BirdLife South Africa is driving systemic change to secure one of the country’s most threatened ecosystems, its estuaries. Working with key partners, the programme has identified priority estuaries for conservation in the Western Cape and is advancing their protection through biodiversity stewardship, policy engagement, and active management, supported by strategic partnerships. It plays a leading role in shaping estuarine policy, strengthening legal protections at national and local levels, and exploring innovative tools such as estuarine-based Other Effective Area-Based Conservation Measures (OECMs). A dedicated legal review is also unlocking pathways to better protect estuaries, particularly estuarine Coastal Public Property. By integrating science, advocacy, and on-the-ground action, the program is helping establish a new national benchmark for estuary
The West Coast programme focuses on flagship systems including the Berg River estuary, Verlorenvlei, and the Olifants River estuary. Here, innovative approaches to protection and restoration are being piloted at scale, with both established and developing protected and conservation areas in place, and active habitat restoration underway across multiple sites, supported by vegetation and species spatial mapping and scientific monitoring. The programme also invests in local capacity through training, education, and research partnerships. Increasingly, the West Coast is emerging as a model for integrating blue carbon restoration, biodiversity stewardship, and community-driven conservation.
Protecting estuaries requires safeguarding their catchments. The programme plays a role in supporting landscapes such as the Moutonshoek Protected Environment (PE), critical for maintaining flows to systems like the Verlorenvlei Ramsar site. It supports the PE’s landowners’ association, particularly around environmental awareness-raising and biodiversity monitoring. In addition, working with legal and policy partners, the team engages in environmental authorisation processes to address threats, including mining, unsustainable water use, and infrastructure development. These interventions help secure freshwater inflows and sediment processes, which are essential to estuarine health. By defending these upstream landscapes, the programme ensures conservation extends beyond estuarine boundaries to the systems that sustain them.
On the South Coast, the programme advances protection and management of key estuaries, including the Klein River estuary. This includes developing Environmental Management Plans and Annual Plans of Operation for emerging protected areas, alongside expanding biodiversity stewardship. Landscape-scale interventions, such as invasive alien plant clearing and integrated fire management planning, are helping to improve ecosystem resilience. Long-term monitoring, including camera trapping and habitat assessments, is generating critical data to guide management. Strong partnerships with landowners and conservation agencies underpin this work, positioning the South Coast as a vital node in a growing network of well-managed estuarine ecosystems.
The program is piloting estuarine habitat restoration with a focus on salt-, sedge-, and reed marsh, vital habitats that store carbon (blue carbon), while supporting diverse birdlife and fisheries. Interventions include the revegetation of degraded areas, piloting the stabilisation of eroding banks, using nature-based solutions, such as landscaping and indigenous species planting, and rehabilitating degraded floodplains through grazing management. The developing Maintenance Management Plan will enable the upscaling of restoration efforts across the entire estuary, demonstrating best practice and providing lessons learned for other estuarine systems. Early research shows encouraging gains in soil health and carbon storage. Robust monitoring, covering water quality, vegetation, soil health, erosion, and birds, ensures adaptive, evidence-based management. By linking climate impact mitigation with biodiversity conservation, this work highlights the critical role estuaries play in addressing both ecological decline and climate change.
A key innovation is the partnership with a local nursery, which supports large-scale restoration by propagating estuarine plants. Expanded infrastructure, including greenhouse space and a developing hydroponics system, is boosting both supply and quality of planting material. The nursery also serves as a demonstration site, raising awareness of estuarine biodiversity and its value. This collaboration shows how local enterprise and conservation can combine to deliver scalable, nature-based solutions.
Waterbird monitoring is central to tracking estuarine health. The programme contributes to the Coordinated Waterbird Count (CWAC), one of South Africa’s largest citizen science initiatives. Regular counts generate critical data on population trends, habitat use, and species conservation status, informing management and national reporting. New tools, including drone-based surveys, are improving survey accuracy for species such as the endangered roosting Cape Cormorant Phalacrocorax capensis at the Berg River estuary. Working with BirdLife South Africa’s Regional Conservation Programme, a new, exciting, migrant wader ringing and tagging project was launched in early 2026 at the Berg, focused on tracking globally threatened, Curlew Sandpiper Calidris ferruginea and Grey Plover Pluvialis squatarola along the African-Eurasian (East Atlantic) Flyway. The programme also builds local capacity through training and volunteer engagement, strengthening long-term stewardship. Together, these efforts ensure conservation is guided by robust, long-term ecological data.