Revisit of Land’s End Peninsular
The bay
experiences a dynamic regime, alternating between periods of erosion and deposition.
The underlying substrate is boulders, however, variable amounts of sand may be deposited
on top, sourced from the sand bar situated offshore. The communities
encountered reflect the alternation between these regimes.
At the
time of visitation the beach was mainly sand with boulders exposed in the
region of the river and amongst out cropping bedrock in the mid to lower shore.
Steep
cliffs surround the bay, craggy edges of which are covered by lichens. Below, large
swathes of sand cover the shore through which a fresh water river has eroded a
channel to the sea. Steep sloping bedrock and cliff bases of the mid and lower
shore are covered by barnacles, limpets, periwinkles and whelks. Boulders and
bedrock of the mid and lower shore host a similar barnacle community plus a variety
of seaweeds, including where sand scour is event, ephemeral seaweeds. Throughout
the mid and lower shore rockpools occur.
Habitats classification:
Substrate
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LR (Littoral rock)
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LS (Littoral sediment)
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Habitat
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LR.HLR (High energy littoral rock)
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LR.MLR (Moderate energy littoral
rock)
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LR.FLR (Features of ilttoral rock)
|
LS.LSa (Littoral sand)
|
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Biotope complex
|
LR. HLR.MusB (Mussels and/or
barnacles on high energy littoral rock)
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LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on
moderately exposed shores)
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LR.FLR.Rkp (Rockpools)
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LR.FLR.Eph (Ephemeral green or red
seaweed communities
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LR.FLR.CvoV (Littoral caves and
overhangs).
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LR.FLR.Lic (Lichens on supralittoral
rock)
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LS.LSa.St (Strandline)
|
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Biotope
|
LR.MLR.BF .FspiB (Fucus spiralis on
full salinity exposed to moderately exposed upper eulittoral rock)
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LR.MLR.BF .Fser (Fucus serratus on
moderately exposed eulittoral rock)
|
LR.MLR.BF .Rho (Rhodothamniella
floridula on sand scoured lower eulittoral rock)
|
LR.FLR.Rkp .Cor (Corallina
officinalis, coralline crusts and brown seaweeds in shallow eulittoral
rockpools)
|
LR.FLR.Rkp .SwSed (Seaweeds in
sediment- floored eulittoral rockpools).
|
LR.FLR.Eph.EntPor (Porphyra
purpurea and Entomorpha spp. on sand scoured mid to lower eulittoral rock)
|
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Sub Biotope
|
LR.MLR.BF.Fser.R (Fucus serratus and
red seaweeds on moderately exposed lower eulittoral rock)
|
LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Cor (Corallina
officinalis and coralline crusts in shallow eulittoral rockpools)
|
The communities
found were similar to those of the previous visit.
Below are photographs of some of the organisms encountered
whilst rock pooling in this habitat.
Small periwinkles (Melarhaphe neritoides) seek refuge within a crevice of the steep faced bedrock which supports an upper shore community akin to littoral fringe biotopes. |
Small periwinkle (Melarhaphe neritoides). |
Representatives of the species complex ‘Rough periwinkle’ Littorina saxatilis agg also inhabit the bed rock. |
Representatives of the species complex ‘Rough periwinkle’ Littorina saxatilis agg. |
Representatives of the species complex ‘Rough periwinkle’ Littorina spp. |
Where these pools drain into damp crevices coralline algae grow as ‘turfs’. Habitat classification: LR.HLR.MusB (Mussel and/or barnacle communities). |
Barnacles. |
Limpets have a low shell profile to deflect the wave’s energy as an adaptation to the wave exposure. |
Where sand is deposited on the boulders fauna are forced to aggregate on the remaining available substrate. |
The tops of fucoids are an indication of the relatively recent sand deposition. |
Fucoids ‘emerge’ from the sand, which has been deposited relatively recent. |
LR.FLR.Rckp.SwSed (Seaweeds in sediment- floored eulittoral rockpools). |
LR.FLR.Rckp.SwSed (Seaweeds in sediment- floored eulittoral rockpools). |
Serrated wrack (Fucus serratus) covers less exposed boulders of the lower shore and characterises the biotope LR.MLR.BF .Fser (Fucus serratus on moderately exposed eulittoral rock). |
Lomentaria articulata and cladophora rupestris form part of the Fucus serratus understory community. |
Mastocarpus stellatus forms a mosaic distribution with Fucus serratus. |
Sand binder (Rhodothamniella floridula). |
Porphyra covers sand scoured boulders. |
The ephemeral green seaweed Cladophora rupestris and a flat periwinkle (Littorina sp). |
The ephemeral green seaweed Cladophora rupestris. |
Caves in the cliff provide shelter from desiccation and the surrounding biotopes often penetrate into the cave entrance. Habitat classification: LR.FLR.CvoV (Littoral caves and overhangs). |
The shaded entrance to the cave supports Osmondea sp. |
Sand scoured gully on shore |
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