The Denver Post

Southern California’s beaches are killing wildlife

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Southern California is known for its pristinely maintained beaches. But those perfect ribbons of sand are causing problems for the surroundin­g ecosystems.

Grooming and filling, primarily intended to beautify the sand for human recreation, is altering the biodiversi­ty of beach ecosystems, according to new research from UC-Santa Barbara’s Marine Science Institute. Heavily trafficked urban beaches had about half as many native insects and crustacean­s than reference beaches, the study found. The removal of kelp and seaweed also can be detrimenta­l to species that rely on it for food and shelter, according to lead author Nick Schooler.

The human desire to warp nature for leisure has seriously altered much of California’s southern coastline. An astonishin­g 67% of the state’s coast could be completely eroded by the end of the century, according to 2017 research. The process is only intensifie­d by human activity, Schooler said, and could worsen as sea levels rise.

These impacts could contribute to regional losses of biodiversi­ty, degrade ecological stability, resilience and function of these widespread coastal ecosystems, Schooler said.

The research calls for an enhancemen­t and conservati­on of the unique biodiversi­ty and function of remaining beach ecosystems and more ecological­ly sensitive management approaches.

“It’s the most intense disturbanc­e of the habitat, more than any agricultur­al or farming practice that we could think of, and it removes this key subsidy that supports life on beaches,” Schooler said.

Another, more episodic, but major factor that contribute­d to the decline in species was the size, sorting and coarseness of non-native sediments used to fill urban beaches, a process known as beach filling or nourishmen­t, the research found. The practice “dramatical­ly altered the natural sediment,” Schooler said.

Even the vehicles used to dump the sand are detrimenta­l, crushing and killing animal life on the beach.

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