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Port Shelter
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Port Shelter |
| native_name | yue |
| other_name | Inner Port Shelter, Outer Port Shelter |
| image | File:HK PortShelter.JPG |
| caption | View of Inner Port Shelter, Port Shelter and Outer Port Shelter from the nearby mountain. Sai Kung town centre can be seen at the left bottom. The right bottom is Hebe Haven |
| image_bathymetry | File:Volonteri's map of the Xin'an County, 1866 (enlarged3).png |
| caption_bathymetry | Map of Xin'an County of 1866 (enlarged), showing the Port Shelter and the town Sai Kung |
| location | Sai Kung District, the New Territories, Hong Kong |
| coordinates | |
| type | Bay / harbour |
| part_of | |
| catchment | |
| designation | water [pollution] control zone |
| length | |
| width | |
| area | |
| depth | |
| max-depth | |
| volume | |
| salinity | 32.7 (measured in 2002–03; 3 sample points) |
| shore | |
| elevation | |
| temperature_high | |
| temperature_low | |
| pushpin_map | Hong Kong |
| pushpin_map_caption | Map of Hong Kong and the approximate location of the centre of Port Shelter |
| max-depth = Port Shelter, known in Cantonese as Ngau Mei Hoi (), is a harbour south of Sai Kung Peninsula in Hong Kong. The water body connects to Inner Port Shelter (known in Cantonese as Sai Kung Hoi; ), as well as Hebe Haven (), Rocky Harbour () and other water body. Outer Port Shelter, is situated at the mouth of the harbour.
Geography
The boundary of Port Shelter has different definition according to different sources. Publication of the U.S. Hydrographic Office, had stated the western shores of Keui Island (now known as Kau Sai Chau) and Jin Island, as well as eastern and north-east shores of the mainland area (now HKUST, Tseung Kwan O New Town and Clear Water Bay Peninsula), were the boundaries of Port Shelter. The Hydrographic Office also stated the entrance of the harbour lies between Lung Ha Wan (; located in Clear Water Bay Peninsula) and [a] Peaked Rock , with a width of about 1.5 miles.
Inner Port Shelter is located near the head of Port Shelter, while Hebe Haven was classified as an inlet in the western shore of Port Shelter.
While The Hydrographic Office's 1943 publication did not have the definition of Outer Port Shelter, H.K.'s Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department had deployed artificial reef to the Outer Port Shelter in the 2000s. They defined the area by coordinates instead. Roughly, it is a triangular area between Steep Island, Basalt Island and the southern shore of Jin Island (known as Tiu Chung Chau in the publication).
Environmental Protection Department, partnered with local universities, also conducted water quality and phytoplankton research in the Port Shelter. In their research, they used a border definition of the area, which their Port Shelter includes Port Shelter proper, Inner and Outer Port Shelter as well as Hebe Haven, and is a bay that "bordered on its northernside by the Sai Kung Peninsula and on its west and southwestern sides by the Clear Water Bay Peninsula".
Islands

These islands are considered within the boundary of the water body of the Port Shelter proper: The three largest islands were Kau Sai Chau, Jin Island and Sharp Island respectively.
- Kau Sai Chau ()
- Jin Island (; Tiu Chung Chau)
- Sharp Island (; Kiu Tsui Chau)
- Shelter Island (; Ngau Mei Chau)
- Yim Tin Tsai ()
- Kwun Cham Wan ()
- Tuen Tau Chau ()
- Yau Lung Kok ()
- Table Island (; Ping Min Chau)
- Mong Chau Tsai ()
- Shek Chau ()
Note: the book Southern District Officer Reports: Islands and Villages in Rural Hong Kong, 1910–60 also listed High Island, Town Island and Ninepin Group in their chapter "The Islands of Port Shelter". But the first two are located in Rocky Harbour, and the last one is outside the mouth of Outer Port Shelter.
Within Inner Port Shelter
These islands are considered within the boundary of the water body of Inner Port Shelter:
- Yeung Chau ()
- Pak Sha Chau ()
- Cham Tau Chau ()
- Kiu Tau ()
- Tai Tsan Chau ()
- Tai Chau ()
- Lap Sap Chau ()
- Siu Tsan Chau ()
Freshwater discharge
The greater Port Shelter area receives discharge from Ho Chung River (), Tai Chung Hau Stream (), and Sha Kok Mei Stream (), as well as man-made storm outfalls and a submarine outfall from the Sai Kung Sewage Treatment Works.
Physical properties
According to measurements by a research, the average salinity of their three sampling stations was 32.7. They also recorded the vertical profile for some of their measurements.
