The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.

A total of 17 bivalve species belonging to 135 families were collected and identified in Malindi, Mombasa Marine National Parks, and Kanamai from Oct.'97 to Mar.'98. Bivalve fauna showed densities 2/m super(2), and low diversity. Modiolus auriculatus and Pinna muricata were the most represented. There was a significant difference in species diversity between Malindi and Mombasa reef flats at p>0.10. Shallow lagoons had very low density and diversity as compared to sea grass and reef flat zones. This was attributed to the high deposits of shell, coral, and sand. Swimming, goggling/scuba diving, walking/trampling and turning of rocks were identified as the main forms human activities causing disturbance to the bivalves. Frequencies of occurrence of these activities varied in the three areas with Kanamai exhibiting the highest. Trampling had the most notable impact and was used to show the impact of human activities on the most vulnerable species. Results show that the distribution of bivalve fauna in the protected and unprotected areas is density independent and is not only influenced by human activities and management strategy but rather by other biological and environmental factors such as substrate type, tide range and wave activity. Human activities however affect those bivalves with fragile shells such as Pinna muricata, through trampling resulting in injury and/or death. Presence of man affects the routine activities of the others such as Tellina flavum, Anadara antiquata, Tridacna squamosa and Codakia punctata. Therefore spreading out of human activities within the marine parks is recommended to reduce their impacts. These activities should be spread out into the reserves and unprotected areas.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Boera, N.P., Okeyo-Owuor, J.B., Wangila, B.C.C.
Other Authors: Hoorweg, Jan
Format: Report Section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: African Studies Centre 2003
Subjects:Mollusc fisheries, Community composition, Protected resources, Marine parks, Man-induced effects, Check lists,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/9002
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-90022021-05-19T06:16:43Z The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities. Recent advances in coastal ecology: studies from Kenya. Boera, N.P. Okeyo-Owuor, J.B. Wangila, B.C.C. Hoorweg, Jan Muthiga, Nyawira Mollusc fisheries Community composition Protected resources Marine parks Man-induced effects Check lists A total of 17 bivalve species belonging to 135 families were collected and identified in Malindi, Mombasa Marine National Parks, and Kanamai from Oct.'97 to Mar.'98. Bivalve fauna showed densities 2/m super(2), and low diversity. Modiolus auriculatus and Pinna muricata were the most represented. There was a significant difference in species diversity between Malindi and Mombasa reef flats at p>0.10. Shallow lagoons had very low density and diversity as compared to sea grass and reef flat zones. This was attributed to the high deposits of shell, coral, and sand. Swimming, goggling/scuba diving, walking/trampling and turning of rocks were identified as the main forms human activities causing disturbance to the bivalves. Frequencies of occurrence of these activities varied in the three areas with Kanamai exhibiting the highest. Trampling had the most notable impact and was used to show the impact of human activities on the most vulnerable species. Results show that the distribution of bivalve fauna in the protected and unprotected areas is density independent and is not only influenced by human activities and management strategy but rather by other biological and environmental factors such as substrate type, tide range and wave activity. Human activities however affect those bivalves with fragile shells such as Pinna muricata, through trampling resulting in injury and/or death. Presence of man affects the routine activities of the others such as Tellina flavum, Anadara antiquata, Tridacna squamosa and Codakia punctata. Therefore spreading out of human activities within the marine parks is recommended to reduce their impacts. These activities should be spread out into the reserves and unprotected areas. Published 2016-04-20T11:47:47Z 2016-04-20T11:47:47Z 2003 Report Section Not Known 9054480548 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/9002 en Research Report African Studies Centre;70 http://asc.leidenuniv.nl pp.81-95 Kenya, Coast African Studies Centre Leiden, Netherlands
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Mollusc fisheries
Community composition
Protected resources
Marine parks
Man-induced effects
Check lists
Mollusc fisheries
Community composition
Protected resources
Marine parks
Man-induced effects
Check lists
spellingShingle Mollusc fisheries
Community composition
Protected resources
Marine parks
Man-induced effects
Check lists
Mollusc fisheries
Community composition
Protected resources
Marine parks
Man-induced effects
Check lists
Boera, N.P.
Okeyo-Owuor, J.B.
Wangila, B.C.C.
The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
description A total of 17 bivalve species belonging to 135 families were collected and identified in Malindi, Mombasa Marine National Parks, and Kanamai from Oct.'97 to Mar.'98. Bivalve fauna showed densities 2/m super(2), and low diversity. Modiolus auriculatus and Pinna muricata were the most represented. There was a significant difference in species diversity between Malindi and Mombasa reef flats at p>0.10. Shallow lagoons had very low density and diversity as compared to sea grass and reef flat zones. This was attributed to the high deposits of shell, coral, and sand. Swimming, goggling/scuba diving, walking/trampling and turning of rocks were identified as the main forms human activities causing disturbance to the bivalves. Frequencies of occurrence of these activities varied in the three areas with Kanamai exhibiting the highest. Trampling had the most notable impact and was used to show the impact of human activities on the most vulnerable species. Results show that the distribution of bivalve fauna in the protected and unprotected areas is density independent and is not only influenced by human activities and management strategy but rather by other biological and environmental factors such as substrate type, tide range and wave activity. Human activities however affect those bivalves with fragile shells such as Pinna muricata, through trampling resulting in injury and/or death. Presence of man affects the routine activities of the others such as Tellina flavum, Anadara antiquata, Tridacna squamosa and Codakia punctata. Therefore spreading out of human activities within the marine parks is recommended to reduce their impacts. These activities should be spread out into the reserves and unprotected areas.
author2 Hoorweg, Jan
author_facet Hoorweg, Jan
Boera, N.P.
Okeyo-Owuor, J.B.
Wangila, B.C.C.
format Report Section
topic_facet Mollusc fisheries
Community composition
Protected resources
Marine parks
Man-induced effects
Check lists
author Boera, N.P.
Okeyo-Owuor, J.B.
Wangila, B.C.C.
author_sort Boera, N.P.
title The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
title_short The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
title_full The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
title_fullStr The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Human Activities on Epibenthic Bivalve Communities.
title_sort impact of human activities on epibenthic bivalve communities.
publisher African Studies Centre
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/9002
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