The concept of an estuary: A definition that incorporates systems which can become closed to the ocean and hypersaline |
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Authors: | Ian C Potter Benjamin M Chuwen Steeg D Hoeksema Michael Elliott |
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Institution: | 1. Centre for Fish and Fisheries Research, School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Murdoch University, South Street, Murdoch, Western Australia 6150, Australia;2. Institute of Estuarine and Coastal Studies, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, UK |
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Abstract: | The majority of the definitions of estuaries have been based on the characteristics of estuaries in temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. As previously pointed out (Day, 1980), such definitions do not take into account such features as periodic closure of their mouths and hypersaline conditions during dry periods, which characterise many estuaries in southern Africa and south-western Australia. There is also ambiguity as to whether an estuary sensu stricto must be fed by a river. The following definition was developed to encompass the main characteristics of all estuaries: An estuary is a partially enclosed coastal body of water that is either permanently or periodically open to the sea and which receives at least periodic discharge from a river(s), and thus, while its salinity is typically less than that of natural sea water and varies temporally and along its length, it can become hypersaline in regions when evaporative water loss is high and freshwater and tidal inputs are negligible. Estuaries are thus regarded as unique ecosystems, which, in the case of fishes, for example, are occupied by species that collectively represent a particular suite of guilds. |
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Keywords: | estuary permanently open seasonally open normally closed hypersalinity river |
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