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University of Port Elizabeth

About: University of Port Elizabeth is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Estuary. The organization has 1067 authors who have published 1538 publications receiving 38560 citations. The organization is also known as: UPE & Universiteit van Port Elizabeth.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The catch of the Sundays Estuary was investigated by monthly seine netting over a period of a year as mentioned in this paper, and the small clupeid Gilchristella aestuarius was numerically dominant and constituted 80% of the catch.
Abstract: The ichthyofauna of the Sundays Estuary was investigated by monthly seine netting over a period of a year. Forty-seven species were captured though 23 of these were represented by a total catch of less than 25 specimens each. The small clupeidGilchristella aestuarius was numerically dominant and constituted 80%, of the catch. The study confirms that in addition to this species, two species of goby,Caffrogobius multifasciatus andPsammogobius knysnaensis and the soleSolea bleekeri complete their life cycles in the estuary. Many other species such as mullet, utilize the estuary as a juvenile nursery area. First year juveniles ofRhabdosargus holubi, Lithognathus lithognathus, Pomadasys commersonni andMonodactylus falciformis, by virtue of their abundance in the Sundays Estuary and other South African estuaries, and their absence from other coastal environments, appear to be dependent on estuaries as juvenile nursery areas.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors track the development of community engagement in South African higher education through the CHESP initiative and identify some of the processes and outcomes at a programmatic, institutional and national level.
Abstract: Community engagement was a relatively unknown concept in South African higher education until the late 1990s. In response to the call of the White Paper on the Transformation of Higher Education (1997) for ‘feasibility studies and pilot programmes which explore the potential of community service in higher education’ the Joint Education Trust launched the Community – Higher Education – Service Partnerships (CHESP) initiative in 1999. The purpose of this initiative was to assist South African Higher Education Institutions to conceptualization and implementation community engagement as a core function of the academy. This article tracks the development of community engagement in South African higher education through the CHESP initiative and identifies some of the processes and outcomes at a programmatic, institutional and national level. The article includes four South African universities as case studies to illustrate the processes and outcomes of embedding community engagement in South African higher education.

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Long-term climatic stability, combined with topoclimatic and edaphic diversity and regular fire occurrence, is likely to be responsible for the remarkable geophyte diversity of the Cape, as compared to other mediterranean-climate regions.
Abstract: The Cape Region (here treated as the winter rainfall region of southern Africa, thus including fynbos, renosterveld and succulent karoo vegetation) is the world's foremost centre of geophyte diversity. Some 2100 species in 20 families have been recorded from this area, 84% of them endemic. The most important families, with more than a hundred geophyte species each, are Iridaceae, Oxalidaceae, Hyacinthaceae, Orchidaceae, Amaryllidaceae and Asphodelaceae. Although southern Africa does not appear to have been the main diversification centre for the plant orders with highest geophyte representation (Asparagales and Liliales), it represents an active centre of transition to geophytism, such transitions having occurred independently in numerous plant groups, often followed by rapid speciation. Several Cape geophyte groups have consequently expanded across Africa to the Mediterranean Basin, and possibly to other winter rainfall regions. Remarkably high local species diversity in renosterveld vegetation, even in relatively homogeneous environments, suggests that pollinator specificity and phenology play an important role in niche partitioning. However, character diversity is also high in storage organs and leaves, and this could account for the high species diversity values recorded at larger spatial scales, especially across environmental gradients. Long-term climatic stability, combined with topoclimatic and edaphic diversity and regular fire occurrence, is likely to be responsible for the remarkable geophyte diversity of the Cape, as compared to other mediterranean-climate regions. © 2006 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2006, 87, 27–43.

119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Addo elephants represent a genetic subset of the Kruger population, with high levels of genetic differentiation resulting from rapid genetic drift, confirming this population also suffered an appreciable bottleneck.
Abstract: Widespread hunting had fragmented and severely reduced elephant populations in South Africa by 1900. Elephant numbers increased during the 1900s, although rates of recovery of individual populations varied. The Kruger National Park elephant population increased rapidly, to more than 6000 by 1967, with recruitment boosted by immigration from Mozambique. The Addo Elephant National Park population was reduced to 11 elephants in 1931 and remains relatively small (n = 325). Loss of genetic variation is expected to occur whenever a population goes through a bottleneck, especially when post-bottleneck recovery is slow. Variation at nine polymorphic microsatellite loci was analysed for Kruger and Addo elephants, as well as museum specimens of Addo elephants shot prior to the population bottleneck. Significantly reduced genetic variation and heterozygosity were observed in Addo in comparison to Kruger (mean alleles/locus and H(E): Addo 1.89, 0.18; Kruger 3.89, 0.44). Two alleles not present in the current Addo population were observed in the museum specimens. Addo elephants represent a genetic subset of the Kruger population, with high levels of genetic differentiation resulting from rapid genetic drift. The Kruger population is low in genetic diversity in comparison to East African elephants, confirming this population also suffered an appreciable bottleneck.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a regular collection of fish were obtained from the surf-zone at King's Beach, Algoa Bay, and a total of 3970 fish, representing 50 species, were caught with a coarse net and 16 857 fish with a fine net.
Abstract: Regular collections of fish were obtained from the surf-zone at King's Beach, Algoa Bay. A total of 3970 fish, representing 50 species was caught with a coarse net and 16 857 fish, representing 37 species, were caught with a fine net. Predominant species were the blacktail, Diplodus sargus; the sand steenbras, Lithognathus mormyrus; the mullet, Liza richardsoni; the gorrie, Pomadasys olivaceum; the white stumpnose, Rhabdosargus globiceps; the sandshark, Rhinobatos annulatus; and the streepie, Sarpa salpa. No seasonal trends were discernible in the overall abundance or species diversity. The species composition of the dominant component of the fish assemblage varied considerably. This indicated instability in the community structure and cast doubts on the applicability of a classic community concept and the use of diversity indices. Neither classification nor correspondence analysis were of any use in identifying a characteristic species component. Multiple regression analysis indicated that short-term variations in wind conditions might be a primary determinant of fluctuations in abundance. The lack of seasonality in the community parameters may reflect the fact that short-term variability masks seasonal perturbations.

116 citations


Authors

Showing all 1067 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard M. Cowling9639230042
Keith Davids8460425038
Thomas A. Schlacher541969594
Anton McLachlan4915610089
Graham I. H. Kerley452038126
Lynnath E. Beckley422175884
Andrew T. Knight391016488
David S. Schoeman391258654
Dan Baird38734841
Johanna J. Heymans381014448
Jenifer E. Dugan37986470
Steven E. Koch36964100
Kerry L. McPhail351005863
Janine B. Adams341933754
M.T. Hoffman33955660
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20201
20191
20162
20156
20145
20133