The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water

Many ecologists have occupied themselves with the problem of the littoral zonation and they still disagree among themselves about the delimitation of the zones and the factors which cause the zonation. In this paper the problem has been approached in two different ways. In the first place the littor...

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Main Author: Hartog, C. den
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1968
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525977
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/566397
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spelling ftnaturalis:oai:naturalis:525977 2023-05-15T15:17:50+02:00 The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water Hartog, C. den 1968 application/pdf http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525977 http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/566397 unknown http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525977 http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/566397 (c) Naturalis Blumea - Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants (0006-5196) vol.16 (1968) nr.2 p.375 Article / Letter to the editor 1968 ftnaturalis 2022-09-01T06:18:47Z Many ecologists have occupied themselves with the problem of the littoral zonation and they still disagree among themselves about the delimitation of the zones and the factors which cause the zonation. In this paper the problem has been approached in two different ways. In the first place the littoral zone sensu lato has been regarded as the border area between the sea and the land. This approach does not result in an explanation of the ‘submergence’ of many eulittoral organisms in the Arctic waters and the Baltic. Secondly the littoral zone sensu lato has been considered as the border zone between the sea and the fresh water, in other words as a brackish environment. This approach gives a reasonable explanation for the ‘submergence’ of littoral organisms in low-salinity waters. It appears that both tidal movements and wave action (wash, splash, and spray) cause salinity fluctuations and that salinity is one of the major factors acting in the littoral zonation. Most of the organisms which do not show ‘submergence’ in low-salinity waters are restricted to the supralittoral and the upper part of the intertidal zone, where they are beyond the influence of the daily tidal rhythm. The vital factor for these organisms is contact with the air. The third active factor, light, is of some importance in the lower part of the eulittoral. These three abiotic factors, together with biological stress (competition), effectuate the littoral zonation pattern. Both the supralittoral and the eulittoral are well-defined ecological units, characterized by their own physical features and their own species composition. In fact they have almost no common species. Strong wave action allows some eulittoral species to survive in the supralittoral; this has to be regarded merely as an interference phenomenon. The littoral border environment is in comparison with other brackish habitats extremely rich in species peculiar to it. In this environment the influence of the salt extends far above the tidal influence. In the estuarine environment, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Naturalis Digital Academic Repository (National Museum of Natural History in the Netherlands) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Naturalis Digital Academic Repository (National Museum of Natural History in the Netherlands)
op_collection_id ftnaturalis
language unknown
description Many ecologists have occupied themselves with the problem of the littoral zonation and they still disagree among themselves about the delimitation of the zones and the factors which cause the zonation. In this paper the problem has been approached in two different ways. In the first place the littoral zone sensu lato has been regarded as the border area between the sea and the land. This approach does not result in an explanation of the ‘submergence’ of many eulittoral organisms in the Arctic waters and the Baltic. Secondly the littoral zone sensu lato has been considered as the border zone between the sea and the fresh water, in other words as a brackish environment. This approach gives a reasonable explanation for the ‘submergence’ of littoral organisms in low-salinity waters. It appears that both tidal movements and wave action (wash, splash, and spray) cause salinity fluctuations and that salinity is one of the major factors acting in the littoral zonation. Most of the organisms which do not show ‘submergence’ in low-salinity waters are restricted to the supralittoral and the upper part of the intertidal zone, where they are beyond the influence of the daily tidal rhythm. The vital factor for these organisms is contact with the air. The third active factor, light, is of some importance in the lower part of the eulittoral. These three abiotic factors, together with biological stress (competition), effectuate the littoral zonation pattern. Both the supralittoral and the eulittoral are well-defined ecological units, characterized by their own physical features and their own species composition. In fact they have almost no common species. Strong wave action allows some eulittoral species to survive in the supralittoral; this has to be regarded merely as an interference phenomenon. The littoral border environment is in comparison with other brackish habitats extremely rich in species peculiar to it. In this environment the influence of the salt extends far above the tidal influence. In the estuarine environment, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hartog, C. den
spellingShingle Hartog, C. den
The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
author_facet Hartog, C. den
author_sort Hartog, C. den
title The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
title_short The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
title_full The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
title_fullStr The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
title_full_unstemmed The littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
title_sort littoral environment of rocky shores as a border between the sea and the land and between the sea and the fresh water
publishDate 1968
url http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525977
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/566397
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Blumea - Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants (0006-5196) vol.16 (1968) nr.2 p.375
op_relation http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525977
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/566397
op_rights (c) Naturalis
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