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      Marine Biodiversity in South Africa: An Evaluation of Current States of Knowledge

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          Abstract

          Continental South Africa has a coastline of some 3,650 km and an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of just over 1 million km 2. Waters in the EEZ extend to a depth of 5,700 m, with more than 65% deeper than 2,000 m. Despite its status as a developing nation, South Africa has a relatively strong history of marine taxonomic research and maintains comprehensive and well-curated museum collections totaling over 291,000 records. Over 3 million locality records from more than 23,000 species have been lodged in the regional AfrOBIS (African Ocean Biogeographic Information System) data center (which stores data from a wider African region). A large number of regional guides to the marine fauna and flora are also available and are listed.

          The currently recorded marine biota of South Africa numbers at least 12,914 species, although many taxa, particularly those of small body size, remain poorly documented. The coastal zone is relatively well sampled with some 2,500 samples of benthic invertebrate communities have been taken by grab, dredge, or trawl. Almost none of these samples, however, were collected after 1980, and over 99% of existing samples are from depths shallower than 1,000 m—indeed 83% are from less than 100 m. The abyssal zone thus remains almost completely unexplored.

          South Africa has a fairly large industrial fishing industry, of which the largest fisheries are the pelagic (pilchard and anchovy) and demersal (hake) sectors, both focused on the west and south coasts. The east coast has fewer, smaller commercial fisheries, but a high coastal population density, resulting in intense exploitation of inshore resources by recreational and subsistence fishers, and this has resulted in the overexploitation of many coastal fish and invertebrate stocks. South Africa has a small aquaculture industry rearing mussels, oysters, prawns, and abalone—the latter two in land-based facilities.

          Compared with many other developing countries, South Africa has a well-conserved coastline, 23% of which is under formal protection, however deeper waters are almost entirely excluded from conservation areas. Marine pollution is confined mainly to the densely populated KwaZulu-Natal coast and the urban centers of Cape Town and Port Elizabeth. Over 120 introduced or cryptogenic marine species have been recorded, but most of these are confined to the few harbors and sheltered sites along the coast.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Role: Editor
          Journal
          PLoS One
          plos
          plosone
          PLoS ONE
          Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
          1932-6203
          2010
          2 August 2010
          : 5
          : 8
          : e12008
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Zoology Department, Marine Biology Research Centre, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa
          [2 ]Zoology Department, Centre for Invasion Biology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa
          Smithsonian's National Zoological Park, United States of America
          Author notes
          Article
          10-PONE-RW-16785R1
          10.1371/journal.pone.0012008
          2914023
          20689849
          00f6ce11-e452-4c2d-b42e-690d75aab6af
          Griffiths et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
          History
          : 23 February 2010
          : 7 July 2010
          Page count
          Pages: 13
          Categories
          Review
          Marine and Aquatic Sciences
          Marine and Aquatic Sciences/Biological Oceanography
          Marine and Aquatic Sciences/Historical Biology

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