Thursday, 26 November 2015

Rockpooling Destination: Revisit West Penwith, St. Loy September 2015



The shore is a high energy environment, comprised of boulders and bedrock, with crevices, rock pools and gullies.

Fauna are relatively sparse among the supralittoral and little fringe boulders, increasing on stable bedrock of the upper shore and within the rockpools, crevices and gullies of the mid and lower shore.

The supralittoral and littoral fringe rock is charecterised by lichen communities, whilst barnacle communities occur across the rest of the shore, inter-dispersed by rockpools. As the lower shore is reached, robust wracks and red seaweeds come to dominate.

A river flows onto the shore and beneath the boulders.

Where conditions are sheltered enough, a seasonal strandline forms.


Habitat classification:

Habitat
LR.HLR (High energy littoral rock)
FLR (Features of littoral rock)
Biotope complex
LR.HLR. MusB (Mussel and/or barnacle communities)
LR.HLR.FR (Robust fucoid and/or red seaweed   communities)
LR.FLR.Lic.(Lichens on supralittoral and littoral fringe rock).
LR.FLR.Rkp (Rockpools)
Biotope
LR.HLR.MusB.Cht (Chthamalus spp. on exposed eulittoral rock)
LR.HLR.FR.Him (Himanthalia elongata) and red seaweeds on exposed to moderately exposed lower eulittoral rock
LR.FLR.Lic.YG (Yellow and grey lichens on supralittoral rock)
LR.FLR.Lic.Ver (Verrucaria Maura on littoral fringe rock)
LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Coralline crust dominated shallow eulittoral rockpools)
LR.FLR.Rkp.FK (Fucoids and kelp in deep eulittoral rockpools)
Sub Biotope
LR.HLR.MusB.Cht.Cht (Chthamalus spp. on exposed upper eulittoral rock)


LR.FLR.Liv.VerB (Verrucaria maura and sparse barnacles on exposed littoral fringe rock)
LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Cor Coralline crusts and Corallina officinalis in shallow eulittoral rockpools
LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Bif (Bifurcaria bifurcata in shallow eulittoral rockpools)


Below are images of the habitats and organisms you may encounter on this shore:


The exposed nature of the shore leads to an extended lichen zone; within this zone the boulder field is comparatively barren, characterised by lichen communities and periwinkles. At the lower extent of the splash zone barnacles occur at low density. Habitat classification: Biotope complex: LR.FLR.Lic.(Lichens on supralittoral and littoral fringe rock) ENUIS: B3.11 containing the biotopes: LR.FLR.Lic.YG (Yellow and grey lichens on supralittoral rock) EUNIS: B3:111 and LR.FLR.Lic.Ver (Verrucaria maura on littoral fringe rock) EUNIS: B3:113 the latter also contains the sub biotope: LR.FLR.Liv.VerB (Verrucaria maura and sparse barnacles on exposed littoral fringe rock) EUNIS: B3:1131.

Upper shore boulders support barnacles and a range of gastropods including limpets (Patella spp), thick topshells (Osilinus lineatus) and periwinkles (Littorina spp). The seaweeds Fucus sp and Catenella caespitosa and the lichen Verrucaria mucosa occur as patches on the boulders.  Habitat classification: Biotope complex LR.HLR.MusB (Mussel and/or barnacle communities) EUNIS: A1.11.
The upper shore bedrock is covered in dense barnacles (predominantly Cthamalus spp) interspersed by limpets (Patella vulgata) and patches of Lichina pygmaea. Habitat classification: LR.HLR.MusB.Cht.Cht (Chthamalus spp. on exposed upper eulittoral rock) EUNIS: A1:1121.

Within the barnacle communities tufts of fucoids are able to grow where there is sufficient shelter from wave exposure. Seaweed species also thrive within the rockpools that punctuate the shore. Small shallow coralline rockpools are covered by pink corallinaceae crusts which are in turn overgrown by ephemeral greens (Ulva spp) and a variety of reds including, coral weed (Corallina officinalis). China limpets (Patella ulyssiponensis) and juvenile blenny (Lipophrys pholis) also occur within the rockpools.  Habitat classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Cor (Coralline crusts and Corallina officinalis in shallow eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.4111.

