Abstract

The Holocene evolution of eight South African coastal lakes and lagoons is examined and related to changes in fish composition over that period. Historical and current connectivity with riverine and marine environments are the primary determinants of present‐day fish assemblages in these systems. A small and remarkably consistent group of relict estuarine species have persisted in these coastal lakes and lagoons. The loss or reduction of connectivity with the sea has impacted on the diversity of marine fishes in all eight study systems, with no marine fishes occurring in those water bodies where connectivity has been completely broken (e.g. Sibaya, Groenvlei). In systems that have retained tenuous linkages with the sea (e.g., Verlorenvlei, Wilderness lakes), elements of the marine fish assemblage have persisted, especially the presence of facultative catadromous species. Freshwater fish diversity in coastal lakes and lagoons is a function of historical and present biogeography and salinity. From a freshwater biogeography perspective, the inflowing rivers of the four temperate systems reviewed here contain three or fewer native freshwater fishes, while the subtropical lakes that are fed by river systems contain up to 40 freshwater fish species. Thus, the significantly higher fish species diversity in subtropical versus temperate coastal lakes and lagoons comes as no surprise. Fish species diversity has been increased further in some systems (e.g., Groenvlei) by alien fish introductions. However, the impacts of fish introductions and translocations have not been studied in the coastal lakes and lagoons of South Africa. In these closed systems, it is probable that predation impacts on small estuarine fishes are significant. The recent alien fish introductions is an example of the growing threats to these systems during the Anthropocene, a period when human activities have had significant negative impacts and show potential to match the changes recorded during the entire Holocene.

Highlights

  • Natural lakes and lagoons are rare in South Africa because the ­climate is generally arid, and surface water flow is dominated by the Orange River which contains 85% of the surface freshwater in the country (Weyl & Cowley, 2015)

  • Increasing isolation from the sea occurs, with many South African systems evolving into temporarily open/closed estuaries (Cooper, 2001b) and some becoming completely isolated from the sea (Hill, 1975)

  • Historical connectivity with the marine environment and past estuarine conditions in coastal lakes and lagoons is a primary determinant of present-day fish assemblages

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Summary

Introduction

Natural lakes and lagoons are rare in South Africa because the ­climate is generally arid (mean annual rainfall is

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