Endemism in the rivers of the Olifants/Doring basin is unusually high for South Africa, with eight species endemic to the system. The upper Olifants River is one of the main dwelling places of adult
sawfins (
Pseudobarbus serra). This local
endemic is classified as
Endangered by the
IUCN. At present it is so rare as to be jeopardized by
angling or fishing and may not be killed or caught; a long-lived and slow-growing species, it needs several years to grow undisturbed but reaches an adult almost 40 cm after a decade.
CapeNature has done trials to adapt it for
aquaculture or fishery, but this requires better
conservation of the river ecosystem. The
Clanwilliam redfin (
"P." calidus) is another threatened and legally protected species found in the Olifants River; it is more The
Clanwilliam yellowfish (
Labeobarbus seeberi) is another large
cyprinid in this basin endemic to the Western Cape region. It has been subject to some
captive breeding effort and its stocks are in better shape. However, it may have gone
extinct in the Olifants River, and at least is almost certainly gone from between
Olifants Gorge and
Clanwilliam Dam. Whether it will be reintroduced is unclear, as sawfin and Clanwilliam yellowfish adults are probably
ecological competitors, and until the Olifants River is sufficiently restored ecologically both might not be able to thrive at the same time. The Olifants River marks the northern limit of the
Cape galaxias (Galaxias zebratus), a South African fish species sharing the same habitat as imported
trout species and living in an area between the Olifants and the
Keurbooms River. Although in South Africa this relatively delicate fish is only
Near Threatened, in
Australia species of the same genus were driven to
extinction by competing
salmonids. Other species that occur in the Olifants riverine system include
Twee River redfin, (
Pseudobarbus erubescens),
Fiery redfin (
Pseudobarbus phlegethon),
Austroglanis barnardi,
Clanwilliam rock-catfish (
Austroglanis gilli),
Chubbyhead barb (
Enteromius anoplus), and
Clanwilliam sandfish (
Labeo seeberi). The most severe
biological threat to the river's ecosystem is probably the
Smallmouth Bass (
Micropterus dolomieu). Originally introduced for
sport fishing, it has become something of a
pest by depleting the stocks of other fish species. Its eradication is encouraged under the
Cape Action for People and the Environment program. Non-biological threats are mainly excessive removal of river water for irrigation, and the resultant toxic
surface runoff from
plantations (especially
agrumes). These are often grown right up to the river bank, without leaving sufficient natural vegetation to filter out
pesticides and
fertilizer and halt
erosion, and thus causing both river and adjacent cropland to degrade. == See also ==