotic integrity, ecological integrity, instream, riparian

Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Health: 5 (1); 41-54
 

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