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The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream

The world-wide proliferation of dams in the last few decades has necessitated a fuller understanding of the effects of stream regulation but has also provided a setting for testing and developing basic theories of stream ecology. Two important concepts in stream ecology, the River Continuum Concept...

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Main Author: Gale, Barbara Ann
Other Authors: Davies, Bryan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gale, Barbara Ann
author2 Davies, Bryan
author_browse Davies, Bryan
Gale, Barbara Ann
author_facet Davies, Bryan
Gale, Barbara Ann
author_sort Gale, Barbara Ann
collection Thesis
description The world-wide proliferation of dams in the last few decades has necessitated a fuller understanding of the effects of stream regulation but has also provided a setting for testing and developing basic theories of stream ecology. Two important concepts in stream ecology, the River Continuum Concept (RCC) and the Serial Discontinuity Concept (SOC), required investigation as to their applicability to entire river systems in the Southern Hemisphere. The RCC hypothesises that biological communities are structured in a predictable fashion from the source to the mouth of a river in relation to physical environmental gradients along the stream continuum. The SOC proposes that a major impoundment at any position on a river system will cause a longitudinal shift in a given parameter (physical or biological) which will cause a discontinuity in the stream continuum. A certain distance is then required for the stream to return to its normal position in the continuum, and this is termed a 'discontinuity distance'. The effect of regulation by multiple impoundment on the 'discontinuity' (recovery) 'distances' for various physical, chemical and biological attributes of the Palmiet River (a short, steep gradient, cool, acid, low nutrient system) was investigated in a two-year study. Two zones of the river were identified for study: one below an upper-reach impoundment, Nuweberg, and one below a middle-reach impoundment, Arieskraal, as they provided sufficiently long stretches of unperturbed river (7 km and 37 km) over which recovery distances could be investigated. Sampling was undertaken monthly for 27 months from February 1986 to April 1988. Eleven sites were chosen along the length of the river: one in the pristine upper reaches, one site above and 3 sites below Nuweberg, a site on the river as it passes through the village of Grabouw, one site above and three sites below Arieskraal and a site on a tributary, the Klein Palmiet, from which water is abstracted into Arieskraal. The values of the variables downstream of the impoundment are said to increase or decrease with respect to the "above-impoundment" value. Median temperatures, pH and alkalinity increased below Nuweberg, but decreased below Arieskraal, whereas the converse was true for soluble reactive phosphate. Seasonal flow regime reversal occurred below Nuweberg and seasonal flow constancy below Arieskraal; there were seasonal shifts in temperature and a dampening of the annual temperature range below both impoundments; and seasonal shifts in alkalinity below Arieskraal. At least partial recovery was noted in all cases, but in some instances, recovery was incomplete to the estuary.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22130 The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream Gale, Barbara Ann Davies, Bryan Zoology The world-wide proliferation of dams in the last few decades has necessitated a fuller understanding of the effects of stream regulation but has also provided a setting for testing and developing basic theories of stream ecology. Two important concepts in stream ecology, the River Continuum Concept (RCC) and the Serial Discontinuity Concept (SOC), required investigation as to their applicability to entire river systems in the Southern Hemisphere. The RCC hypothesises that biological communities are structured in a predictable fashion from the source to the mouth of a river in relation to physical environmental gradients along the stream continuum. The SOC proposes that a major impoundment at any position on a river system will cause a longitudinal shift in a given parameter (physical or biological) which will cause a discontinuity in the stream continuum. A certain distance is then required for the stream to return to its normal position in the continuum, and this is termed a 'discontinuity distance'. The effect of regulation by multiple impoundment on the 'discontinuity' (recovery) 'distances' for various physical, chemical and biological attributes of the Palmiet River (a short, steep gradient, cool, acid, low nutrient system) was investigated in a two-year study. Two zones of the river were identified for study: one below an upper-reach impoundment, Nuweberg, and one below a middle-reach impoundment, Arieskraal, as they provided sufficiently long stretches of unperturbed river (7 km and 37 km) over which recovery distances could be investigated. Sampling was undertaken monthly for 27 months from February 1986 to April 1988. Eleven sites were chosen along the length of the river: one in the pristine upper reaches, one site above and 3 sites below Nuweberg, a site on the river as it passes through the village of Grabouw, one site above and three sites below Arieskraal and a site on a tributary, the Klein Palmiet, from which water is abstracted into Arieskraal. The values of the variables downstream of the impoundment are said to increase or decrease with respect to the "above-impoundment" value. Median temperatures, pH and alkalinity increased below Nuweberg, but decreased below Arieskraal, whereas the converse was true for soluble reactive phosphate. Seasonal flow regime reversal occurred below Nuweberg and seasonal flow constancy below Arieskraal; there were seasonal shifts in temperature and a dampening of the annual temperature range below both impoundments; and seasonal shifts in alkalinity below Arieskraal. At least partial recovery was noted in all cases, but in some instances, recovery was incomplete to the estuary. 2016-10-14T06:26:30Z 2016-10-14T06:26:30Z 1992 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22130 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Zoology
Gale, Barbara Ann
The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
title_full The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
title_fullStr The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
title_full_unstemmed The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
title_short The effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid, blackwater, Cape mountain stream
title_sort effect of regulation by two impoundments on an acid blackwater cape mountain stream
topic Zoology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22130
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