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Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore
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Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Coastal Ecology

1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore

Page 2: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Hurker’s Haven, Berwickshire

Page 3: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Lamberton Beach, Berwickshire (Rock Platform)

Page 4: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Burnmouth, Berwickshire

Page 5: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Lawrencetown Beach, Nova Scotia (Cobbles)

Page 6: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Aldburgh, Suffolk (Shingle)

Page 7: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Druridge Bay, Northumberland (Sand)

Page 8: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Sand Dunes at Bamburgh, Northumberland

Page 9: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Saltmarsh at Alnmouth, Northumberland

Page 10: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Saltmarsh at Alnmouth, Northumberland

Page 11: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Sea Braes at Berwickshire

Page 12: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Seaweeds 1: Red

Page 13: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Seaweeds 2: Brown

Page 14: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Seaweeds 3: Green

Page 15: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 1: Sea Anemones

Page 16: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 2: Annelids

Page 17: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

How we normally see Arenicola

Page 18: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 3:Molluscs

Page 19: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 4: Echinoderms

Page 20: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 5: Echinoderms

Page 21: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Sea Urchins in a less-usual setting

Page 22: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Marine Animals 6: Crustaceans

Page 23: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Factors influencing organisms

• Substratum

• Light

• Desiccation

• Pollution

• Exposure

• Salinity

• Temperature

• Grazers and Predators

Page 24: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Substratum

• Rocky shores and sandy shores have different fauna.• Seaweeds need a firm substratum on which to become

attached (which, in the case of wracks for example, they do within an hour of fertilisation).

• Seaweeds are adapted to their environment – they are not just tolerating it.

• Individual species of seaweed have specific environmental requirements.

• Detached plants and algae in the drift on the strandline are dying or dead.

• Plants don’t ‘make a choice’: their spores settle and, if conditions are satisfactory, the plant will develop – if they are not it will die.

Page 25: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Nature of substratum

• All solid substrata are colonisable by algae.• Chemical nature is irrelevant.• Texture i.e. roughness/smoothness may affect

attachment of species.• Unstable substrata, such as shingle and sand

are generally of no use to seaweeds (exceptions are that there is a filamentous red seaweed which binds sand and the brown seaweed Desmarestia viridis will grow subtidally on shingle).

Page 26: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Sand bound by Audouinella floridula

Page 27: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Desmarestia viridis

Page 28: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Light

Page 29: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Action spectrum for Chlorophyll a

This shows that most photosynthesis takes place in red light and some in blue light. Chlorophyll reflects (and therefore cannot utilise) green light – which is why it appears green.

Page 30: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Desiccation and Zonation

Page 31: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Adaptations to desiccation

• Thick cell walls in species found higher on the shore.

• Mucilage to prevent drying out in cell walls (Brown algal cell walls are composed of a fibrillar polysaccharide called alginic acid together with cellulose and an amorphous polysaccharide called fucoidan).

• Early stages in development of Pelvetia are retained in mesochiton (vestige of structure in which eggs are produced).

• Plants may dry out but may rejuvenate when wetted.

Page 32: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Photosynthesis and desiccation

• There is some evidence in some species, for example of Fucus, that photosynthesis ceases when the plant is uncovered at low tide and only resumes when the plant is recovered. This means, of course, that the plant can only produce sugars when high tides occur during daylight, and the higher a plant is on the shore the shorter its photosynthetic activity.

Page 33: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Problems with silt

• Produces an unstable substratum.

• Reduces light for photosynthesis.

• Causal factor in absence of Himanthalia from Durham coast (work by Moss et al 1973) and affecting distribution of Fucus in the Baltic (2003).

Page 34: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Pollution

• Pollution can be visible (such as silt, oil spills, non-biodegradable plastic) or invisible (such as chemicals from agricultural run-off, bacteria from sewage).

Page 35: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Surf Scoter in San Francisco Bay, 2007

Page 36: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Rubbish on beach at Curacao

Page 37: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Exposure

• By and large, most seaweeds do not like extremes.

• Very exposed shores tend to be clear of macroalgae, which are replaced by mussels and barnacles. One exception is the filamentous red seaweed Ceramium shuttleworthianum which grows in mussel beds.

• Some species characteristic of fast flowing currents e.g. Alaria esculenta.

Page 38: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Ceramium shuttleworthianum

• Very delicate, striped, spiny species of Ceramium.

Page 39: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Alaria esculenta

Page 40: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Fucus vesiculosus and exposure

• Direct link between number of number of air bladders and degree of exposure – in sheltered habitats get colossal number of air bladders.

Page 41: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Brown algae and exposure

• In fast moving currents bladders are absent from bladder wrack (if that is not a contradiction in terms) – form evesiculosus.

• Work in Norway in the late 1960s/early 1970s demonstrated that the degree of digitation in the kelp Laminaria digitata is directly related to exposure.

Page 42: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Ascophyllum nodosum

• Characteristic of sheltered shores – particularly abundant on the west coast of Scotland where it is harvested.

Page 43: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Effects of salinity

• Seawater is made up of roughly 35 parts per thousand salt.

• Freshwater – rivers/streams or rain – reduces salinity.

• Evaporation – for example in rock pools – increases salinity.

• Seaweeds are either adapted to these variations or don’t survive.

Page 44: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Estuaries

• Green seaweeds are more tolerant of reductions in salinity than other groups (red seaweeds are least tolerant).

• Working up an estuary from the coast, you will find that red seaweeds die out first (very close to the estuary mouth), brown seaweeds will persist somewhat further, green ‘seaweeds’ extend into freshwater.

Page 45: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Fucus vesiculosus/ceranoides

• Fucus vesiculosus (bladder wrack) is a coastal seaweed.

• In estuaries this is replaced by Fucus ceranoides.

• A transect up the estuary would show Fucus vesiculosus on the coast, then a mixture of both species, then Fucus ceranoides alone (and then, ultimately, no Fucus species at all).

Page 46: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Fucus vesiculosus/ceranoides

• Recent experimental work has demonstrated that Fucus ceranoides grows as well in seawater as it does in reduced salinities; its absence from the shore generally is due to it being a poor competitor with Fucus vesiculosus.

• Fucus ceranoides predominates in estuaries because Fucus vesiculosus doesn’t tolerate reductions in salinity so well. (Confusingly, in local estuaries, Fucus ceranoides is absent from the River Tyne and Fucus vesiculosus penetrates up the estuary to Gateshead).

Page 47: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Fucus ceranoides

• More delicate and ‘filmy’ than Fucus vesiculosus with pointed apices.

Page 48: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Temperature

• Being fixed to one spot, seaweeds have to tolerate the ambient temperature.

• Species distributions are strongly influenced by temperature: for example, Bifurcaria bifurcata will grow in Devon but not in Northumberland; Lithothamnion glaciale will grow in Northumberland but not in Devon. Tropical species distinct from temperate ones

• ‘Enteromorpha’ seems to tolerate just about anything – hence its success as a ship-fouling organism.

Page 49: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Bifurcaria bifurcata

Page 50: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Lithothamnion glaciale

Page 51: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Being eaten alive: the world of grazers

• Variety of animal grazers from sea slugs, limpets and sea urchins to fishes.

• This causes tissue damage and can be sufficiently common to affect species’ growth on the shore.

• Filter feeding animals such as mussels ingest algal spores as part of their diet.

• This can, of course, influence settlement and growth of algal populations.

Page 52: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Blue-rayed limpet

Page 53: Coastal Ecology 1. Varieties and Conditions of the Seashore.

Diadema (Tropical sea urchin)