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Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland

Globally, wetlands are being degraded and destroyed largely as a result of anthropogenic activity. Monitoring and assessment are required to maintain functional ecosystems and the valuable services they provide. Surface sediment cores were taken from 4 points around an urban wetland (Princess Vlei)...

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Main Author: Cowan, Oliver
Other Authors: Meadows, Michael E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Cowan, Oliver
author2 Meadows, Michael E
author_browse Cowan, Oliver
Meadows, Michael E
author_facet Meadows, Michael E
Cowan, Oliver
author_sort Cowan, Oliver
collection Thesis
description Globally, wetlands are being degraded and destroyed largely as a result of anthropogenic activity. Monitoring and assessment are required to maintain functional ecosystems and the valuable services they provide. Surface sediment cores were taken from 4 points around an urban wetland (Princess Vlei) on the Cape Flats, Cape Town, South Africa. Diatoms were and used as a proxy for water quality variables to determine whether the diatom flora preserved in organic sediments accumulating in and around an urban wetland is a useful tool in determining the changes in water quality over time. In addition, the project attempts to establish whether there are spatial patterns in diatom flora within a small lake. Diatoms from three depths from each of the four sites were identified, counted and analyzed according to their trophic preferences and pollution tolerances which were acquired from a variety of resources. Results showed clear spatial differences between sites as a result of positioning in relation to effluent input, output and specific site characteristics such as reed stands. Differences between depths were evident although no significant trends were observed. In summation; spatial heterogeneity in the diatom assemblage of an urban wetland reveal that diatoms are suitable indicators of water quality, even within a small system, due to their niche specificity. The project also shows that Princess Vlei remains a eutrophic and polluted wetland, although not uniformly so. Continual monitoring is required to prevent the vlei from becoming a health hazard for the surrounding community and to maintain its ability to act as a buffering zone to protect the Rondevlei nature reserve, as well as acting as a functional ecosystem in an area threatened by urbanization.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:52.713Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24854 Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland Cowan, Oliver Meadows, Michael E Kirsten, Kelly Botany Globally, wetlands are being degraded and destroyed largely as a result of anthropogenic activity. Monitoring and assessment are required to maintain functional ecosystems and the valuable services they provide. Surface sediment cores were taken from 4 points around an urban wetland (Princess Vlei) on the Cape Flats, Cape Town, South Africa. Diatoms were and used as a proxy for water quality variables to determine whether the diatom flora preserved in organic sediments accumulating in and around an urban wetland is a useful tool in determining the changes in water quality over time. In addition, the project attempts to establish whether there are spatial patterns in diatom flora within a small lake. Diatoms from three depths from each of the four sites were identified, counted and analyzed according to their trophic preferences and pollution tolerances which were acquired from a variety of resources. Results showed clear spatial differences between sites as a result of positioning in relation to effluent input, output and specific site characteristics such as reed stands. Differences between depths were evident although no significant trends were observed. In summation; spatial heterogeneity in the diatom assemblage of an urban wetland reveal that diatoms are suitable indicators of water quality, even within a small system, due to their niche specificity. The project also shows that Princess Vlei remains a eutrophic and polluted wetland, although not uniformly so. Continual monitoring is required to prevent the vlei from becoming a health hazard for the surrounding community and to maintain its ability to act as a buffering zone to protect the Rondevlei nature reserve, as well as acting as a functional ecosystem in an area threatened by urbanization. 2017-08-08T06:49:03Z 2017-08-08T06:49:03Z 2010 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons.) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24854 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Cowan, Oliver
Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
title_full Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
title_fullStr Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
title_full_unstemmed Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
title_short Princess Vlei : what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
title_sort princess vlei what diatoms can tell us about spatial and temporal heterogeneity in an urban wetland
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24854
work_keys_str_mv AT cowanoliver princessvleiwhatdiatomscantellusaboutspatialandtemporalheterogeneityinanurbanwetland