0000000000395364

AUTHOR

Larissa A. Naylor

showing 3 related works from this author

Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures

2015

Concrete flood defences, erosion control structures, port and harbour facilities, and renewable energy infrastructure are increasingly being built in the world’s coastal regions. There is, however, strong evidence to suggest that these structures are poor surrogates for natural rocky shores, often supporting assemblages with lower species abundance and diversity. Ecological engineering opportunities to enhance structures for biodiversity conservation (and other management goals) are therefore being sought, but the majority of work so far has concentrated on structural design features at the centimetre–meter scale.\ud \ud We deployed concrete tiles with four easily-reproducible fine-scale (m…

EngineeringEnvironmental Engineeringbusiness.industryEcologyErosion controlUrbanizationReconciliation ecologyManagement Monitoring Policy and LawIntertidal ecologyEcological engineeringEcological engineeringEcosystem engineerSpatial heterogeneityReconciliation ecologyIntertidal ecologyRocky shoreHabitatEcosystem engineerMarine concretebusinessNature and Landscape ConservationEcological Engineering
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The influence of light attenuation on the biogeomorphology of a marine karst cave: A case study of Puerto Princesa Underground River, Palawan, the Ph…

2015

Karst caves are unique biogeomorphological systems. Cave walls offer habitat for microorganisms which in-turn have a geomorphological role via their involvement in rock weathering, erosion and mineralisation. The attenuation of light with distance into caves is known to affect ecology, but the implications of this for biogeomorphological processes and forms have seldom been examined. Here we describe a semi-quantitative microscopy study comparing the extent, structure, and thickness of biocover and depth of endolithic penetration for samples of rock from the Puerto Princesa Underground River system in Palawan, the Philippines, which is a natural UNESCO World Heritage Site.\ud \ud Organic gr…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiageographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryBiogeomorphologyPhototrophEcologyEndolithbioerosionSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaBioerosionmicrobiologykarstbiogeomorphologySettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleKarsthumanitiesCaveHabitatmarine caveLichenGeologyBiogeomorphology Marine cave Microbiology Bioerosion Karst PalawanEarth-Surface Processes
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Cool barnacles: Do common biogenic structures enhance or retard rates of deterioration of intertidal rocks and concrete?

2017

Sedentary and mobile organisms grow profusely on hard substrates within the coastal zone and contribute to the deterioration of coastal engineering structures and the geomorphic evolution of rocky shores by both enhancing and retarding weathering and erosion. There is a lack of quantitative evidence for the direction and magnitude of these effects. This study assesses the influence of globally-abundant intertidal organisms, barnacles, by measuring the response of limestone, granite and marine-grade concrete colonised with varying percentage covers of Chthamalus spp. under simulated, temperate intertidal conditions. Temperature regimes at 5 and 10 mm below the surface of each material demons…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesIntertidal zoneWeatheringrock coastEnvironment010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesRocky shoreBarnacleEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsGeotechnical engineeringbiodeteriorationChthamalusWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesBiogeomorphologybiologyConstruction MaterialsThoracicabiogeomorphologybiology.organism_classificationPollutionecological enhancementCold TemperatureOceanographyErosionweatheringbioprotectionCyclingGeologyEnvironmental MonitoringThe Science of the total environment
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