SlideShare a Scribd company logo
6
Most read
8
Most read
9
Most read
Sand Dune Ecosystems
The sand dunes show a typical  transect  with low embryo dunes near the shoreline and much taller mature dunes several hundred metres back from the shore. As you follow the transect from the beach, the dunes get older and the vegetation changes, gradually covering more and more of the bare sand.
Beach at low tide Sand accumulates on the beach from  longshore drift  or  onshore currents . At low tide, the sand dries out allowing the  prevailing winds  to move the loose sand up the beach. Most moves by  saltation  in a series of short hops but strong winds may be powerful enough to carry the finer sand grains for longer distances. At Coatham Sands, there is a large  tidal range  which exposes wide expanses of sand at low tide. Much of the fine material is  glacial  in origin and probably accumulated offshore at the end of the last ice age.
Embryo Dunes Sand is continuously moving around at the top of the beach and it needs an  obstruction  to break the force of the wind, so that sand begins to accumulate. Seaweed, dead seabirds, driftwood and other detritus may all serve this purpose. These  embryo dunes  may disappear as quickly as they form but some may eventually be colonised by plants and the sand stabilised. Conditions here are very extreme, with high pH values (over 8), rapid drainage, no humus, high wind speed and lots of salt spray. These young dunes may reach no more than 1 metre in height.
Foredunes The first plants to colonise the  foredunes  are  lyme grass ,  sea couch grass  and  marram grass . These plants are drought-resistant and capable of withstanding burial by the shifting sand. As they grow up through the sand, they help trap more sand and so the dunes increase in height. Here the dunes may typically reach up to 5 metres. Other pioneer plants include  sea rocket ,  saltwort  and  ragwort . The marram grass which may reach 50-120cms. in height, has an extensive root system which helps to bind the sand together and young shoots grow up from the spreading roots or rhizomes. The picture on the right shows a single marram grass plant
Yellow Dunes The  yellow dunes  begin to show a greater diversity of plants as conditions become more favourable. As plants die and decay, a humus layer builds up and this traps both water and nutrients. The pH is now only slightly alkaline (about 7.5), there is more shelter and less salt spray. Marram usually still dominates the vegetation but as can be seen in the picture on the right, other plants are taking hold on the stabilised surface. Plants may include  creeping fescue, sand sedge, mosses, lichens, sea holly  and  sea spurge .The dunes by this stage may well have reached 5-10 metres in height. Up to 80% of the sand surface may now be vegetated. Rabbits and othe mammals may add their droppings to help enrich the developing soil.
Grey Dunes The  grey dunes  are much more stable and mosses and lichens fill the few remaining spaces between plants so that vegetation cover may reach 100%.  Marram grass  becomes less common and appears now in isolated patches.  Red fescue, sand sedge, sea spurge  begin to dominate. Small shrubs ( brambles, gorse, buckthorn ) appear for the first time. Environmental conditions 50-100 metres from the sea are much more friendly. There is shelter from the harshest winds, humus is beginning to darken the surface layers and a true soil begins to form. Soil pH is increasingly acid and heathers may take advantage of the acid conditions. Water content is still low and plants have to search for water with their spreading root systems. These large dunes are commonly 10 metres in height and wider than those dunes nearer the shore.
Dune Slacks The  dune slacks  are found in between the more mature dunes where the water table reaches the surface causing seasonal or even permanent waterlogging and surface water. Plants which are well adapted to these damp, sheltered hollows include  rushes, sedges, cotton grass  and  creeping willow . If decay is slow, a peaty soil may develop.
Mature Dunes The most  mature dunes  are found several hundred metres from the shore. Left undisturbed these dunes develop a soil which can support shrubs and trees including  hawthorn ,  ash  and  birch . Humans may, as in the picture on the right, plant fast-growing conifers which flourish in the sandy soil. Eventually an  oak   climax vegetation  may develop.
Possible areas of investigation? increase in number of species;  decline in area of bare soil;  increased moisture and humus content, and decline in pH;  change in visual appearance of sediment from light beige pure sand to darker sandy soil;  changes in dominance of species;  decrease in infiltration rates
Possible methods of investigation? Vegetation characteristics could be assessed at 10 metre intervals using a quadrat. Within the quadrat the following information could be recorded: percentage of bare soil;  number of species;  name and percentage cover of the four most dominant species using identification keys;  average height of the most dominant species using a ruler;  measurements.  Additional information could be collected at 50 metre intervals: soil pH and moisture content using probes and meters;  wind speed and direction using compass and hand held anemometer;  infiltration rate using home made infiltration equipment  a small sediment sample ,sealed in a polythene bag and labelled, to be used for later laboratory analysis.

