Introduction:
The sandy shores of beaches can be considered as a very harsh environment to live in (Ted Klenk, 1999). Survival in such a habitat requires an organism to withstand strong wave and current action, tidal rise and fall, unstable substrate, heavy predation and wide variations in salinity and temperature (The Otter Island Project). Any organism found in this type of harsh environment is specialized and highly adapted (The Otter Island Project).
Fine, sandy beaches often occur in areas with light wave action (California's Ocean Resources, 1995). While a more coarse sand is found with heavy wave action (California's Ocean Resources, 1995). The slope gradient of a beach also helps determine the grain size of the sediment (Bascom, 1959). The steeper a beach is, the larger the sand particles (Ted Klenk, 1999). The water retention of coarse sand is quite low allowing temperatures to rise easily at low tide (MB2050 lecture notes). Any organisms on a coarse particle beach will not only have to deal with the very unstable substrate but also the real danger of desiccation (MB2050 lecture notes).
Fine sediment areas do not have much water moving through the particles (MB2050 lecture notes). Therefore any oxygen available is used up quickly by burrowing organisms (MB2050 lecture notes). There comes a point beneath the substrate where there is insufficient oxygen for organisms to respire, this is called the anoxic layer (MB2050 lecture notes). The anoxic layer is therefore much deeper under coarse sediments then fine (MB2050 lecture notes).
The fish community of a surf zone is largely controlled by three factors (Robertson & Lenanton, 1984). The form of primary production input to the surf zone, the water movement pattern, and the geomorphology of the sandy beach (Robertson & Lenanton, 1984). Fish such as anchovies, herrings and mullets often inhabits surf zones
Bibliography: Bascom, W. M. (1959) Beach processes and coastal hydrodynamics, Part three: The relationship between sand size and beach face slope. Dowden, Hutchinson and Ross Inc. Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. California 's Ocean Resources, http://ceres.ca.gov/CRA/ocean/html/chapt_4.html Klenk, T. (1999) Sandy Beaches. http://darter.ocps.k12.fl.us/classroom/klenk/beach.htm MB2050: Functional biology of marine organisms, lecture material (2000), James Cook University, Townsville. The Otter Island Project, http://www.csc.noaa.gov/otter/htmls/ecosys/ecology/intbeach.htm Robertson, A. I. and Lenanton, R. C. J. (1984) Fish community structure and food chain dynamics in the surf-zone of sandy beaches: The role of detached macrophyte detritus, Elsevier Science publishers B.V.