The
shore comprises bedrock and boulders with swathes of sand on the upper shore.
Rock pools and channels occur throughout the central section of the bedrock
supporting a variety of marine life.
The
distribution of habitats across the bay is patchy. Lichens occur at the top of
the shore below which fucoids form a mosaic with barnacles. Rockpools occur
across the shore and increase with species diversity toward the low water mark.
The
rock pools vary with those in the upper shore characterized by the green
seaweeds Cladophora and Ulva spp; whilst mid shore pools
are dominated by encrusting coralline algae and a variety of red and brown
seaweeds; further down the shore brown seaweeds, such as Bifurcaria bifurcata and Himanthalia elongata, become more
prolific within the coralline pools with red seaweeds occupying the understory.
Above the pools is a mosaic of fucoids, osmoundea, grazing molluscs and barnacles.
Spring
storms had washed seaweed up onto the shore where it formed successive strandlines
and filled many of the higher shore pools. The presence of the decomposing
seaweed in the pools caused the water to become de-oxygenation and
stagnant. In comparison to April 2013 there was less washed up seaweed and sand
in the rock pools.
The
shore comes under the broad habitats (LS.Lsa) Littoral sand, LR.FLR.Rkp
(Rockpools)and LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores)
with a number of sub variants of the latter.
Habitat
classification:
Substrate
|
LR (Littoral rock)
|
Habitat
|
LR.MLR (Moderate energy littoral
rock)
|
LR.FLR (Features of ilttoral rock)
|
Biotope complex
|
LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately
exposed shores)
|
LR.FLR.Rkp (Rockpools)
|
LR.FLR.Eph (Ephemeral green or red
seaweed communities
|
Biotope
|
LR.MLR.BF.FspiB (Fucus spiralis on
full salinity exposed to moderately exposed upper eulittoral rock)
|
LR.MLR.BF.Fser (Fucus serratus on moderately
exposed eulittoral rock)
|
LR.LMR.BF (Pelvetia canaliculata and barnacles
on moderately exposed shores)
|
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.Rckp.SwSed (Seaweeds in sediment-
floored eulittoral rockpools).
|
LR.FLR.Rkp.G (Green seaweeds (Entomorpha spp. and
Cladophora spp.) in shallow upper shore rock pools)
|
LR.FLR.Eph (Ephermeral green or red
seaweeds (Fresh water or sand influenced)
|
LR.FLR.Eph.EntPor (Porphyra purpurea
and Entomorpha spp. on sand scoured mid to
lower eulittoral rock)
|
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)
|
LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Bif (Bifurcaria
bifurcate in shallow eulittoral rockpools)
|
|
Below are
images of organisms you may encounter whilst rock pooling in this habitat:
|
The bay comprises sandy patches in the upper shore with bedrock and
boulders that shallowly descend to the low water mark with rockpools throughout.
Habitat classification: LS.LSa (Littoral
sand), LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores) and
LR.FLR.Rkp (Rockpools). |
|
Channel wrack (Pelvetia
canaliculata) and tar lichen (Verrucaria
maura) occur at the top of the shore on the right hand side of the bay.
Habitat classification: LR.LMR.BF (Pelvetia
canaliculata and barnacles on moderately exposed shores) that occurs within
the broader habitat LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed
shores). |
|
Spiral wrack (Fucus spiralis)
occurs in patches on the upper shore rock. Fucus
spiralis is characteristic of the habitat LR.MLR.BF.FspiB (Fucus spiralis on full salinity exposed
to moderately exposed upper eulittoral rock) that occurs within the broader
habitat LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores). |
|
Spiral wrack (Fucus spiralis)
in its reproductive phase with swollen receptacles at the end of its fronds. |
|
Spiral wrack (Fucus spiralis)
in its reproductive phase with swollen receptacles at the end of its fronds. |
|
Ulva spp (Previously Entomorpha spp) |
|
Bare rock has a patchy distribution of barnacles with thick topshells (Osilinus lineatus), Limpets (Patella vulgata), beadlet anemones (Actinia equina) and the occasional
mussel (Mytilus edulis) within rock
crevices. |
|
Barnacles,
Limpets (Patella vulgata) and a thick
topshell (Osilinus lineatus) occur on
the bare patches of rock.
|
|
Thick topshells (Osilinus lineatus)
aggregate together in a crevice as a behaviour response to reduce desiccation. |
|
Barnacle density is relatively low. |
|
Patches of fucoids and barnacle covered rock form a mosaic across the
shore with occasional clumps of Ulva spp.
LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores) and LR.FLR.Rkp
(Rockpools). |
|
Ephemeral green seaweeds dominate the pools of the upper shore. Habitat
classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.G (Green
seaweeds (Entermorpha spp. and Cladophora spp.) in shallow upper shore
rock pools). |
|
Lower down the shore serrated wrack (Fucus
serratus) becomes the dominant fucoid, forming a mosaic with barnacles.
