What can kelp loss processes and beach-cast patterns tell us about sandy beach management?
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Cape Higher Education Consortium
Abstract
This project set out to assess the ecological role of beach cast kelp—which tends to be
routinely removed from recreational beaches—on the beach surface of selected sandy
shores in the City of Cape Town municipal area. Particularly, we were interested in
understanding the role that kelp wracks may provide as a nutritional source to the beach
consumer biota after it had been mechanically and biologically transformed to become
particulate organic matter (POM) and incorporated in the beach sediment. Our working null
hypothesis is that there is no difference in the amount of POM measured in the sediments of
cleared vs. non-cleared urban beaches.
The outcome of the study is that kelp removal does in fact not alter the POM matter content
of beaches in areas where kelp wrack is cleared (i.e. we could not reject the null
hypothesis). We suggest that this is due to the highly modified nature of the beach systems
that we studied: i) the overriding influence of the anthropogenic (engineering) modifications
to the beach systems override any influence that might be caused by altered inputs of kelpderived
POM; and ii) an array of additional impacts on the managed beaches may add
additional confounding influences that distort the effect due to the main driver that our study
intended to find.
This research links to a topical environmental management issue that the CoCT faces, and
supports on an ecological basis their decision to actively manage the beaches through kelp
cast removal programmes. The research also added a significant step forward to the
ongoing work that the UWC Biodiversity and Conservation Biology Department’s Kelp
Research Group has done around the ecological functioning of kelp beds in the Western
Cape region, and adds an new dimension to our current focus, climate change. Since the
consequences of climate change will be especially noticeable in urban settings such as the
CoCT, we would very much like to see future research efforts merging the City’s climate
mitigation and adaptation strategies with our studies on the ecological role that kelps may
contribute towards the well-being of our urban coastline.
