Link
to later reports for 2005
2 September
2005
A Little
Egret, two Oysterctachers
and a small group of about five Turnstones
were feeding on the low neap tideline west of the Lifeboat Station
(7). The photographs above into the sun did
not pick out the details of the foraging activity of these camouflaged
birds. The Egret
was seen to lean forward and catch a small fish, probably a small first
year Bass
which were seen in shoals of a hundred or more.
22
August 2005
Drizzle
turned into steady rain with the early morning low tide,
and the fauna was exiguous, a Little Egret
patrolled the mud below Chart Datum and
a Cormorant
perched on a pole; additional aquatic species included five first year
Bullheads,
Taurulus
bubalis, and a few tiny Blennies,
Lipophrys
pholis and equally small Common
Gobies, Pomatoschistus microps. .
Above
the high tide mark (by the A259
road), Evening Primrose
was in flower.
21
August 2005
As
the spring equinoctial tide receded in the early
evening past the Chart Datum point on Kingston
Buci beach, a very small first year Tompot
Blenny, Parablennius gattorugine, was
caught in the prawn net. This fish is just occasional catch between the
tides, occurring about once every two years or one in every thirty rockpooling
trips. Other fish included an Eel
under
a boulder, a young 5-Bearded Rockling Ciliata
mustela, a dozen first year Corkwing
Wrasse,
Symphodus
melops, a probable first year
Ballan
Wrasse, Labrus bergylta,
and two Sand Gobies Pomatoschistus
minutus. Under small rocks, there
were the usual dozens of tiny first year Rock
Gobies Gobius paganellus.
One
small Long-legged Spider Crab,
Macropodia
rostrata, was netted.
25
July 2005
There
was too much swell after the rain had stopped for any access to the best
prawning spots. There was an uncommon sea anemone Sagartiogeton
undatus recorded at mid-tide level
(4)
on Kingston Buci beach. The
first photograph on the left below shows the very small shrimp Athanas
nitescens. In the Observer's
"Sea & Seashore" it is called the Hooded
Shrimp but I do not think this name ever
caught on.
My
attention was drawn to the flowering plants above the high water mark photographed
above. The plant on the second left is one of the Evening
Primroses. The two images on the
right are the same plant and this is the Prickly
Lettuce.
22
July 2005
A
fisherman had scooped up the dozen or so large prawns before I arrived
on the low spring tide. There were young fish of all the common species
in the pools. One Athanas nitescens
(a tiny shrimp) turned
from dark red to bright green whilst in the bucket.
29
May 2005
A
score or more of small Blennies, Lipophrys
pholis, were caught in the
net below Chart Datum (3)
and some were retained for exhibition at Adur
World Oceans Day 2005. There were
a few of the transparent Sea Gooseberries
(a cnidarian) in
the net as well and just two tiny 7 mm long juvenile Bullheads,
Taurulus
bubalis, Thirty clumps of the red
seaweed Irish Moss, Chondrus crispus,
were caught in the net, and all the broken clumps had sea mats of the bryozoan
Membranipora
membranacea growing on them.
In
the pool underneath the second groyne (5)
a Snakelocks Anemone, Anemonia
viridis, expanded its tentacles. I
left it in-situ.
26
May 2005
Although
the tide went out to Chart Datum as the
mist rolled in, there were no large prawns and apart from the usual young
Blennies
and Rock Gobies,
there was nothing of note.
23
May 2005
The
exceptionally poor rockpooling season continues.
There were a few of the regulars, ovigerous Common
Gobies, newly hatched (earlier this
year)
Blennies
and Rock Gobies.
I noted a large (large for the shore, nearly minimum size) Edible
Crab near Chart
Datum (3)
and the unusual sea anemone Sagartiogeton
undatus at mid-tide level (4),
the tiny red striped crustacean with the name Hooded
Shrimp, Athanas nitescens, (4)
and
a bryozoan colony
living on the underside of a small boulder (4).
Dogwhelks
were now frequently seen (at least 20 noticed). One was a dirty grey colour
like a bleached Periwinkle.
Later a small Daisy Anemone,
Cereus
pedunculatus, was discovered in the
home
aquarium, and it was probably introduced with a cockle. This is another
sea anemone that is unusual and has not been recorded more than once or
twice (if at all) on Kingston Beach. It is southern species that
occasionally occurs on Worthing beach.
BMLSS
Sea Anemones
|
|
The
brown patch on the image on the right is a bryozoan
I have not yet identified, but it is probably Membranipora
membranacea. The rocks on the photograph
on the right are stained red, probably by an algae. The second photograph
contains a Cockle,
Periwinkle
and a Common Limpet.
26
April 2005
So
poor was a visit to the Half Brick shore
at east Worthing yesterday, that I nearly did not visit Kingston Beach
under the overcast sky.
|
In British seas, and on
the shore when the numbers can reach epidemic proportions, the Common
Starfish,
Asterias
rubens, is the most prevalent
conventional starfish of the N.E. Atlantic Ocean.
Its
principal prey is mussels
(consuming them in their shells), but it will eat fish eggs, carrion, and
other molluscs. |
The
sea still surrounded the Chart Datum tide
height gauge (1).
There was one surprise: Common Starfish,
Asterias
rubens, are popularly thought to be
a common inhabitant of the shore, but in reality they are rather infrequent;
a small specimen was on the mussel beds by the Thru-penny Bit. Two large
prawns Palaemon serratus
were the only notable capture in the net as the cloudy water pounded against
the vertical metal barrier.(1).
