Search results for "Intertidal ecology"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

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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Combining heat-transfer and energy budget models to predict thermal stress in Mediterranean intertidal mussels

2011

Recent studies have emphasised that organisms can experience physiological stress well within their geographic range limits. Developing methods for mechanistically predicting the presence, absence and physiological performance of organisms is therefore important because of the ongoing effects of climate change. In this study, we merged a biophysical–ecological (BE) model that estimates the aquatic (high tide) and aerial (low tide) body temperatures of Mytilus galloprovincialis with a Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) model to predict growth, reproduction and mortality of this Mediterranean mussel in both intertidal and subtidal environments. Using weather and chlorophyll-a data from three Mediter…

Mediterranean musselMediterranean climateEcologybiologyEcologyDynamic energy budgetfungiIntertidal zoneIntertidal ecologyBivalviabiology.organism_classificationMytilusOceanographyMediterranean seaGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneral Environmental ScienceChemistry and Ecology
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The impact of climate change on Mediterranean intertidal communities: losses in coastal ecosystem integrity and services

2014

As has been shown for other ecosystems, the ecological and socio-economic impacts of climate change on Mediterranean intertidal habitats are highly variable in space and time. We conducted field and laboratory measurements of cellular, ecophysiological and behavioural responses of selected intertidal invertebrates (mussels, gastropods and sponges) and completed a literature review to determine what is known of socioeconomic consequences of these biological changes. Results suggest significant gaps in our knowledge that may impede a complete understanding of likely impacts (physical, biological, and socioeconomic) and that sufficient data for such an analysis is available only for mussels. A…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcosystem serviceEcologyBioenergetic mechanistic modellingEcophysiologyMytilaster minimusInvasive specieIntertidal zoneClimate changeIntertidalIntertidal; Bioenergetic mechanistic modelling; Ecophysiology; Ecosystem services; Climate change; Invasive species; Mediterranean SeaIntroduced speciesIntertidal ecologyEcosystem servicesFisheryGeographyHabitatMediterranean SeaClimate changeEcosystemintertidal; bioenergetic mechanistic modelling; ecophysiology; ecosystem services; climate change; invasive species; Mediterranean Sea
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Sources of organic matter for inter-tidal consumers in Ascophyllum-shores (Sw Iceland): a multi stable isotope approach.

2007

Stable isotopes were used to examine the origin of organic matter in Icelandic Ascophyllum-based habitats, the role of different organic matters in filling intertidal food webs and the food preferences of the most abundant suspension feeders, grazers and predators. We selected three intertidal sites on the SW coast of Iceland where we sampled in early September 2004, organic matter sources (POM, SOM and most abundant primary producers, A. nodosum and F. vesciculosus) and the most abundant macrofauna species (barnacles, mussels, gastropods, sponge and crabs). Even though the primary production (Ascophyllum-based) was the same at the three study sites, the isotopic composition of common-among…

chemistry.chemical_classificationSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaPrimary producersbiologyEcologyStable isotope ratioIntertidal zoneAquatic ScienceIntertidal ecologyOceanographybiology.organism_classificationFood webchemistryHabitatBenthic organism Intertidal environment Stable isotope Iceland North AtlanticEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterAscophyllum
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