Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?

Despite the global implementation of rock-rubble groyne structures, there is limited research investigating their ecology, much less than for other artificial coastal structures. Here we compare the intertidal ecology of urban (or semi-urban) rock-rubble groynes and more rural natural rocky shores f...

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Main Authors: Paul Holloway, Richard Field
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Land
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/9/5/131
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spelling doaj-5d33c42cb374406e989089c0c1734cdb2020-11-25T02:27:37ZengMDPI AGLand2073-445X2020-04-01913113110.3390/land9050131Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?Paul Holloway0Richard Field1Department of Geography, University College Cork, T12K8AF Cork, IrelandSchool of Geography, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UKDespite the global implementation of rock-rubble groyne structures, there is limited research investigating their ecology, much less than for other artificial coastal structures. Here we compare the intertidal ecology of urban (or semi-urban) rock-rubble groynes and more rural natural rocky shores for three areas of the UK coastline. We collected richness and abundance data for 771 quadrats across three counties, finding a total of 81 species, with 48 species on the groynes and 71 species on the natural rocky shores. We performed three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) on both richness and abundance data, running parallel analysis for rock and rock-pool habitats. We also performed detrended correspondence analysis on all species to identify patterns in community structure. On rock surfaces, we found similar richness and abundance across structures for algae, higher diversity and abundance for lichen and mobile animals on natural shores, and higher numbers of sessile animals on groynes. Rock-pool habitats were depauperate on groynes for all species groups except for sessile animals, relative to natural shores. Only a slight differentiation between groyne and natural shore communities was observed, while groynes supported higher abundances of some ‘at risk’ species than natural shores. Furthermore, groynes did not differ substantially from natural shores in terms of their presence and abundance of species not native to the area. We conclude that groynes host similar ecological communities to those found on natural shores, but differences do exist, particularly with respect to rock-pool habitats.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/9/5/131biodiversitynon-native speciesprotected speciesrange expansionspecies distributions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Holloway
Richard Field
spellingShingle Paul Holloway
Richard Field
Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
Land
biodiversity
non-native species
protected species
range expansion
species distributions
author_facet Paul Holloway
Richard Field
author_sort Paul Holloway
title Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
title_short Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
title_full Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
title_fullStr Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
title_full_unstemmed Can Rock-Rubble Groynes Support Similar Intertidal Ecological Communities to Natural Rocky Shores?
title_sort can rock-rubble groynes support similar intertidal ecological communities to natural rocky shores?
publisher MDPI AG
series Land
issn 2073-445X
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Despite the global implementation of rock-rubble groyne structures, there is limited research investigating their ecology, much less than for other artificial coastal structures. Here we compare the intertidal ecology of urban (or semi-urban) rock-rubble groynes and more rural natural rocky shores for three areas of the UK coastline. We collected richness and abundance data for 771 quadrats across three counties, finding a total of 81 species, with 48 species on the groynes and 71 species on the natural rocky shores. We performed three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) on both richness and abundance data, running parallel analysis for rock and rock-pool habitats. We also performed detrended correspondence analysis on all species to identify patterns in community structure. On rock surfaces, we found similar richness and abundance across structures for algae, higher diversity and abundance for lichen and mobile animals on natural shores, and higher numbers of sessile animals on groynes. Rock-pool habitats were depauperate on groynes for all species groups except for sessile animals, relative to natural shores. Only a slight differentiation between groyne and natural shore communities was observed, while groynes supported higher abundances of some ‘at risk’ species than natural shores. Furthermore, groynes did not differ substantially from natural shores in terms of their presence and abundance of species not native to the area. We conclude that groynes host similar ecological communities to those found on natural shores, but differences do exist, particularly with respect to rock-pool habitats.
topic biodiversity
non-native species
protected species
range expansion
species distributions
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/9/5/131
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