More Related Content

PPSX
morphometric analysis
PPT
Ocean sediments
PPT
Sand dunes
PPTX
Coastal environment
PDF
Physical oceanography
PPTX
Aquatic ecosystem ppt
PDF
GEOG 100--Lecture 17--Coastal Geomorphology
PPT
Ocean floor-topography
morphometric analysis
Ocean sediments
Sand dunes
Coastal environment
Physical oceanography
Aquatic ecosystem ppt
GEOG 100--Lecture 17--Coastal Geomorphology
Ocean floor-topography

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Fluvial landforms
PPT
Clastic Shelf Systems
PPT
Oceanography
PPTX
coastal erosion
PDF
Fluvial Geomorphology
PDF
Coastal Erosion And Its Control
PPT
Continental margins
PPTX
River Rejuvination
DOC
Fundamental and concept of environmental geology
PPT
Properties of sea water
PDF
Types Drainage pattern presentation
PPTX
PPTX
REMOTE SENSING IN GROUNDWATER.pptx
DOCX
Geological oceanography 301
PPTX
Coastal Ecosystems
PPTX
Lacustrine
PPTX
Glaciers and its types
PPT
Geomorphology at a glance: Major landforms
DOCX
Foliation and lineation
PPTX
Biosphere Reserve & Marine Protected Areas in India...
Fluvial landforms
Clastic Shelf Systems
Oceanography
coastal erosion
Fluvial Geomorphology
Coastal Erosion And Its Control
Continental margins
River Rejuvination
Fundamental and concept of environmental geology
Properties of sea water
Types Drainage pattern presentation
REMOTE SENSING IN GROUNDWATER.pptx
Geological oceanography 301
Coastal Ecosystems
Lacustrine
Glaciers and its types
Geomorphology at a glance: Major landforms
Foliation and lineation
Biosphere Reserve & Marine Protected Areas in India...
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Coastal Protection Methods
PPTX
Formation of spits, tombolos and bars
PPTX
Holocene sea level change
PPT
Beaches AS
PPTX
L4 ap erosional landforms
PPT
Mangroves and coral reefs
PPTX
Sediment Cells And Sources
PDF
S3 GE Slides 1.2 - Coasts GW1
PPT
Spit, bar or tombolo
PPTX
Coastal erosion processes
PPT
Holderness coastal erosion case study
PPT
Sea Defences Revision
PPTX
Coastal erosion
PDF
Coastal and sea erosion
PPT
Erosion, Weathering And Mass Movement
PPTX
Submergent and emergent coastlines
PPTX
How we measure development
PPTX
Migration - IB Geography Labour Flows
PPT
Coastal Mass Movement
PDF
Lee's Migration Model
Coastal Protection Methods
Formation of spits, tombolos and bars
Holocene sea level change
Beaches AS
L4 ap erosional landforms
Mangroves and coral reefs
Sediment Cells And Sources
S3 GE Slides 1.2 - Coasts GW1
Spit, bar or tombolo
Coastal erosion processes
Holderness coastal erosion case study
Sea Defences Revision
Coastal erosion
Coastal and sea erosion
Erosion, Weathering And Mass Movement
Submergent and emergent coastlines
How we measure development
Migration - IB Geography Labour Flows
Coastal Mass Movement
Lee's Migration Model
Ad

Similar to Sand Dune Ecosystems (20)

