Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze

Coastal squeeze caused by sea level rise threatens the size, type, and quality of intertidal habitats. Along coastlines protected by hard defenses, there is a risk that natural rocky shore habitats will be lost, with the remaining assemblages, characteristic of hard substrata, confined to sea walls...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alice E. Hall, Roger J. H. Herbert, J. Robert Britton, Ian M. Boyd, Nigel C. George
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00456/full
id doaj-1cdad7b34b4d4fb8b87cb1e3b1b9c207
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1cdad7b34b4d4fb8b87cb1e3b1b9c2072020-11-25T00:19:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452019-07-01610.3389/fmars.2019.00456435320Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal SqueezeAlice E. Hall0Roger J. H. Herbert1J. Robert Britton2Ian M. Boyd3Nigel C. George4Faculty of Science and Technology, Life and Environmental Sciences, Bournemouth University, Poole, United KingdomFaculty of Science and Technology, Life and Environmental Sciences, Bournemouth University, Poole, United KingdomFaculty of Science and Technology, Life and Environmental Sciences, Bournemouth University, Poole, United KingdomArtecology Ltd., Sandown, United KingdomArtecology Ltd., Sandown, United KingdomCoastal squeeze caused by sea level rise threatens the size, type, and quality of intertidal habitats. Along coastlines protected by hard defenses, there is a risk that natural rocky shore habitats will be lost, with the remaining assemblages, characteristic of hard substrata, confined to sea walls and breakwaters. These assemblages are likely to be less diverse and different to those found on natural shores, as these structures lack features that provide moist refugia required by many organisms at low tide, such as pools and crevices. Engineering solutions can help mitigate the impact of sea level rise by creating habitats that retain water on existing structures. However, as experimental trials are strongly affected by local conditions and motivations, the development of new techniques and solutions are important to meet the needs of local communities and developers. Following a small-scale community project, a feasibility study retrofitted five concrete-cast artificial rock pools (“Vertipools”) on a vertical seawall on the south coast of England. After 5 years, the artificial pools increased the species richness of the sea wall and attracted mobile fauna previously absent, including fish and crabs. The Vertipools had assemblages which supported several functional groups including predators and grazers. Although disturbance of algal assemblages on the seawall from the retrofitting process was still evident after 3 years, succession to full canopy cover was underway. Collaboration between policy makers, ecologists, children and artists produced an ecologically sensitive design that delivered substantial benefits for biodiversity, which can be adapted and scaled-up to both mitigate habitat loss and enhance coastal recreational amenity.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00456/fullecological enhancementclimate changesea level riseseawallhabitat creationocean sprawl
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alice E. Hall
Roger J. H. Herbert
J. Robert Britton
Ian M. Boyd
Nigel C. George
spellingShingle Alice E. Hall
Roger J. H. Herbert
J. Robert Britton
Ian M. Boyd
Nigel C. George
Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
Frontiers in Marine Science
ecological enhancement
climate change
sea level rise
seawall
habitat creation
ocean sprawl
author_facet Alice E. Hall
Roger J. H. Herbert
J. Robert Britton
Ian M. Boyd
Nigel C. George
author_sort Alice E. Hall
title Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
title_short Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
title_full Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
title_fullStr Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
title_full_unstemmed Shelving the Coast With Vertipools: Retrofitting Artificial Rock Pools on Coastal Structures as Mitigation for Coastal Squeeze
title_sort shelving the coast with vertipools: retrofitting artificial rock pools on coastal structures as mitigation for coastal squeeze
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Coastal squeeze caused by sea level rise threatens the size, type, and quality of intertidal habitats. Along coastlines protected by hard defenses, there is a risk that natural rocky shore habitats will be lost, with the remaining assemblages, characteristic of hard substrata, confined to sea walls and breakwaters. These assemblages are likely to be less diverse and different to those found on natural shores, as these structures lack features that provide moist refugia required by many organisms at low tide, such as pools and crevices. Engineering solutions can help mitigate the impact of sea level rise by creating habitats that retain water on existing structures. However, as experimental trials are strongly affected by local conditions and motivations, the development of new techniques and solutions are important to meet the needs of local communities and developers. Following a small-scale community project, a feasibility study retrofitted five concrete-cast artificial rock pools (“Vertipools”) on a vertical seawall on the south coast of England. After 5 years, the artificial pools increased the species richness of the sea wall and attracted mobile fauna previously absent, including fish and crabs. The Vertipools had assemblages which supported several functional groups including predators and grazers. Although disturbance of algal assemblages on the seawall from the retrofitting process was still evident after 3 years, succession to full canopy cover was underway. Collaboration between policy makers, ecologists, children and artists produced an ecologically sensitive design that delivered substantial benefits for biodiversity, which can be adapted and scaled-up to both mitigate habitat loss and enhance coastal recreational amenity.
topic ecological enhancement
climate change
sea level rise
seawall
habitat creation
ocean sprawl
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00456/full
work_keys_str_mv AT aliceehall shelvingthecoastwithvertipoolsretrofittingartificialrockpoolsoncoastalstructuresasmitigationforcoastalsqueeze
AT rogerjhherbert shelvingthecoastwithvertipoolsretrofittingartificialrockpoolsoncoastalstructuresasmitigationforcoastalsqueeze
AT jrobertbritton shelvingthecoastwithvertipoolsretrofittingartificialrockpoolsoncoastalstructuresasmitigationforcoastalsqueeze
AT ianmboyd shelvingthecoastwithvertipoolsretrofittingartificialrockpoolsoncoastalstructuresasmitigationforcoastalsqueeze
AT nigelcgeorge shelvingthecoastwithvertipoolsretrofittingartificialrockpoolsoncoastalstructuresasmitigationforcoastalsqueeze
_version_ 1725372495983280128