Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures

© 2015 . Concrete flood defences, erosion control structures, port and harbour facilities, and renewable energy infrastructure are increasingly being built in the world's coastal regions. There is, however, strong evidence to suggest that these structures are poor surrogates for natural rocky s...

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Main Authors: Coombes, M, La Marca, E, Naylor, L, Thompson, R
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2015
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author Coombes, M
La Marca, E
Naylor, L
Thompson, R
author_facet Coombes, M
La Marca, E
Naylor, L
Thompson, R
author_sort Coombes, M
collection OXFORD
description © 2015 . Concrete flood defences, erosion control structures, port and harbour facilities, and renewable energy infrastructure are increasingly being built in the world's coastal regions. There is, however, strong evidence to suggest that these structures are poor surrogates for natural rocky shores, often supporting assemblages with lower species abundance and diversity. Ecological engineering opportunities to enhance structures for biodiversity conservation (and other management goals) are therefore being sought, but the majority of work so far has concentrated on structural design features at the centimetre-meter scale.We deployed concrete tiles with four easily-reproducible fine-scale (millimetre) textures (control, smoothed, grooved and exposed aggregate) in the intertidal zone to test opportunities for facilitating colonisation by a dominant ecosystem engineer (barnacles) relative to natural rock. Concrete texture had a significant effect on colonisation; smoothed tiles supported significantly fewer numbers of barnacles, and those with intermediate roughness (grooved concrete) significantly greater numbers, after one settlement season.The successful recruitment of early colonists is a critical stage in the development of more complex and diverse macrobenthic assemblages, especially those that provide physical habitat structure for other species. Our observations show that this can be facilitated relatively simply for barnacles on marine concrete by manipulating surface heterogeneity at a millimetre scale. Alongside other larger-scale manipulation (e.g. creating holes and pools), including fine-scale habitat heterogeneity in engineering designs can support international efforts to maximise the ecological value of marine urban infrastructure.
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spelling oxford-uuid:37aa2ce9-e5c6-408c-a4e8-7b5e0491fb402022-03-26T13:45:21ZGetting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface texturesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:37aa2ce9-e5c6-408c-a4e8-7b5e0491fb40Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2015Coombes, MLa Marca, ENaylor, LThompson, R© 2015 . Concrete flood defences, erosion control structures, port and harbour facilities, and renewable energy infrastructure are increasingly being built in the world's coastal regions. There is, however, strong evidence to suggest that these structures are poor surrogates for natural rocky shores, often supporting assemblages with lower species abundance and diversity. Ecological engineering opportunities to enhance structures for biodiversity conservation (and other management goals) are therefore being sought, but the majority of work so far has concentrated on structural design features at the centimetre-meter scale.We deployed concrete tiles with four easily-reproducible fine-scale (millimetre) textures (control, smoothed, grooved and exposed aggregate) in the intertidal zone to test opportunities for facilitating colonisation by a dominant ecosystem engineer (barnacles) relative to natural rock. Concrete texture had a significant effect on colonisation; smoothed tiles supported significantly fewer numbers of barnacles, and those with intermediate roughness (grooved concrete) significantly greater numbers, after one settlement season.The successful recruitment of early colonists is a critical stage in the development of more complex and diverse macrobenthic assemblages, especially those that provide physical habitat structure for other species. Our observations show that this can be facilitated relatively simply for barnacles on marine concrete by manipulating surface heterogeneity at a millimetre scale. Alongside other larger-scale manipulation (e.g. creating holes and pools), including fine-scale habitat heterogeneity in engineering designs can support international efforts to maximise the ecological value of marine urban infrastructure.
spellingShingle Coombes, M
La Marca, E
Naylor, L
Thompson, R
Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title_full Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title_fullStr Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title_full_unstemmed Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title_short Getting into the groove: Opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine-scale surface textures
title_sort getting into the groove opportunities to enhance the ecological value of hard coastal infrastructure using fine scale surface textures
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