PPT
Igcse geog dune succession
PPT
12748358.ppt
PPT
Coastal Revision Ppt
PDF
Ldb Permacultura_Kent dryland strategies
PDF
Ldb Permacultura_Kent dryland strategies 2
PPTX
Desert ecosystem by manshi
PPTX
New Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation (2).pptx
PPTX
The Sandy Shore Ecosystem PowerPoint.pptx
PDF
Class 7 Soil
PPTX
Different farming techniques in Philippines.pptx
DOCX
salt marshes
PPTX
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: DUNE FORMATION - MURIWAI BEACH NEW ZEALAND
PPT
CVSP Microhabitat Investigation
PPTX
Deserts in the world
PPTX
BIO114 SOIL AND IT'S COMPONENTSssss.pptx
PPT
Succession Lesson1
PPTX
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS - CASE STUDY NEW ZEALAND
PPTX
Sediments transportation
PPTX
Igcse geog dune succession
12748358.ppt
Coastal Revision Ppt
Ldb Permacultura_Kent dryland strategies
Ldb Permacultura_Kent dryland strategies 2
Desert ecosystem by manshi
New Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation (2).pptx
The Sandy Shore Ecosystem PowerPoint.pptx
Class 7 Soil
Different farming techniques in Philippines.pptx
salt marshes
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: DUNE FORMATION - MURIWAI BEACH NEW ZEALAND
CVSP Microhabitat Investigation
Deserts in the world
BIO114 SOIL AND IT'S COMPONENTSssss.pptx
Succession Lesson1
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS - CASE STUDY NEW ZEALAND
Sediments transportation

More from jacksonthree (20)

PPT
Howdo tropicalrevolvingstormsform
PPTX
Tropical storms lesson 2
PPT
Going Around The Bend
PPT
China Population
PPT
Indigenous People
PPT
River Study
PPT
Role Of Fire In Forest Ecosystems
PPT
Tropical Rainforest Introduction
PPT
Biomes & Ecosystems
PPT
Physical Geography Plate Tectonics
PPT
PPT
Urbanisation
PPT
Urbanisation
PPT
Urbanisation
PPT
Settlement Hierarchy Tasks
PPT
Lesson Conservation Groups Essay
PPT
Urban Land Use in Vancouver
PPT
Vancouver Introduction
PPT
Changing Sedimentation Levels
PPT
Population Growth
Howdo tropicalrevolvingstormsform
Tropical storms lesson 2
Going Around The Bend
China Population
Indigenous People
River Study
Role Of Fire In Forest Ecosystems
Tropical Rainforest Introduction
Biomes & Ecosystems
Physical Geography Plate Tectonics
Urbanisation
Urbanisation
Urbanisation
Settlement Hierarchy Tasks
Lesson Conservation Groups Essay
Urban Land Use in Vancouver
Vancouver Introduction
Changing Sedimentation Levels
Population Growth

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Optimiser vos workloads AI/ML sur Amazon EC2 et AWS Graviton
PDF
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
PDF
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PDF
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
PDF
Accuracy of neural networks in brain wave diagnosis of schizophrenia
PPTX
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PPTX
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
PDF
A comparative analysis of optical character recognition models for extracting...
PDF
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
PDF
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
PDF
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
PDF
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
PPTX
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx
PPTX
Programs and apps: productivity, graphics, security and other tools
PPT
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
PDF
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
PDF
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
PPTX
Machine Learning_overview_presentation.pptx
PDF
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology
Optimiser vos workloads AI/ML sur Amazon EC2 et AWS Graviton
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
Accuracy of neural networks in brain wave diagnosis of schizophrenia
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
A comparative analysis of optical character recognition models for extracting...
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx
Programs and apps: productivity, graphics, security and other tools
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
Machine Learning_overview_presentation.pptx
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology

