Arthropodofauna richness and abundance across beach-dune systems with contrasting morphodynamics

2021 ◽  
pp. 101722
Author(s):  
Emilia Innocenti Degli ◽  
Omar Defeo ◽  
Felicita Scapini
Keyword(s):  
Shore & Beach ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 17-21
Author(s):  
A.T. Williams

Between the years 1200 and 1600, vast quantities of sand were brought inshore from offshore bars as a result of centuries of ferocious storms, to form a series of dune systems along the South Wales coastline. Today, as a result of many housing, leisure, and industrial developments only a few remnants exist. On one such remnant at Porthcawl, Wales, UK, became a caravan site in the 1930s, which was abandoned in 1993 for political reasons. Within 27 years a minimum of 120,000 m3 of sand was transported from the adjacent beach and formed dunes >4 m in height along a 400- m frontal edge that extended some 130 m inland, approximately a third of the site. Typical vegetation found along the frontal part of the system are Ammophila arenaria (marram), Agropyron junceiforme (sand couch grass) and Euphorbia maritimum (spurge). To the rear of the system, vegetation included Agrostis tenuis and stolonifera, (bent and creeping bent grass), Cirsium avense (creeping thistle), and Caluna vulgaris (heather). A 4-m-high and c. 3000m2 area of a vigorous stand of Hippophae rhamnoides (sea buckthorn) has also formed. The rapidity of dune formation and vegetation colonization is staggering.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Umberto Andriolo ◽  
Gil Gonçalves ◽  
Filipa Bessa ◽  
Paula Sobral ◽  
Luis Pinto ◽  
...  

<p>Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS, aka drones) are being used to map marine macro-litter on the coast. Within the UAS4Litter project, the application of UAS has been applied on three sandy beach-dune systems on the wave-dominated North Atlantic Portuguese coast. Several technical solutions have been tested in terms of drone mapping performance, manual image screening and marine litter map analysis. The conceptualization and implementation of a multidisciplinary framework allowed to improve and making more efficient the mapping of marine litter items with UAS on coastal environment. </p><p>The location of major marine litter loads within the monitored areas were found associated to beach slope and water level dynamics on the beach profiles. Moreover, the abundance of marine pollution was related to the geographical location and level of urbanization of the study sites. The testing of machine learning techniques underlined that automated technique returned reliable abundance map of marine litter, while manual image screening was required for a detailed categorization of the items. </p><p>As marine litter pollution on coastal dunes has received limited scientific attention when compared with sandy shores, a novel non-intrusive UAS-based marine litter survey have been also applied to quantify the level of contamination on coastal dunes. The results showed the influence of the different dune plant communities in trapping distinct type of marine litter, and the role played by wind and overwash events in defining the items pathways through the dune blowouts. </p><p>The experiences on the Portuguese coast show that UAS allows an integrated approach for marine litter mapping, beach morphodynamic and nearshore hydrodynamic, setting the ground for marine litter dynamic modelling on the shore. Besides, UAS can give a new impulse to coastal dune litter monitoring, where the long residence time of marine debris threat the bio-ecological equilibrium of these ecosystems.</p>


1957 ◽  
Vol S6-VII (1-3) ◽  
pp. 83-90
Author(s):  
Rene Battistini

Abstract A preliminary report on Quaternary shore lines and dune systems of the extreme southern part of Madagascar. Consolidated beach deposits three meters above present sea level are attributed to a stillstand (here named the Karimbolian) which occurred prior to the pre-Flandrian regression. This three-meter level acts as a marker zone for identifying periods of dune formation. Present knowledge of the Quaternary history of the region is summed up in a table correlating climates, cycles of erosion and continental sedimentation, shore lines, and phases of dune formation.


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