The bay experiences a dynamic regime, alternating between periods of erosion and deposition. The underlying substrate is boulders and bedrock, 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.
The shore alternates between periods of deposition, sandy and erosion, stony.
April 2015
September 2013 January 2014
The overlaying sand has been eroded to reveal the boulders beneath. |
At the time of visitation the cove was comprised of boulders and bedrock with an occasional thin veneer of sand.
Habitat classification:
Substrate
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LR (Littoral rock)
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Habitat
| LR.HLR (High energy littoral rock) |
LR.MLR (Moderate energy littoral rock)
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LR.FLR (Features of ilttoral rock)
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Biotope complex
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LR.
HLR.MusB (Mussels and/or barnacles on high energy littoral rock) |
LR.MLR.BF (Barnacles and fucoids on moderately exposed shores)
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LR.FLR.Lic.(Lichens on supralittoral and littoral fringe rock).
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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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Biotope
| 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.Lic.Ver (Verrucaria Maura on littoral fringe rock)
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LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Coralline crust-dominated shallow eulittoral rockpools)
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LR.FLR.Rckp.SwSed (Seaweeds in sediment- floored eulittoral rockpools).
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LR.FLR.Eph (Ephermeral green or red seaweeds (Fresh water or sand influenced)
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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)
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Melarhaphe neritoides
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Rough periwinkles (Littorina spp) and limpets (Patella vulgata) have begun to recolonise upper shore boulders that were previously covered by sand. |
Similarly upper shore bed rock is being recolonised by limpets (Patella vulgata) |
The cliff bases enable organisms to move up and down in response to the sediment regime and sand scour, as a result they support more stable barnacle communities with limpets, periwinkles, mussels and whelks. In the case of limpets the spray from the waves of this high energy shore, enable them to live far up the cliff base.Habitat classification: LR.HLR.MusB (Mussels and/or barnacles on high energy littoral rock) EUNIS: A1.11. The base of the cliffs are hollowed by the grinding of the boulders. An indication of the high wave exposure experienced by organisms on this shore. Barnacles and small periwinkles (Melarhaphe neritoides) cover the bases of the cliffs. |
The cliff bases hold a number of small coralline rockpools that support corallinaceae crusts, limpets and red seaweeds. Habitat classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Coralline crust-dominated shallow eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.411 |
A coralline rockpool with red seaweeds and limpets. |
Barnacles |
Barnacles |
A limpet (Patella spp) |
A limpet (Patella spp) |
Barnacles and Littorina compressa var. nigrolineata. |
Dog whelks (Nucella lapillus), Limpets (Patella spp) and barnacles. |
Barnacles and Patella depressa |
Verrucaria mucosa |
Some boulders are smooth and uncolonised by fauna. |
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