45) SANDY SHORES
The sandy shore is not a hospitable place: nothing is stable and
nothing grows there. All food on the sandy shore has to be
imported, and is either washed in by the waves or blown in by the
wind.
The small pieces of shell and sand particles that make up the
beach are always on the move, and are constantly washed by water
and blown by wind. There is little protection for anything living
there, so animals burrow into the sand or live between the grains
of sand. Here they are protected from waves, sand movements and
predators.
No large plants grow on sandy shores but pieces of dead plants
are washed in by the waves. Microscopic algae, called diatoms,
are found in the water and between the sand particles. The many
small animals living between the sand grains form an entire
foodweb, including grazers, predators, scavengers and
detritivores (animals eating tiny fragments of decaying food).
Many animals use tidal, lunar or seasonal rhythms to help them
survive. Thus plough snails burrow into the sand at mid-tide to
avoid stranding on the high shore. Small, white sandhoppers and
ghost crabs are both nocturnal scavengers. During the day the
sandhoppers bury themselves in the damp sand of the high-tide
mark and the ghost crabs retreat to deep burrows. By being active
at night they avoid both predators and the hot, drying sun.
Animals of the sandy shore are dependent on seawater to keep them
moist, and to supply them with oxygen and food in the form of
small pieces of dead plants and animals.
Like most sandy shore animals, the common plough snail is a
scavenger. It is sensitive to traces of food in the water and
uses its large foot as an underwater sail to surf up the beach
in search of stranded prey.
Many animals are filter feeders, such as the mole crab which
lives in the intertidal zone on the east coast of South Africa.
The long net like antennae are used to trap food from the water.
Other filter feeders include white mussels, sand prawns and mysid
shrimps.
Zooplankton (small drifting animals) and fish are the animals
found most commonly in the surf-zone. Zooplankton is a food
source for filter feeding animals. Jellyfish and blue-bottles are
not resident in the surf-zone but are washed in from the open
sea. When stranded on the beach they are an important source of
food for scavenging beach animals.
Fish found in the surf-zone include soles, mullet, pompano,
garrick, tasselfish, blacktail, elf, skates, rays and sandsharks.
They feed on smaller fish, zooplankton, molluscs and crustaceans.
Gulls, sandpipers and terns are some of the larger animals on
sandy shores. Turtles nest on northern KwaZulu/Natal shores
during summer.
THREATS TO SANDY SHORES
Pollution, bait harvesting, traffic and development harm sandy
beaches. Pollution includes oil slicks, chemical effluent, sewage
and litter (from ships at sea, rivers and beach users). Most
large burrowing sand animals, e.g. mole crabs, mussels and ghost
crabs are used as food or bait. Vehicles on beaches kill beach
creatures, compact the sand, destroy burrows and, at high tide,
drivers trying to avoid the incoming tide damage the dunes.
Popular bathing beaches may be so disturbed that no sign of
animal or plant life remains.
Development such as mining and building on beaches or in the
dunes ruin sandy beaches. Dunes are vulnerable to trampling,
vehicles, dumping of refuse, grazing, and littering. Many of
these activities destroy the vegetation which stabilises the dune
sand.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
* Visit the beach after a storm and see what has been washed up.
A trip to the beach at night with a torch will show you many
creatures not normally seen.
* Avoid walking over dune vegetation, driving vehicles on the
beach, making fires with coastal forest timber and littering.
* Develop and share your awareness and concern by making the
sandy shore the topic for your next school or guide/scout
project.
FURTHER READING
HANDS ON THE EAST COAST SANDY SHORE: A FIELD GUIDE.
A. Ashwell. 1991. Share-Net, P O Box 394, Howick, 3290.
THE LIVING SHORES OF SOUTHERN AFRICA.
G. Branch and M. Branch. Struik, Cape Town, 1981.
EAST COAST SANDY BEACH LIFE POSTER.
Share-Net, P O Box 394, Howick 3290. Tel. 0332-303931
THE BEACH CODE.
Natal Parks Board. Tel. 0331-471961.
A GUIDE TO THE COASTAL FISHING REGULATIONS OF NATAL.
Natal Parks Board.
USEFUL ADDRESSES
Oceanographic Research Institute.
P O Box 10712, Marine Parade, 4056. Tel. 031-373536.
Treasure Beach Project.
PO Box 16126, Brighton Beach, 4009. Tel. 031-478507.
East London Museum.
Upper Oxford Street, East London, 5200. Tel. 0431-22623.
Albany Museum.
Somerset Street, Grahamstown, 6140. Tel. 0461-22243
Port Elizabeth Museum.
Beach Road, Humewood, Port Elizabeth, 6001. Tel. 0461-561050.
The South African Museum.
Marine Biology Department, Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town,
8001. Tel. 021-243330.
Natal Parks Board.
P O Box 662, Pietermaritzburg, 3200. Tel. 0331-471961.
Dept. Environment and Cultural Affairs (previously Cape Nature
Conservation)
Private Bag X9086 Cape Town 8000. Tel. 021-483 4227.
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