Sofala Bay
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The Bight of Sofala/Swamp Coast is a marine ecoregion along the eastern coast of Africa, characterized by extensive mangrove swamps and coastal wetlands. It extends along the coast of Mozambique, from
Angoche Angoche is a district, city and municipality located in Nampula Province in north-eastern Mozambique. The district has limits in the North with Mogincual District, in the South with Larde District, to the east with the Indian Ocean and to the wes ...
(16°14' S) to the Bazaruto Archipelago (21°14’ S). It adjoins the East African coral coast ecoregion to the north, and the Delagoa ecoregion to the south.


Geography

The Bight of Sofala, also known as Sofala Bay, is a large indentation on the African coast. The continental shelf is wide in the region, reaching up to 140 km near Beira, in contrast with the narrower continental shelves to the north and south. The concave coastline and shallow seas create high-amplitude tides. The
Mozambique Current The Mozambique Current is an ocean current in the Indian Ocean, usually defined as warm surface waters flowing south along the African east coast in the Mozambique Channel, between Mozambique and the island of Madagascar. The classical definitio ...
runs generally southward along the coast, and eddy currents form in coastal indentations like the Sofala Bight.


Habitat types

24 rivers empty into the ocean in this region, which supports extensive mangroves, coastal swamps, and tidal estuaries. The Zambezi, Pungwe, and Save rivers form large river deltas, and numerous smaller rivers support coastal estuaries, mangroves, and estuaries. The waters are turbid with fine river sediments. Salinity of coastal waters varies seasonally as river discharge rises and falls, from 20 ppt in the rainy season to 34 ppt in the dry season.


Fauna

The extensive mangrove forests and coastal wetlands are important habitat for waterbirds, with over 73 species present. The turbid waters of the region, along with occasional cold-water upwelling, limits the growth of corals in the region.


Human use

The Sofala Bank is an productive fishery, particularly for
Indian prawn The Indian prawn (''Fenneropenaeus indicus'', formerly ''Penaeus indicus''), is one of the major commercial prawn species of the world. It is found in the Indo-West Pacific from eastern and south-eastern Africa, through India, Malaysia and Indone ...
s ''(Fenneropenaeus indicus)''. Large dams on the Zambezi –
Kariba Dam The Kariba Dam is a double curvature concrete arch dam in the Kariba Gorge of the Zambezi river basin between Zambia and Zimbabwe. The dam stands tall and long. The dam forms Lake Kariba, which extends for and holds of water. Construction Th ...
, completed in 1959, and Cahora Bassa, completed in 1975 – have altered freshwater, sediment, and nutrient flows into the Zambezi Delta and Sofala Bight. Large seasonal floods have been reduced, and sediments and nutrients formerly carried to the sea by floodwaters are now trapped behind dams. The productivity of the Sofala Bight prawn harvest decreased continually from the 1970s through the 1990s, from 90kg per hour in 1977 to 30kg per hour by the early 2000s. The productivity continued to decrease from 2000 to 2014, and the region also saw a decline the total harvest of prawns and other food fish during the same period.Penn, James & Sousa, Lizette. (2018). Assessment of the shallow water shrimp fishery of Sofala Bank, Mozambique 2014".


Protected areas

Marine protected areas include: * Marromeu National Reserve and other game reserves (''coutadas'') in the Zambezi delta *
Primeiras and Segundas Islands Environmental Protected Area The Primeiras and Segundas Archipelago is a chain of 10 sparsely inhabited barrier islands and two coral reef complexes situated in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Mozambique and near the coastal city of Angoche. The islands lie in two groups alo ...
extends into the northern portion of the ecoregion.


References

{{coord missing, Mozambique Continental shelves Ecoregions of Mozambique Bays of Mozambique Marine ecoregions Western Indo-Pacific