Bioerosion on rocky shores has been frequently reported as an important mechanism in coastal evolution, with less attention focussed on determining the bioprotective role organisms may have in mediating coastal erosion. This work aims, for the first time, to provide an integrated assessment of both traversing microerosion meter (TMEM) downwearing rates and activity of intertidal organisms on two carbonate shore platforms in southern Portugal. Paired substations positioned on the same substrate but differing in biological cover (one with bare rock and the other with algal cover colonised between the first and final readings) were monitored for eighteen months using a TMEM. At each station, the volume of burrows produced by macro borers was m...
The stability of cohesive and non-cohesive sediments in a mixed intertidal habitat within the Ria Fo...
Bioerosion - the removal of lithic substrate by the erosive activities of living organisms- has not ...
Urbanisation is increasingly recognised as a major ecological pressure at the coast. By 2035, the De...
Bioerosion on rocky shores has been frequently reported as an important mechanism in coastal evoluti...
Vertical lowering (downwearing) of shore platform surfaces is a very important mechanism in their mo...
A multi-scale and multi-method approach has been developed to evaluate the nature and effects of sho...
Remodeling of rocky coasts and erosion rates have been widely studied in past years, but not all the...
Attempts to understand the morphodynamics of rock coasts focus on the nature and rate of erosion and...
Organisms boring into intertidal consolidated sediments generate bioerosion. It is generally unknown...
The organisms inhabiting intertidal platforms can affect their weathering and erosion rates. Researc...
The French Basque Coast is an actively eroding rocky coast. In the study area it is made of flysch w...
International audiencePatterns of bioerosion of dead corals and rubbles on the northern Great Barrie...
Bioerosion, the degradation of hard substrate by living organisms, is an integral process of the mar...
Trampling by human visitors to rocky shores is a known stressor on macroorganisms. However, the effe...
Urbanisation is increasingly recognised as a major ecological pressure at the coast. By 2035, the De...
The stability of cohesive and non-cohesive sediments in a mixed intertidal habitat within the Ria Fo...
Bioerosion - the removal of lithic substrate by the erosive activities of living organisms- has not ...
Urbanisation is increasingly recognised as a major ecological pressure at the coast. By 2035, the De...
Bioerosion on rocky shores has been frequently reported as an important mechanism in coastal evoluti...
Vertical lowering (downwearing) of shore platform surfaces is a very important mechanism in their mo...
A multi-scale and multi-method approach has been developed to evaluate the nature and effects of sho...
Remodeling of rocky coasts and erosion rates have been widely studied in past years, but not all the...
Attempts to understand the morphodynamics of rock coasts focus on the nature and rate of erosion and...
Organisms boring into intertidal consolidated sediments generate bioerosion. It is generally unknown...
The organisms inhabiting intertidal platforms can affect their weathering and erosion rates. Researc...
The French Basque Coast is an actively eroding rocky coast. In the study area it is made of flysch w...
International audiencePatterns of bioerosion of dead corals and rubbles on the northern Great Barrie...
Bioerosion, the degradation of hard substrate by living organisms, is an integral process of the mar...
Trampling by human visitors to rocky shores is a known stressor on macroorganisms. However, the effe...
Urbanisation is increasingly recognised as a major ecological pressure at the coast. By 2035, the De...
The stability of cohesive and non-cohesive sediments in a mixed intertidal habitat within the Ria Fo...
Bioerosion - the removal of lithic substrate by the erosive activities of living organisms- has not ...
Urbanisation is increasingly recognised as a major ecological pressure at the coast. By 2035, the De...