Dictionary Definition
foreshore n : the part of the seashore between
the high-water mark and the low-water mark
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The part of a shore between high water and low water, especially the beach exposed at maximum ebb spring tides.
Related terms
Translations
- Italian: bagnasciuga
Extensive Definition
The intertidal zone (also known as the foreshore)
is the area that is exposed to the air at low tide and
submerged at high tide, for
example, the area between tide marks. This area can include many
different types of habitats, including steep rocky cliffs, sandy
beaches or vast mudflats. The area can be a
narrow strip, as in Pacific islands that have only a narrow tidal
range, or can include many meters of shoreline where shallow beach
slope interacts with high tidal excursion.
Organisms in the
intertidal zone are adapted to an environment of harsh extremes.
Water is
available regularly with the tides but varies from fresh with
rain to highly saline and dry salt with drying between tidal
inundations. The action of waves
can dislodge residents in the littoral
zone. With the intertidal zone's high exposure to the sun the
temperature range
can be anything from very hot with full sun to near freezing in colder
climes. Some microclimates in the
littoral zone are ameliorated by local features and larger plants
such as mangroves.
Adaption
in the littoral zone is for making use of nutrients supplied in high
volume on a regular basis from the sea which is actively moved to the
zone by tides. Edges of habitats, in this case land and sea, are
themselves often significant ecologies, and the littoral
zone is a prime example.
A typical rocky
shore can be divided into a spray zone or splash zone (also known
as the supratidal
zone), which is above the spring high-tide line and is covered
by water only during storms, and an intertidal zone, which lies
between the high and low tidal extremes. Along most shores, the intertidal zone can be
clearly separated into the following subzones: high tide zone,
middle tide zone, and low tide zone.
Zonation
Marine biologists and others divide the
intertidal region into three zones (low, middle, and high), based
on the overall average exposure of the zone. The low intertidal
zone, which borders on the shallow subtidal zone, is only exposed
to air at the lowest of low tides and is primarily marine in
character. The mid intertidal zone is regularily exposed and
submerged by average tides. The high intertidal zone is only
covered by the highest of the high tides, and spends much of its
time as terrestrial habitat. The high intertidal zone borders on
the swash
zone (the region above the highest still-tide level, but which
receives wave splash). On shores exposed to heavy wave action,
the intertidal zone will be influenced by waves, as the spray from
breaking waves will extend the intertidal region above the high
tide line.
Depending on the substratum and topography of the
shore, additional features may be noticed. On rocky shores,
tide
pools may be formed at low tide when water is trapped in
hollows. Under certain conditions, such as those at Morecambe
Bay, quicksand may
be formed.
Low tide zone (lower littoral)
This subregion is mostly submerged - it is only exposed at the point of low tide and for a longer period of time during extremely low tides. This area is teeming with life; the most notable difference with this subregion to the other three is that there is much more marine vegetation, especially seaweeds. There is also a great biodiversity. Organisms in this zone generally are not well adapted to periods of dryness and temperature extremes. Some of the organisms in this area are abalone, anemones, brown seaweed, chitons, crabs, green algae, hydroids, isopods, limpets, mussels, nudibranchs, sculpin, sea cucumber, sea lettuce, sea palms, sea stars, sea urchins, shrimp, snails, sponges, surf grass, tube worms, and whelks. Creatures in this area can grow to larger sizes because there is more available energy in the localised ecosystem and because marine vegetation can grow to much greater sizes than in the other three intertidal subregions due to the better water coverage: the water is shallow enough to allow plenty of light to reach the vegetation to allow substantial photosynthetic activity, and the salinity is at almost normal levels. This area is also protected from large predators such as large fish because of the wave action and the water still being relatively shallow.Ecology
The intertidal region is an important model systems for the study of ecology, especially on wave-swept rocky shores. The region contains a high diversity of species, and the different zones caused by the physics of the tides causes species ranges to be compressed into very narrow bands. This makes it relatively simple to study species across their entire cross-shore range, something that can be extremely difficult in, for instance, terrestrial habitats that can stretch thousands of kilometers. Communities on wave-swept shores also have high turnover due to disturbance, so it is possible to watch ecological succession over years rather than decades.Since the foreshore is alternately covered by the
sea and exposed to the air, organisms living in this environment
must have adaptions for both wet and dry conditions. Hazards
include being smashed or carried away by rough waves, exposure to
dangerously high temperatures, and desiccation. Typical inhabitants
include sea anemones,
barnacles, chitons, crabs, isopods, limpets, mussels, starfish, snails and whelks.
Legal issues
As with the dry sand part of a beach, legal and political disputes can arise over the ownership and use of the foreshore. One recent example is the New Zealand foreshore and seabed controversy. In legal discussions the foreshore is often referred to as the wet-sand area.For privately owned beaches in the United
States, some states such as Massachusetts
use the low water mark as the dividing line between the property of
the State and that of the beach owner while others such as California use
the high water mark. In the UK the foreshore is
generally deemed to be owned by the Crown although there are
notable exceptions especially what are termed several fisheries
which can be historic deeds to title dating back to King
John's time or earlier, and the Udal Law which
applies generally in Orkney and Shetland.
See also
foreshore in Min Nan: Hái-phiâⁿ
foreshore in German: Wattenmeer
foreshore in Estonian: Eulitoraal
foreshore in French: Estran
foreshore in Polish: Watt (geografia)
foreshore in Portuguese: Zona intertidal
foreshore in Romanian: Zona tidală
foreshore in Chinese: 潮間帶