# A fragmented fish community: evaluation of the present distribution and drivers of fish communities in the lower uThukela River, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

**Authors:** Bradley van Zyl, Matthew J. Burnett, Celine Hanzen, Colleen T. Downs

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10641-026-01822-y · Environmental Biology of Fishes · 2026-03-04

## TL;DR

This study examines how a weir on the uThukela River in South Africa affects local fish communities and their habitats.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the impact of a newly constructed weir on fish community structures and identifies key environmental drivers in a water-scarce region.

## Key findings

- Dominant cover types, substrate, depth, and water temperature significantly influence fish communities.
- The weir has affected three cichlid species, including Tilapia sparrmanii, due to changes in sedimentation and water quality.
- Fish species respond differently to habitat and water-quality variables in the river.

## Abstract

In South Africa, a water-scarce country, the construction of dams and weirs is increasing to ensure water security for a growing nation. The human need for this infrastructure is generally prioritised over its environmental impact, particularly for aquatic fauna with migratory needs. Such infrastructure can block migratory pathways for fish, trap sediment, and alter river flow regimes. The Lower Thukela Bulk Water Supply Scheme (LTBWSS) abstraction weir was constructed on the lower uThukela River in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa, in 2017, near the town of Mandini. The riverine stretch where it is constructed is a critical interface for marine, estuarine, and freshwater migrant local fish species. As such, a vertical-slot fishway was incorporated into its design to facilitate the movement of fish over the weir. This study utilised data collected from field surveys at three sites upstream of the weir, four sites downstream of it, and two sites on the Mandini Stream, a tributary of the uThukela, to assess the impact of the weir on local fish community structures. Multivariate statistical analyses were employed to identify the environmental variables influencing fish community structures and select fish species in the region. The results showed that the dominant cover types, dominant substrate, average depth, and water temperature significantly affected fish communities in the study. Individual species were driven by different habitats, water velocity-depth profiles, and physical water-quality variables. Furthermore, the presence of the LTBWSS has influenced three cichlid species, particularly Tilapia sparrmanii, which was previously shown to favour silt substrate. The resulting loss of downstream sedimentation because of the LTBWSS weir has led to the absence of the species, along with synergistic effects on water quality and quantity in the downstream sections of the uThukela River.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10641-026-01822-y.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Tilapia sparrmanii (taxon 64551)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** flood (MESH:C565009)
- **Chemicals:** Water (MESH:D014867), salts (MESH:D012492), DWS (-), DS (MESH:D003903)
- **Species:** Glossogobius callidus (river goby, species) [taxon 990588], Anguilla mossambica (African longfin eel, species) [taxon 48164], Labeobarbus natalensis (species) [taxon 2483416], Clarias gariepinus (North African catfish, species) [taxon 13013], P. reticulata [taxon 418680], Glossogobius giuris [taxon 205127], Ambassis dussumieri (Malabar glassy perchlet, species) [taxon 1003684], Labeo molybdinus (species) [taxon 2951623], Tilapia sparrmanii (banded tilapia, species) [taxon 64551], Eleotris fusca (dusky sleeper, species) [taxon 86233], P. capensis [taxon 126626], ESpp [taxon 126790], Oreochromis mossambicus (Hawaiian perch, species) [taxon 8127], Oostethus brachyurus (short-tailed pipefish, species) [taxon 161466], Poecilia reticulata (guppy, species) [taxon 8081], Actinopterygii (fishes, superclass) [taxon 7898], Anguilla marmorata (giant mottled eel, species) [taxon 7939], Enteromius trimaculatus (threespot barb, species) [taxon 1913189], Coptodon rendalli (redbreast tilapia, species) [taxon 8129], Micropterus salmoides (largemouth bass, species) [taxon 27706], Awaous aeneofuscus (freshwater goby, species) [taxon 990559], Saccharum officinarum (noble cane, species) [taxon 4547], Pseudomyxus capensis (freshwater mullet, species) [taxon 1003962], Pseudocrenilabrus philander (species) [taxon 277994], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Tilapia sparmanii (species) [taxon 2591260], Acanthopagrus berda (picnic seabream, species) [taxon 119680], Enteromius paludinosus (straightfin barb, species) [taxon 1911125], Enteromius viviparus (species) [taxon 1705806], Gilchristella aestuaria (Gilchrist's round herring, species) [taxon 521029], Cyprinus carpio (carp, species) [taxon 7962], Microphis fluviatilis (species) [taxon 2842182]
- **Mutations:** V50C, V50D

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12960327/full.md

## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12960327/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12960327