Habitat classification: LR.MLR.BF.Fser (Fucus
serratus on moderately exposed eulittoral rock) that occurs within the
broader habitat LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores). |
|
Above
the rock pools of the lower shore Fucus
serratus forms a mosaic with barnacles and an increasing number of red
seaweeds including Osmoundea sp., Mastocarpus stellatus and Corallina officinalis. Habitat
classification: LR.MLR.BF.Fser.R (Fucus
serratus and red seaweeds on moderately exposed lower eulittoral rock) that
occurs within the habitat LR.MLR.BF.Fser (Fucus
serratus on moderately exposed eulittoral rock) that occurs within the
broader habitat LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores).
|
|
Fucus serratus forms a mosaic with
the red seaweeds Osmoundea sp., Mastocarpus stellatus and Corallina officinalis. |
|
Fucus serratus forms a mosaic with red seaweeds including Osmoundea sp., Mastocarpus stellatus and Corallina officinalis. Thong weed (Himanthalia elongata) also occurs. |
|
Mastocarpus stellatus |
|
Osmoundea sp, Fucus serratus and common limpets (Patella vulgata) |
|
A red seaweed grows on a limpet. |
|
A red seaweed grows on a limpet. |
|
Lomentaria articulata |
|
Limpets, including (Patella
vulgata) with a covering of red algae, Dog whelk (Nucella lapillus) and Flat topshell (Gibbula umbilicus). |
|
Limpets
(Patella velgata)
|
|
As the low tide mark is approached thong weed (Himanthalia elongata) occurs and red seaweeds become more abundant. |
|
Fucus serratus, Osmoundea sp, Mastocarpus stellatus, Ulva
sp, Porphyra sp and filamentous
greens. |
|
Large rockpools stretch across the mid and lower shore. Within the rock
pools is a variety of fauna and seaweed species. Habitat classification: LR.
FLR. Rkp (Rock pools). |
|
A shallow mid shore rock pool with coralline, red and green seaweeds.
Habitat classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Corallina
officinalis, coralline crusts and brown seaweeds in shallow eulittoral
rockpools). |
|
Within in the rock pools corallinaceae crusts cover much of the exposed
rock, upon which Corallina officinalis then grows. |
|
Corallinaceae crusts, Grey topshells (Gibbula cineraria), limpets and encrusting fauna on a boulder in a
rock pool. |
|
Corallinaceae crust |
|
A seaweed |
|
A Red seaweed |
|
A Red seaweed |
|
A red seaweed |
|
A red seaweed |
|
Japweed (Sargassum muticum) is
an invasive species which can come to dominate pools and in doing so shade the
other species and change the environmental conditions of intertidal rockpool. |
|
Ephemeral green seaweeds |
|
Seaweeds |
|
Codium fragile |
|
Gastroclonium ovatum, Corallina officinalis, Corallinaceae
crusts, Ulva sp and filamentous
greens. |
|
Calliblepharis jubata |
|
Calliblepharis jubata |
|
Calliblepharis jubata |
|
Lower down the shore the brown seaweed, Bifurcaria bifurcata comes to dominate the coralline pools. Bifurcaria
bifurcata dominated coralline rockpool with Corallina officinalis, Corallinaceae
crusts, Ulva sp, Sargassum muticum and Fucus
serratus. Habitat classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Bif (Bifurcaria bifurcata in shallow eulittoral rockpools). |
|
Bifurcaria bifurcata dominated coralline
rockpool with Corallina officinalis, Corallinaceae crusts, Ulva sp and Fucus serratus. |
|
Bifurcaria bifurcata dominated coralline
rockpool with Corallina officinalis, Corallinaceae
crusts, Ulva sp, Sargassum muticum and Fucus
serratus. |
|
Bushy rainbow wrack (Cystoseira
tamariscifolia), Corallina
officinalis, Corallinaceae crusts, Ulva
sp, Bifurcaria bifurcata and brown
seaweeds. |
|
Bifurcaria bifurcata |
|
Bifurcaria bifurcata dominated coralline
rockpool with Corallina officinalis, Corallinaceae
crusts, Ulva sp, Fucus serratus and filamentous reds. |
|
Beneath the shade of the Bifurcaria
bifurcate, Mesophyllum lichenoides grows. |
|
Gem anemone (Aulactinia verrucosa) |
|
Gem anemone (Aulactinia verrucosa) |
|
Anemones |
|
Anemone |
|
Beadlet anemone (Actinia equina) |
|
Beadlet anemone (Actinia equina) |
|
Snakelocks
anemone (Anemonia viridis)
|
|
Snakelocks anemone (Anemonia viridis) |
|
Snakelocks anemone (Anemonia viridis) |
|
Coarallinacea crust and Botryllus schlosseri. |
|
Beneath
the boulders is a rich under boulder community of cushion stars (Asterina gibbosa), Grey topshells (Gibbula cineraria), Seasquirts (Botryllus schlosseri), Beadlet anemone (Actinia equina), Sponge, Painted
topshell (Calliostoma zizyphinum) and
Spirorbid polychaetes. Above
corallinacea crust, Corallina officinalis
and Mastocarpus stellatus grows.
|
|
Cushion stars (Asterina gibbosa) |
|
Netted dog whelk (Nassarius reticulatus). |
|
Worm
pipefish (Nerophis lumbriciformis)
|
|
At the low tide mark Sand binder (Rhodothamniella
floridula) becomes increasing dominant. |
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