Littoral sediment

English name: Littoral sediment

Quick facts

EUNIS habitat type code A2

Description (English)

Littoral sediment includes habitats of shingle (mobile cobbles and pebbles), gravel, sand and mud or any combination of these which occur in the intertidal zone. Littoral sediment is defined further using descriptions of particle sizes - mainly gravel (16-4 mm), coarse sand (4-1 mm), medium sand (1-0.25 mm), fine sand (0.25-0.063 mm) and mud (less than 0.063 mm) and various admixtures of these (and coarser) grades - muddy sand, sandy mud and mixed sediment (cobbles, gravel, sand and mud together). Littoral sediments support communities tolerant to some degree of drainage at low tide and often subject to variation in air temperature and reduced salinity in estuarine situations. Very coarse sediments tend to support few macrofaunal species because these sediments tend to be mobile and subject to a high degree of drying when exposed at low tide. Finer sediments tend to be more stable and retain some water between high tides, and therefore support a greater diversity of species. Medium and fine sand shores usually support a range of oligochaetes, polychaetes, and burrowing crustaceans, and even more stable muddy sand shores also support a range of bivalves. Very fine and cohesive sediment (mud) tends to have a lower species diversity, because oxygen cannot penetrate far below the sediment surface. A black, anoxic layer of sediment develops under these circumstances, which may extend to the sediment surface and in which few species can survive. Some intertidal sediments are dominated by angiosperms, e.g. eelgrass (Zostera noltii) beds on the mid and upper shore of muddy sand flats, or saltmarshes which develop on the extreme upper shore of sheltered fine sediment flats.
Situation: Littoral sediments are found across the entire intertidal zone, including the strandline. Sediment biotopes can extend further landwards (dune systems, marshes) and further seawards (sublittoral sediments). Sediment shores are generally found along relatively more sheltered stretches of coast compared to rocky shores. Muddy shores or muddy sand shores occur mainly in very sheltered inlets and along estuaries, where wave exposure is low enough to allow fine sediments to settle. Sandy shores and coarser sediment (gravel, pebbles, cobbles) shores are found in areas subject to higher wave exposures.
Temporal variation: Littoral sediment environments can change markedly over seasonal cycles, with sediment being eroded during winter storms and accreted during calmer summer months. The particle size structure of the sediment may change from finer to coarser during winter months, as finer sediment gets resuspended in seasonal exposed conditions. This may affect the sediment infauna, with some species only present in summer when sediments are more stable. These changes are most likely to affect sandy shores on relatively open shores. Sheltered muddy shores are likely to be more stable throughout the year, but may have a seasonal cover of green seaweeds during the summer period, particularly in nutrient enriched areas or where there is freshwater input.

Source: EUNIS habitat classification

Vegetation types

Relation to vegetation types (syntaxa)

Not available

Species mentioned in habitat description

Flowering Plants Zostera noltii
Species scientific name English common name Species group
Zostera noltii Flowering Plants

Other classifications

Classification Code Habitat type name Relationship type
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 200112 11.28 Pebbly shore littoral communities narrower
CORINE Land Cover 4.2.3. Intertidal flats n/a
Marine Habitat Classification Britain/Ireland 0405 LS Littoral sediments same
Phase 1 habitat classification (UK) 1993 H1 Intertidal wider
Phase 1 habitat classification (UK) 1993 H Coastlands wider
Biodiversity Broad Habitat Classification (UK) 21 Littoral sediment narrower
For relation to plant communities (syntaxa), see Vegetation types

History

Classification Code Habitat type name Relationship type
EUNIS Habitat Classification 200410 A2 Littoral sediment same
EUNIS Habitat Classification 200308 A2 Littoral sediment same
EUNIS Habitat Classification 200202 A2 Littoral sediments same
EUNIS Habitat Classification 199910 A2 Littoral sediments same
EUNIS Habitat Classification 199811 A2 Littoral sediments same
EUNIS Habitat Classification 199712 A2 Littoral (inter-tidal) sediments same
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 199905 11.28 Pebbly shore littoral communities not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1997 11.28 Pebbly shore littoral communities not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1997 11.27 Soft sediment littoral communities not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1996 11.28   not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1996 11.27   not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1993 11.27   not defined
Palaearctic Habitat Classification 1993 11.28   not defined
MNCR BioMar 97.06 (Britain & Ireland) LS Littoral sediments same
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