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Sectoral Reports

Several sectoral state of the environment reports have been completed in South Africa. These include:


State of the Coasts:

Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism: Marine and Coastal Management (DEAT MCM) has initiated a State of the Coasts reporting programme for the marine and coastal environment in South Africa. The aim of this initiative is to compile the first State of the Coasts Report for South Africa. The report will address numerous issues facing the marine and coastal environment, and will use environmental indicators to track changes in these issues over time. The State of the Coasts Report will form part of the long-term monitoring and reporting process initiated by DEAT MCM, and contributes to evaluating the interactions between biophysical, social, economic and institutional systems in terms of:

  • The current condition of the marine and coastal environment;
  • Trends of changes in the marine and coastal environment;
  • The key driving forces of these changes;
  • The implications of these trends; and
  • What societal response to these changes should be.

More detail on this project can be found at http://soc.csir.co.za/


State of rivers:

Between 1996 and 1999, the River Health Programme (RHP) conducted surveys on the three major river systems of Mpumalanga, including some of their tributaries. The RHP collected and assessed a substantial body of data on the ecological health of these river during the surveys. The State of the Rivers Report for the Crocodile, Sabie-Sand & Olifants River Systems was released by the Water Research Commission in March 2001. This report makes information available in a state-of-environment reporting framework.

The publication is obtainable from:
Water Research Commission
PO Box 824
Pretoria
0001

More information is available at http://www.csir.co.za/rhp


State of estuaries:

EstauryThe South African 3 000 km coastline has approximately 370 outlets to the sea ranging from small coastal streams to large permanently open tidal estuaries. The current state of scientific information on the vast majority of these systems, however, is virtually nil. As part of a national program to assess the state of South Africa’s estuarine environment, basic surveys were conducted on these systems during the period 1992 to 1999. This included ichthyofauna (fish), water quality, and geomorphological and aesthetic observations. Some 67% of South Africa’s ‘estuaries’ have been surveyed to date. This baseline data has been analysed and synthesised to render it understandable to the non-specialist but at a sufficiently high level to inform potential end users of the state of South Africa’s estuaries.

The full report is now available on the Internet in Acrobat PDF format. Click on the links below to open the relevant section of the report.




Chapter 1: Introduction  ( 32K)
Chapter 2: Geomorphology  (379K)
Chapter 3a: Ichthyofauna  (123K)
Chapter 3b: Ichthyofauna continued..   (124K)
Chapter 4: Water Quality  (81K)
Chapter 5: Aesthetics   (34K)
Chapter 6: General summary & recommendations (66K)
References  (22K)
Appendix 1: Strip-maps Alexander Bay to Goda estuary ( 996K)
Appendix 1 Strip maps: Goda to Kosi Bay  (1088K)
To view the executive summary of the report, click the Summary button below.To see the key findings, click the Findings button below.


The publication is obtainable from:
Directorate Environmental Monitoring and Reporting
Private Bag X447
Pretoria
0001
South Africa

E-mail: State of Environment Section