Schlacher Thomas A, Richardson Darren, McLean Ian
Faculty of Science, Health, and Education, University of the Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore QLD-4558, Australia.
Environ Manage. 2008 Jun;41(6):878-92. doi: 10.1007/s00267-008-9071-0.
Sandy beaches are the prime sites for human recreation and underpin many coastal economies and developments. In many coastal areas worldwide, beach recreation relies on the use of off-road vehicles (ORVs) driven on the shore. Yet, the use of ORVs is not universally embraced due to social conflicts with other beach user groups and putative environmental consequences of vehicle traffic on sandy shores. Such ecological impacts of ORVs are, however, poorly understood for endobenthic invertebrates of the intertidal zone seawards of the dunes. Consequently, this study quantified the degree to which assemblages of intertidal beach invertebrates are affected by traffic. The study design comprised a series of temporally replicated spatial contrasts between two reference sites (no ORVs) and two beaches with heavy ORV traffic (in excess of 250,000 vehicles per year) located in SouthEast Queensland, Australia. Macrobenthic assemblages on ORV-impacted beaches had significantly fewer species at substantially reduced densities, resulting in marked shifts in community composition and structure. These shifts were particularly strong on the middle and upper shore where vehicle traffic was concentrated. Strong effects of ORVs were detectable in all seasons, but increased towards the summer months as a result of heavier traffic volumes. This study provides clear evidence that ORVs can have substantial impacts on sandy beach invertebrates that are manifested throughout the whole community. Demonstrating such an ecological impact caused by a single type of human use poses a formidable challenge to management, which needs to develop multi-faceted approaches to balance environmental, social, cultural, and economic arguments in the use of sandy shores, including management of "beach traffic."
沙滩是人类休闲娱乐的主要场所,也是许多沿海地区经济和发展的支柱。在全球许多沿海地区,沙滩休闲活动依赖于在岸边驾驶的越野车辆(ORV)。然而,由于与其他沙滩使用者群体的社会冲突以及车辆在沙滩上行驶可能带来的环境后果,ORV的使用并未得到普遍认可。然而,对于沙丘向海一侧潮间带的底栖无脊椎动物而言,ORV的这种生态影响却知之甚少。因此,本研究量化了潮间带沙滩无脊椎动物群落受交通影响的程度。研究设计包括在澳大利亚昆士兰州东南部的两个参考地点(无ORV)和两个ORV交通繁忙(每年超过25万辆车)的沙滩之间进行一系列时间上重复的空间对比。受ORV影响的沙滩上的大型底栖动物群落物种数量显著减少,密度大幅降低,导致群落组成和结构发生明显变化。这些变化在车辆交通集中的中岸和上岸尤为明显。ORV的强烈影响在所有季节都能检测到,但由于交通量增加,在夏季月份影响更大。本研究提供了明确的证据,表明ORV会对沙滩无脊椎动物产生重大影响,且这种影响在整个群落中都有体现。证明由单一类型的人类活动造成的这种生态影响对管理构成了巨大挑战,管理部门需要制定多方面的方法来平衡在沙滩使用中环境、社会、文化和经济等各方面的考量,包括对“沙滩交通”的管理。