2 Beach Sampling Programmes
Beach surveys are used to monitor the population size and length
structure of selected shellfish species at various beaches within the
inter-tidal zone. Traditionally, these surveys have been done for
toheroa (Paphies ventricosa), but lately have included cockles
(Austrovenus stutchburyi), large wedge shells (Macomona liliana),
pipi (Paphies australis), tuatua (Paphies subtriangulata) and sea
lettuce (Ulva). Predominately, beaches are sampled with transect
lines, with samples dug from quadrats along the transect line, and
the beach material sieved for shellfish.
Surveys of beaches are either non-stratified, from transects
sampled at fixed distance intervals [ E.g., Carbines, G.D, 1997.
Survey of toheroa at Oreti Beach, June 1996. NIWA Technical Report 1.
1997. 10p], or as randomly selected transects within strata defined
on the beach. Usually, a two-phase stratified random design [Francis,
R.I.C.C. 1984, An adaptive strategy for stratified random trawl
surveys. N.Z. Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 18: 59-71.]
is adopted. Individual beaches are broken up into rectangular strata
based on previous survey results or previous phases of the same
survey. Stratification incorporates both upshore and alongshore
variation, and is usually optimised across all target shellfish
species to produce the best overall c.v.s
In some surveys, the starting location of each transect within a
stratum is pre-determined using a random number generator, for both
the x co-ordinate (distance along the stratum boundary) and y
co-ordinate ( 0 - 10 m from the stratum boundary). Transects are run
from these points down or up the beach. Quadrats are sampled at
regular 10 m intervals along each transect, and run until either the
boundary of another stratum is encountered, or until no more habitat
is available; i.e. Low-tide mark, or top of beach. The basic sampling
unit for analysis is the mean quadrat density for each transect,
rather than that for each individual quadrat.
At each sampling point, one quadrat is sampled, where the usually
quadrat is a box of 0.1 m2 and 0.15m depth and is pushed into the
sediment until flush with the surface. The contents of this are dug
out and passed through a aperture sieve. All target species are
counted and measured down to the nearest millimetre total shell
length.
During data analysis, stratum boundaries (and hence areas) are
modifed where sampling is found to extend greater or lesser distances
down / up the beach than predicted from previous surveys. Areas of
unsuitable habitat; e.g. Rock platforms are also removed from strata
area estimates if present (total available habitat area appeared to
flucuate slightly from year to year at some beaches, depending on
sand movement). Total population sizes are calculated using scaled
estimates of population sizes from each stratum.
Data from previous surveys are used to refine sampling strategies
in subsequent programmes. For example, in the 1997/98 Auckland
regional beach survey (see Appendix 1 for survey locations), four
hundred sampling quadrats were simply assigned to each surveyed
beach. In 1998/99, a more adaptive strategy was possible. Four
hundred quadrats were initially assigned per beach. Three hundred of
these were assigned to phase 1 sampling, and were allocated across
strata to achieve the smallest coefficient of variance (c.v.)
possible. The number of transects per beach varied depending on beach
size and the stratification adopted. The remaining one hundred
quadrats were deployed as phase 2 stations, and assigned to achieve a
maximal reduction in the species with the highest c.v. However, phase
2 allocation was done across all beaches; i.e., where a target c.v.
Had already been reached for a beach during phase 1 sampling, the
phase 2 quadrats were utilised on other, more variable beaches.