In
the pool under the second groyne there was a juvenile (one year old) Short-spined
Bullhead, Taurulus bubalis,
and an adult Blenny, Lipophrys
pholis. (5)
On
the estuarine shore to the west of the Lifeboat Station
(7), a juvenile dark coloured ButterfishPholis
gunnellus and an adult Rock
Goby Gobius paganellus in
black breeding livery were discovered with two juveniles. There was a large
Mussel,
Mytlius
edulis, measured at 83 mm, which is exceptionally large for this
beach, where mussels rarely exceed 70 mm.
Oysters,
Ostrea,and
Netted
Dogwhelks, Hinia,were
noted, and a few white
Dogwhelks,
Nucella
lapillus, and Slipper
Limpets, Crepidula fornicata,
as well. Shore
Crabs,
Carcinus
maenas, were under half of the rocks.
Two out of a hundred were in berry.
British
Marine Life Study Society
BMLSS
Molluscs
10
March 2005
On
Kingston Buci beach, the tide went out as far as I had ever seen. There
was very little life in the pools. A Grey
Topshell (a usually abundant small gastropod)
on an Oyster
was unusual for this beach. There was Dogwhelk,
Nucella
lapillus, feeding on a Mussel
and an adult Blenny,
Lipophrys
pholis, under a boulder.
The
silt was cloying and as bad as usual at and around Chart Datum (1).
6 March
2005
There
were at least four Oystercatchers,
Haematopus
ostralegus, on Kingston beach, between
the groynes (5)
until disturbed by mussel collectors on a low
neap tide. They then flew off to the east, two actually landing on the
furthermost wooden groyne on the map above, before landing on the sand
and trottng over it.
WILDLIFE
REPORT PAGES 2004
14
October 2004
As
an ominous black cloud rolled in from the west and made the darkness set
in early, it was the pools underneath the groyne
to the east of the Launching Ramp (5)
that
produced the most life on a low spring 0.5 metre tide with a handful of
Bullheads
Taurulus
bubalis, (in small number s of a common fish this summer) a
single 5-Bearded Rockling,
Ciliata
mustela, a first year Corkwing
Wrasse,
Symphodus
melops, and two Shore Crabs,
Carcinus
meanas.
Further
down the shore (3)
there were two Edible Crabs,
Cancer
pagurus, and a Hairy Crab,
Pilumnus
hirtellus, and a Shore Squat Lobster,
Galathea
squamifera, under rocks. There were a few small
prawns,
Palaemon elegans, in the
pools.
A
Dogwhelk,
Nucella
lapillus, was seen on the mussel
beds (2) and
a few Oysters
were noticed (3).
A
pair of Mute Swans
flew overhead from west to east as dusk descended.
30
August 2004
On
a low spring tide, a Little Egret
was feeding on very small prawns or Common Gobies
in the shallows and an Oystercatcher
was on the mud flats.
The
rock
pools below Chart Datum had the usual moble fauna including edible
sized prawns Paleamon
serratus, first year Corkwing
Wrasse, Symphodus
melops, small Long-legged Spider
Crabs,
Macropodia
rostrata, a first year
Ballan
Wrasse, Labrus bergylta,
two Bullheads
Taurulus
bubalis,
and very little else. Two
nearly adult Rock Gobies, Gobius
paganellus, were netted underneath
the groynes at mid-tide level.
5 August
2004
There
was still too much silt from the flood tide dredging and despite forgetting
the handle to my prawn net, there were enough (40+) edible sized prawns,
Paleamon
serratus, to make a meal. Dozens
of small first year and one second year Corkwing
Wrasse, Symphodus
melops, were captured in the net, together with a first year green
Ballan
Wrasse, Labrus bergylta, a
tiny Blenny
Lipophrys
pholis, and small Bullhead
Taurulus
bubalis,
and one each of a Short-legged
Spider Crab
Eurynome
aspera, and a small Long-legged
Spider Crab,
Macropodia
rostrata,
BMLSS
Prawns and Shrimps
5 January
2004
As
the Shoreham Harbour fog horn boomed, four Oystercatchers,
Haematopus
ostralegus, probed for worms amongst
the mussel beds and sand.
WILDLIFE REPORT
PAGES 2003
21
October 2003
The
black and white wing was the first indication of an Oystercatcher,
Haematopus
ostralegus, that descended
to land on the loose rock shore of Kingston Beach on a low neap tide.
A careful watch for a few minutes through my binoculars and the Oystercatcher
was attempting the repeated stabbing with its medium-length black beak,
which is a behavioural characteristic of this bird. It was meant as one
of several techniques to stab at mussels to get
at the rich flesh inside. It was not successful and the tide would not
go out any further to reveal the mussel beds (on a 1.9 metre low neap tide)
and there would not be more than an occasional mussel exposed *, and it
may have been stabbing at the hinges of exposed cockles?
(* Mussels need be submerged for every tide.)
The
red legs of the Oystercatcher were
matched by a well camouflaged Redshank
between the launching ramp and the first groyne.
Oystercatchers
on Lundy (Behaviour)
Over
the shallow pool near the Lifeboat Station the red breast of a Kingfisher
stood
out from the pipeline it was perched on (8).
Ironically, a couple of Crows
had managed to prise out a clump of mussels.
19
October 2003
The
neap tide variation between 2.36 metres (low at 12.04
pm) and the high tide of 4.4 metres (6:14
pm in darkness) is one of the smallest possible.
(The equinoctial spring tide variation could be up to 7 metres).
BMLSS
Tides