Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/431
Title: The Effects of Habitat Complexities Created by Mangroves on Macrofaunal Composition in Brackishwater Intertidal Zones at the Kenyan Coast
Authors: Ruwa, R.
Keywords: Mangrove ecosystem
Intertidal zone
Macrofaunal Composition
Brackish water
Issue Date: 1990
Publisher: African Journals Online
Series/Report no.: Discovery and Innovation;Vol. 2 no. 1 March 1990
Abstract: The semi-arid Kenyan coastline has a total of about .52,980 hectares of mangrove forests (Doute et al., 1981). ,The bulk of these forests occur in intertidal areas where submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) or seepage occurs rather than in estuaries (Ruwa and Polk, 1986). Mangrove forests in Kenya are currently being heavily exploited (Kokwaro, 1986) especially in urban areas where they are under environmental stress due to uncontrolled disposal of domestic and industrial wastes in the vicinity of the forests. Unfortunately, as these activities continue, there is still scanty published ecological information on macrofaunal composition in mangrove ecosystems in Kenya which could be used to initiate conservation strategies. The only published study on macrofauna in mangrove ecosystems in Kenya is by Icely and Jones (1978) based on the ecology of crab species of genus Uca.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/431
ISSN: 1015-079X
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