Sand Dune Ecosystems

  • 2. The sand dunes show a typical transect with low embryo dunes near the shoreline and much taller mature dunes several hundred metres back from the shore. As you follow the transect from the beach, the dunes get older and the vegetation changes, gradually covering more and more of the bare sand.
  • 3. Beach at low tide Sand accumulates on the beach from longshore drift or onshore currents . At low tide, the sand dries out allowing the prevailing winds to move the loose sand up the beach. Most moves by saltation in a series of short hops but strong winds may be powerful enough to carry the finer sand grains for longer distances. At Coatham Sands, there is a large tidal range which exposes wide expanses of sand at low tide. Much of the fine material is glacial in origin and probably accumulated offshore at the end of the last ice age.
  • 4. Embryo Dunes Sand is continuously moving around at the top of the beach and it needs an obstruction to break the force of the wind, so that sand begins to accumulate. Seaweed, dead seabirds, driftwood and other detritus may all serve this purpose. These embryo dunes may disappear as quickly as they form but some may eventually be colonised by plants and the sand stabilised. Conditions here are very extreme, with high pH values (over 8), rapid drainage, no humus, high wind speed and lots of salt spray. These young dunes may reach no more than 1 metre in height.
  • 5. Foredunes The first plants to colonise the foredunes are lyme grass , sea couch grass and marram grass . These plants are drought-resistant and capable of withstanding burial by the shifting sand. As they grow up through the sand, they help trap more sand and so the dunes increase in height. Here the dunes may typically reach up to 5 metres. Other pioneer plants include sea rocket , saltwort and ragwort . The marram grass which may reach 50-120cms. in height, has an extensive root system which helps to bind the sand together and young shoots grow up from the spreading roots or rhizomes. The picture on the right shows a single marram grass plant
  • 6. Yellow Dunes The yellow dunes begin to show a greater diversity of plants as conditions become more favourable. As plants die and decay, a humus layer builds up and this traps both water and nutrients. The pH is now only slightly alkaline (about 7.5), there is more shelter and less salt spray. Marram usually still dominates the vegetation but as can be seen in the picture on the right, other plants are taking hold on the stabilised surface. Plants may include creeping fescue, sand sedge, mosses, lichens, sea holly and sea spurge .The dunes by this stage may well have reached 5-10 metres in height. Up to 80% of the sand surface may now be vegetated. Rabbits and othe mammals may add their droppings to help enrich the developing soil.
  • 7. Grey Dunes The grey dunes are much more stable and mosses and lichens fill the few remaining spaces between plants so that vegetation cover may reach 100%. Marram grass becomes less common and appears now in isolated patches. Red fescue, sand sedge, sea spurge begin to dominate. Small shrubs ( brambles, gorse, buckthorn ) appear for the first time. Environmental conditions 50-100 metres from the sea are much more friendly. There is shelter from the harshest winds, humus is beginning to darken the surface layers and a true soil begins to form. Soil pH is increasingly acid and heathers may take advantage of the acid conditions. Water content is still low and plants have to search for water with their spreading root systems. These large dunes are commonly 10 metres in height and wider than those dunes nearer the shore.
  • 8. Dune Slacks The dune slacks are found in between the more mature dunes where the water table reaches the surface causing seasonal or even permanent waterlogging and surface water. Plants which are well adapted to these damp, sheltered hollows include rushes, sedges, cotton grass and creeping willow . If decay is slow, a peaty soil may develop.
  • 9. Mature Dunes The most mature dunes are found several hundred metres from the shore. Left undisturbed these dunes develop a soil which can support shrubs and trees including hawthorn , ash and birch . Humans may, as in the picture on the right, plant fast-growing conifers which flourish in the sandy soil. Eventually an oak climax vegetation may develop.
  • 10. Possible areas of investigation? increase in number of species; decline in area of bare soil; increased moisture and humus content, and decline in pH; change in visual appearance of sediment from light beige pure sand to darker sandy soil; changes in dominance of species; decrease in infiltration rates
  • 11. Possible methods of investigation? Vegetation characteristics could be assessed at 10 metre intervals using a quadrat. Within the quadrat the following information could be recorded: percentage of bare soil; number of species; name and percentage cover of the four most dominant species using identification keys; average height of the most dominant species using a ruler; measurements. Additional information could be collected at 50 metre intervals: soil pH and moisture content using probes and meters; wind speed and direction using compass and hand held anemometer; infiltration rate using home made infiltration equipment a small sediment sample ,sealed in a polythene bag and labelled, to be used for later laboratory analysis.