首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


A preliminary account of two sandy beaches in South West India
Authors:A Trevallion  A D Ansell  P Sivadas  B Narayanan
Institution:(1) Present address: Marine Laboratory, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK;(2) Dunstaffnage Marine Research Laboratory, Oban, Scotland, UK;(3) Biological Oceanography Division, National Institute of Oceanography, Ernakulam, South India
Abstract:Observations were made on 2 beaches during the premonsoon period (January to March) when conditions were relatively stable. The beach below the berm at Cochin is 14 m wide with a slope of 1 in 8.5, and at Shertallai 40 m wide with a slope of 1 in 16. The well-sorted sand has a mean particle size of 275 mgr at Cochin and 175 mgr at Shertallai. The amount of chlorophyll attached to sand grains is very small. Chlorophyll in the water varies between 0.9 and 13.0 mgrg/l. Carbon in the sand amounts to 210 to 630 mgrg/g, and in the water to 355 to 3660 mgrg/l. Throughout observations, the water temperature remained about 31°C, but on the dry sand surface it reached 50°C. Fauna zonation on the 2 beaches is similar to that of other tropical beaches; crabs of the genus Ocypode and the isopod Eurydice sp. occur at high water mark, the polychaetes of the genera Glycera, Onuphis, Scoloplos and Lumbrinereis in the mid-intertidal region and below; the tidal migrants Bullia melanoides (Gastropoda), Donax incarnatus and D. spiculum (Bivalvia) and Emerita holthuisi (Crustacea) inhabit the wash zone of the surf. The average biomass is 0.73 g carbon/m2 at Shertallai and 0.85 g C/m2 at Cochin, where fewer species are present. This compares with a value of 0.63 g C/m2 for a sandy beach on the west coast of Scotland.
Keywords:
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号