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Institution

Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism

About: Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Fishing. The organization has 108 authors who have published 176 publications receiving 7502 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
07 Oct 2005-Science
TL;DR: Electronic tag and photographic identification data show a complex suite of behavioral patterns in white sharks that contradict previous ideas that female white sharks do not make transoceanic migrations, and they suggest natal homing behavior.
Abstract: The large-scale spatial dynamics and population structure of marine top predators are poorly known. We present electronic tag and photographic identification data showing a complex suite of behavioral patterns in white sharks. These include coastal return migrations and the fastest known transoceanic return migration among swimming fauna, which provide direct evidence of a link between widely separated populations in South Africa and Australia. Transoceanic return migration involved a return to the original capture location, dives to depths of 980 meters, and the tolerance of water temperatures as low as 3.4°C. These findings contradict previous ideas that female white sharks do not make transoceanic migrations, and they suggest natal homing behavior.

424 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main thrust or conclusion of this paper is that jellyfish biomass in the Benguela now exceeds that of once prolific finfish, because the recent estimates of fish and jelly fish biomass are from the own observations and not the interpretation of FAO data.

334 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To inform and implement policies that support an integrated approach to water management, as well as to measure progress in halting the rapid decline in freshwater species, basin-level indicators describing the condition and threats to freshwater ecosystems and species are required.
Abstract: Human activities have severely affected the condition of freshwater ecosystems worldwide. Physical alteration, habitat loss, water withdrawal, pollution, overexploitation and the introduction of nonnative species all contribute to the decline in freshwater species. Today, freshwater species are, in general, at higher risk of extinction than those in forests, grasslands and coastal ecosystems. For North America alone, the projected extinction rate for freshwater fauna is five times greater than that for terrestrial fauna—a rate comparable to the species loss in tropical rainforest. Because many of these extinctions go unseen, the level of assessment and knowledge of the status and trends of freshwater species are still very poor, with species going extinct before they are even taxonomically classified. Increasing human population growth and achieving the sustainable development targets set forth in 2002 will place even higher demands on the already stressed freshwater ecosystems, unless an integrated approach to managing water for people and ecosystems is implemented by a broad constituency. To inform and implement policies that support an integrated approach to water management, as well as to measure progress in halting the rapid decline in freshwater species, basinlevel indicators describing the condition and threats to freshwater ecosystems and species are required. This paper discusses the extent and quality of data available on the number and size of populations of freshwater species, as well as the change in the extent and condition of natural freshwater habitats. The paper presents indicators that can be applied at multiple scales, highlighting the usefulness of using remote sensing and geographical information systems technologies to fill some of the existing information gaps. Finally, the paper includes an analysis of major data gaps and information needs with respect to freshwater species to measure progress towards the 2010 biodiversity targets.

304 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an overview of regime shifts, species replacements and alternations that have been observed in the northern and southern Benguela ecosystems over the past few decades is provided.

223 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a detailed study of foraging Cape gannets Morus capensis and of their feeding environment in the Benguela upwelling zone was conducted. And the authors showed that non-breeding birds can survive when complementing their diet with fishery wastes, but they struggle to reproduce if live prey is scarce.
Abstract: Worldwide fisheries generate large volumes of fishery waste and it is often assumed that this additional food is beneficial to populations of marine top-predators. We challenge this concept via a detailed study of foraging Cape gannets Morus capensis and of their feeding environment in the Benguela upwelling zone. The natural prey of Cape gannets (pelagic fishes) is depleted and birds now feed extensively on fishery wastes. These are beneficial to non-breeding birds, which show reduced feeding effort and high survival. By contrast, breeding gannets double their diving effort in an attempt to provision their chicks predominantly with high-quality, live pelagic fishes. Owing to a scarcity of this resource, they fail and most chicks die. Our study supports the junk-food hypothesis for Cape gannets since it shows that non-breeding birds can survive when complementing their diet with fishery wastes, but that they struggle to reproduce if live prey is scarce. This is due to the negative impact of low-quality fishery wastes on the growth patterns of gannet chicks. Marine management policies should not assume that fishery waste is generally beneficial to scavenging seabirds and that an abundance of this artificial resource will automatically inflate their populations.

214 citations


Authors

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20121
20111
201012
200914
200826
200721