Another research, recorded and estimated the tidal flushing time of the greater Port Shelter area which their tidal stations were deployed in the Port Shelter proper, as well as in Rocky Harbour, Hebe Haven, Inner Port Shelter and Outer Port Shelter. Such as a station at Leung Shuen Wan (; or known as High Island) and in Po Toi O. They concluded that in the inner Port Shelter, the flushing time is the longest among the fish culture zones of Hong Kong, which is 40 days in the dry season. While Po Toi O is located at the mouth of Port Shelter, its hydrodynamics is mainly affected by the open ocean, thus the flushing time was just 5.3 days in dry season in the computer estimation.
Biodiversity
A research conducted in 2006, had recorded a total of 106 fish species in Port Shelter in their preliminary report, including rare species Cephalopholis urodeta, Bodianus axillaris and Echidna nebulosa.
History
A 1863 book states that Port Shelter and Rocky Harbour are the two main components of a deep bay. At that time the water body was still part of the Qing Empire, under the Xin'an County.
Port Shelter was also mentioned in a report to the UK government in 1898 by James Stewart Lockhart, shortly after the signing of the Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory. It stated the harbour is a deep water port that suitable for ships in any size. The Convention ceded Port Shelter and other areas that collectively known as the New Territories and New Kowloon, to the British Empire, as an extension of the colony of Hong Kong.
In the past, villagers from the six villages of Pak Tam Chung would collect coral from Port Shelter to make lime. Nowadays, fishermen still catch sea urchins in the Port Shelter.
References
References
- {{cite magazine. link. 黃垤華. (November 1997). 香港郊野活動聯會 [The Hong Kong Federation of Countryside Activities]
- (1943). "Sailing Directions for the Coast of China". U.S. Hydrographic Office.
- (1910). "Asiatic Pilot Vol.3: Coast of China, Yalu River to Hongkong with Formosa 1909". U.S. Hydrographic Office.
- (July 2000). "ARTIFICIAL REEF DEPLOYMENT IN OUTER PORT SHELTER - Project Profile". Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.
- (October 2001). "Long-term Changes in Water Quality and Phytoplankton Characteristics in Port Shelter, Hong Kong, from 1988–1998". Marine Pollution Bulletin.
- (2011). "Vegetation and vascular plant diversity of islands surrounding Port Shelter, Hong Kong, China". 生物多样性 [Biodiversity Science].
- (October 2007). "Hong Kong Landscapes: Shaping the Barren Rock".
- (2010). "Southern District Officer Reports: Islands and Villages in Rural Hong Kong, 1910–60". Hong Kong University Press.
- (2006). "20 Years of River Water Quality Monitoring in Hong Kong". Environmental Protection Department.
- (December 2011). "Tidal Flushing Time of Marine Fish Culture Zones in Hong Kong". Chinese Ocean Engineering.
- (15 August 2017). "Population dynamics of Noctiluca scintillans during a bloom in a semi-enclosed bay in Hong Kong". Marine Pollution Bulletin.
- (September 2006). "A survey of reef fish diversity in Port Shelter". Department of Ecology and Biodiversity, The University of Hong Kong.
- Williams, Samuel Wells. (1863). "The Chinese Commercial Guide". A. Shortrede & Co..
- link. Chung Hwa Book Company ([[Sino United Publishing]]). (May 2010)
- Faure, David. (1986). "The structure of Chinese Rural Society: Lineage and Village in the Eastern New Territories, Hong Kong". Oxford University Press.
- link. (16 May 2018). 野Guide. HK Discovery Limited
- Hayes, James. (2006). "The Great Difference: Hong Kong's New Territories and Its People 1898-2004". Hong Kong University Press.
- Coates, Austin. (2010). "Southern District Officer Reports: Islands and Villages in Rural Hong Kong, 1910–60". Hong Kong University Press.
- (7 May 1995). "Official Record of Proceedings". Hong Kong Legislative Council.
- (1954). "Far Eastern Economic Review".
- link. (25 November 2011)
- "Water Pollution Control Ordinance". Environmental Protection Department.
- link. (7 November 2018). Sing Tao News Corporation
- (September 2014). "Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan Marine Biodiversity Working Group Marine Habitat Assessment Focus Group – Final Report". Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.
- link. (4 March 2014)
- Nip, Amy. (31 May 2018). "Parks push to save turtles and dolphins". Sing Tao News Corporation.
- "Advocating for more marine protected areas". World Wide Fund for Nature.
- (2018). "Sea For Future". World Wide Fund for Nature.
- (February 2005). "Consultation Paper on the Proposed Amendment of the Fisheries Protection Ordinance, Cap 171 for the Establishment of a Regulatory Framework for Fishing Activities in Hong Kong Waters". Advisory Council on the Environment c/o Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.
- "Cap. 548D MERCHANT SHIPPING (LOCAL VESSELS) (CERTIFICATION AND LICENSING) REGULATION".
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