An ecohydrological review of dune slacks on the west coast of England and Wales
An ecohydrological review of dune slacks on the west coast of England and Wales
Coastal dunes are valuable ecological reserves providing a range of ecosystem services from coastal flood defence to recreational amenity. An important feature of dune systems is the slack floors, areas of high ecological value that are closely linked to the prevailing hydrological system in the dunes. Dune slacks are sensitive environments that are impacted by external changes, such as rainfall patterns and foreshore erosion as well as conservation management. Understanding the effects of these influences upon the water balance in a dune system is fundamental to the management of the slacks. Occurrence of seasonal flood depths, area and timing and how far the water table recedes below ground in summer are critical to the flora and fauna that the slacks will support. Change in the hydrological regime directly impacts the ecosystem. Experience is drawn from four sites in Wales and west coast England: Ainsdale on the Sefton Coast, Newborough Warren in North Wales, Whiteford Burrows in South Wales and Braunton Burrows in North Devon. Similarities and differences between the hydroecology of the respective sites highlight common mechanisms and processes and those unique to each site
dune slack, coastal dune, england, wales, ecohydrology
162-171
Stratford, C.J
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Robins, N.S.
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Clarke, D.
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Jones, L.
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Weaver, G.
4caec19f-490e-46ec-9842-623c47adda06
February 2013
Stratford, C.J
37d9e478-8026-45cc-a460-a0b8addbd119
Robins, N.S.
fe095a57-d828-4d66-9666-c7334914dd77
Clarke, D.
9746f367-1df2-4e0e-8d71-5ecfc9ddd000
Jones, L.
b873ef7a-7df0-4411-9287-b35c45663770
Weaver, G.
4caec19f-490e-46ec-9842-623c47adda06
Stratford, C.J, Robins, N.S., Clarke, D., Jones, L. and Weaver, G.
(2013)
An ecohydrological review of dune slacks on the west coast of England and Wales.
Ecohydrology, 6 (1), .
(doi:10.1002/eco.1355).
Abstract
Coastal dunes are valuable ecological reserves providing a range of ecosystem services from coastal flood defence to recreational amenity. An important feature of dune systems is the slack floors, areas of high ecological value that are closely linked to the prevailing hydrological system in the dunes. Dune slacks are sensitive environments that are impacted by external changes, such as rainfall patterns and foreshore erosion as well as conservation management. Understanding the effects of these influences upon the water balance in a dune system is fundamental to the management of the slacks. Occurrence of seasonal flood depths, area and timing and how far the water table recedes below ground in summer are critical to the flora and fauna that the slacks will support. Change in the hydrological regime directly impacts the ecosystem. Experience is drawn from four sites in Wales and west coast England: Ainsdale on the Sefton Coast, Newborough Warren in North Wales, Whiteford Burrows in South Wales and Braunton Burrows in North Devon. Similarities and differences between the hydroecology of the respective sites highlight common mechanisms and processes and those unique to each site
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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 January 2013
Published date: February 2013
Keywords:
dune slack, coastal dune, england, wales, ecohydrology
Organisations:
Centre for Environmental Science
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Local EPrints ID: 346788
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/346788
ISSN: 1936-0584
PURE UUID: fd062762-1216-4ea8-bfd0-ba75b72ac736
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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2013 14:54
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:32
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Author:
C.J Stratford
Author:
N.S. Robins
Author:
L. Jones
Author:
G. Weaver
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