Deeper coralline rockpools support a higher abundance and diversity of seaweeds. Including ephemeral greens (Ulva spp and Cladophora spp), a variety of reds including, Corallinaceae crusts, Corallina sp, Mesophyllum lichenoides and the invasive brown seaweed, Sargassum muticum. S. muticum can have detrimental effects on coralline rockpools because it grows and blocks out the light, changing the environmental conditions from that which the indigenous seaweed species are adapted. Habitat classification: Habitat classification:  LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Coralline crust dominated shallow eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.411.

On the mid and lower shore other seaweed species are also prolific within the coralline rockpools, including (from top right to the left) ephemeral green seaweeds such as Ulva spp and Cladophora spp, the brown forking weed (Bifurcaria bifurcata) and on the lower shore brown wracks and kelp. A range of smaller epiphyte seaweed species also occur. Habitat classification: LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor (Coralline crust dominated shallow eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.411, LR.FLR.Rkp.Cor.Bif (Bifurcaria bifurcata in shallow eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.4113 and LR.FLR.Rkp.FK (Fucoids and kelp in deep eulittoral rockpools) EUNIS: A1.412.


On the lower shore the seaweeds are no longer confined to the rockpools. Thong weed (Himanthalia elongata) and kelp cover the under-storey reds. The remaining bare rock is covered by barnacles and limpets. Habitat classification: LR.HLR.FR.Him (Himanthalia elongata) and red seaweeds on exposed to moderately exposed lower eulittoral rock EUNIS: A1.123.

Other seaweed species present include a variety of robust fucoids and reds. (Anticlockwise from  top right) Fucus serratus; kelp (Laminaria sp); Mastrocarpus stellatus and Codium spp; Cladophora rupestris, reds and Corallinaceae crusts; and Corallina officinalis. Limpets, grey topshells (Gibbula cineraria) and a variety of faunal turfs also occur. Habitat classification: Biotope complex, LR.HLR.FR (Robust fucoid and/or red seaweed communities) EUNIS: A1.12).

Anticlockwise from top right, Gelidium spp and Osmundea spp, Codium spp; Gelidium spp; and Corallina spp.

Palmaria palmata and ephemeral green seaweed (Ulva spp formally Entermorpha spp).



Where conditions allow within the broader biotope complex of robust fucoid and red seaweed habitat, the robust reds may form turfs. On the lower shore these turfs are restricted to patches on boulder edgesThe turf comprises Corallinaceae crust, upon which Mastrocarpus stellatus, Chondus crispus and Corallina officinalis grow, above  Lomentaria articulata, Gelidium sp and Osmundea sp occur. That rock not covered by Corallinaceae crust supports barnacles, limpets and topshells. Habitat classification: Biotope complex, LR.HLR.FR (Robust fucoid and/or red seaweed communities) EUNIS: A1.12).
At the low tide mark the red seaweed turfs extend across the rock. Young Himanthalia elongata grow among a turfs of red seaweeds that comprise, Corallinaceae crusts, Corallina officinalis, Mastrocarpus stellatus, Chondrus crispus, Osmundea sp, Gelidium sp and Lomentaria articulata.  

The low tide mark corresponds to a dramatic increase is kelp abundance and red seaweeds turfs extend over available rock. Habitat classification: ILR (Infralittoral rock).


Looking among the kelp blades you may be lucky and spot a blue rayed limpet (Patella pellucida).

A revisit to an overhang found little change since October 2014, except it was not clear to discern the presence or absence of the fried egg anemones  (Actinothoe sphyrodeta).

The same overhang in October 2014. Such overhangs provide shade, enabling subtidal species such as, fried egg anemones (Actinothoe sphyrodeta) to occur within the rockpool and enables Coralline crusts, Serpulid polychaetes  and breadcrumb sponge (Halichondria panicea)to extend up the shaded boulder sides; Grey topshells (Gibbula cineraria) also occur.


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