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SeaSide dangerS
Most of these baby turtles,
hatching from eggs buried
by their mother in the
sand, will die. They are
food for gulls, crabs,
lizards and other
hunters. Humans
also steal the eggs.
Conservation
efforts are now
being made to
protect turtles.
Many sea birds
patrol the coast,
searching for food
or scavenging on the
dead bodies of cast-
up sea creatures.
Lace coral can survive
harsh rubbing by the wave-
washed sand grains. It provides
a refuge for animals
in its lacy folds.
gHoST Crab
There are hundreds of
kinds of shore crabs along the
world’s coastlines. They are
the seashore’s “cleaners;”
they consume almost anything edible—living
or dead. The ghost crab (above right) takes
its name from its ghostly pale color.
Wading birdS
Waders probe into sand or mud
with their long, narrow bills to
find shellfish and worms. Large
species with the longest bills, such
as the curlew (above), reach
down several inches for deeply
buried items. Smaller waders,
such as the black-bellied
dunlin, take food from
just below the surface.
Sandy
beaCHeS
Waves roll
and tumble the
tiny grains of
sand on the beach.
Plants cannot get a firm
hold on this type
of shore, so they
usually grow higher
up. although the
sandy beach often looks
deserted, dozens of
creatures are just below
the surface. Sand makes
an ideal hiding place for
burrowing creatures.
Many filter food from the
seawater when the tide
is in or digest tiny edible
particles in the sand.
egg CaSeS
Sharks and rays lay
their eggs near the
shore, anchored to seaweeds or rocks by
clinging tendrils. When the young fish hatch,
the egg cases, known as “mermaid’s purses,”
come free and are often washed up on the shore.
Sand eeL
Many animals, from puffins to herrings,
feed on the sand eel (right). in turn,
the sand eel eats even smaller fish,
as well as worms and plankton. it is
not a true eel, but an eel-shaped
member of the perch group.
it lives in shallow water.
Weever fiSH
The weever lies half buried in the sand, waiting
to gobble up small fish, crabs, and shrimps.
it has poisonous
spines on its fins,
which give a nasty
sting if the fish is
stepped on.
458
Seashore wildlife 458-
a SeaSHore iS forMed wherever the land meets the sea
and can be a polar ice cliff or a tropical beach. The endless
motion of the waves, and the tide going in and out, means
the shore changes constantly with time. each seashore has its
own selection of plant and animal life, specially adapted to
an environment governed by the rhythm of the tides.
inhabitants of the seashore must survive pounding waves,
salty seawater, fresh rainwater, drying winds, and hot
sunshine. Plants thrive along rocky coasts and in some
muddy areas, providing food and shelter for creatures, but
they cannot grow on shifting sand or pebbles. Here, the
inhabitants depend on the tide to bring new supplies of
food, in the form of particles floating in the water. Successful
seashore animal groups include mollusks and crustaceans,
both of which are protected by hard casings.
Common starfish
Sand HoPPer
Sand hoppers are
crustaceans which
feed on rotting
vegetation. They
swarm over seaweed
that has washed up on
shore and, when in
danger, leap away on their strong
back legs, hence their name.
The burrowing sea
anemone’s arms spread out to
sting and catch small prey. Its
stalk, up to 12 in (30 cm) long,
is used to hold on to the sand.
razor CLaM
So called because it looks
like an old-fashioned cut-
throat razor, the razor
clam has a hinged shell.
The mollusk inside digs
quickly by pushing its
strong, fleshy foot into
the sand and then
pulling the shell down.
Gulls hover over the
sea looking for fish,
while waders hunt
around the shore.
Seagull
US_458_Seashore_1.indd 458 12/02/16 11:19 am