The Edge of the Sea
Beyond, in the waters bathing Labrador, southern Greenland, and parts of Newfoundland, the temperature of the sea and the nature of its flora and fauna are subarctic. Still farther to the north is the arctic province, with limits not yet precisely defined.
Although these basic zones are still convenient and well-founded divisions of the American coast, it became clear by about the third decade of the twentieth century that Cape Cod was not the absolute barrier it had once been for warm-water species attempting to round it from the south. Curious changes have been taking place, with many animals invading this cold-temperate zone from the south and pushing up through Maine and even into Canada. This new distribution is, of course, related to the widespread change of climate that seems to have set in about the beginning of the century and is now well recognized—a general warming-up noticed first in arctic regions, then in subarctic, and now in the temperate areas of northern states. With warmer ocean waters north of Cape Cod, not only the adults but the critically important young stages of various southern animals have been able to survive.
One of the most impressive examples of northward movement is provided by the green crab, once unknown north of the Cape, now familiar to every clam fisherman in Maine because of its habit of preying on the young stages of the clam. Around the turn of the century, zoological manuals gave its range as New Jersey to Cape Cod. In 1905 it was reported near Portland, and by 1930 specimens had been collected in Hancock County, about midway along the Maine coast. During the following decade it moved along to Winter Harbor, and in 1951 was found at Lubec. Then it spread up along the shores of Passamaquoddy Bay and crossed to Nova Scotia.
With higher water temperatures the sea herring is becoming scarce in Maine. The warmer waters may not be the only cause, but they are undoubtedly responsible in part. As the sea herring decline, other kinds of fish are coming in from the south. The menhaden is a larger member of the herring family, used in enormous quantities for manufacturing fertilizer, oils, and other industrial products. In the 1880's there was a fishery for menhaden in Maine, then they disappeared and for many years were confined almost entirely to areas south of New Jersey. About 1950, however, they began to return to Maine waters, followed by Virginia boats and fishermen. Another fish of the same tribe, called the round herring, is also ranging farther north. In the 1920's Professor Henry Bigelow of Harvard University reported it as occurring from the Gulf of Mexico to Cape Cod, and pointed out that it was rare anywhere on the Cape. (Two caught at Provincetown were preserved in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard.) In the 1950's, however, immense schools of this fish appeared in Maine waters, and the fishing industry began experiments with canning it.
Many other scattered reports follow the same trend. The mantis shrimp, formerly barred by the Cape, has now rounded it and spread into the southern part of the Gulf of Maine. Here and there the soft-shell clam shows signs of being adversely affected by warm summer temperatures and the hard-shell species is replacing it in New York waters. Whiting, once only summer fish north of the Cape, now are caught there throughout the year, and other fish once thought distinctively southern are able to spawn along the coast of New York, where their delicate juvenile stages formerly were killed by the cold winters.
Despite the present exceptions, the Cape Cod—Newfoundland coast is typically a zone of cool waters inhabited by a boreal flora and fauna. It displays strong and fascinating affinities with distant places of the northern world, linked by the unifying force of the sea with arctic waters and with the coasts of the British Isles and Scandinavia. So many of its species are duplicated in the eastern Atlantic that a handbook for the British Isles serves reasonably well for New England, covering probably 80 per cent of the seaweeds and 60 per cent of the marine animals. On the other hand, the American boreal zone has stronger ties with the arctic than does the British coast. One of the large Laminarian seaweeds, the arctic kelp, comes down to the Maine coast but is absent in the eastern Atlantic. An arctic sea anemone occurs in the western North Atlantic abundantly down to Nova Scotia and less numerously in Maine, but on the other side misses Great Britain and is confined to colder waters farther north. The occurrence of many species such as the green sea urchin, the blood-red starfish, the cod, and the herring are examples of a distribution that is circumboreal, extending right around the top of the earth and brought about through the agency of cold currents from melting glaciers and drifting pack ice that carry representatives of the northern faunas down into the North Pacific and North Atlantic.
The existence of so strong a common element between the faunas and floras of the two coasts of the North Atlantic suggests that the means of crossing must be relatively easy. The Gulf Stream carries many migrants away from American shores. The distance to the opposite side is great, however, and the situation is complicated by the short larval life of most species and the fact that shallow waters must be within reach when the time comes for assuming the life of the adult. In this northern part of the Atlantic intermediate way-stations are provided by submerged ridges, shallows, and islands, and the crossing may be broken into easy stages. In some earlier geologic times these shallows were even more extensive, so over long periods both active and involuntary migration across the Atlantic have been feasible.
In lower latitudes the deep basin of the Atlantic must be crossed, where few islands or shallows exist. Even here some transfer of larvae and adults takes place. The Bermuda Islands, after being raised above the sea by volcanic action, received their whole fauna as immigrants from the West Indies via the Gulf Stream. And on a smaller scale the long transatlantic crossings have been accomplished. Considering the difficulties, an impressive number of West Indian species are identical with, or closely related to African species, apparently having crossed in the Equatorial Current. They include species of starfish, shrimp, crayfish, and mollusks. Where such a long crossing has been made it is logical to assume that the migrants were adults, traveling on floating timber or drifting seaweed. In modern times, several African mollusks and starfish have been reported as arriving at the Island of St. Helena by these means.
The records of paleontology provide evidence of the changing shapes of continents and the changing flow of the ocean currents, for these earlier earth patterns account for the otherwise mysterious present distribution of many plants and animals. Once, for example, the West Indian region of the Atlantic was in direct communication, via sea currents, with the distant waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Then a land bridge built up between the Americas, the Equatorial Current turned back on itself to the east, and a barrier to the dispersal of sea creatures was erected. But in species living today we find indications of how it was in the past. Once I discovered a curious little mollusk living in a meadow of turtle grass on the floor of a quiet bay among Florida's Ten Thousand Islands. It was the same bright green as the grass, and its little body was much too large for its thin shell, out of which it bulged. It was one of the scaphanders, and its nearest living relatives are inhabitants of the Indian Ocean. And on the beaches of the Carolinas I have found rocklike masses of calcareous tubes, secreted by colonies of a dark-bodied little worm. It is almost unknown in the Atlantic; again its relatives are Pacific and Indian Ocean forms.
And so transport and wide dispersal are a continuing, universal process—an expression of the need of life to reach out and occupy all habitable parts of the earth. In any age the pattern is set by the shape of the continents and the flow of the currents; but it is never final, never completed.
On a shore where tidal action is strong and the range of the tide is great, one is aware of the ebb and flow of water with a daily, hourly awareness. Each recurrent high tide is a dramatic enactment of the advance of the sea against the continents, pressing up to the very threshold of the land, while the ebbs expose to view a strange and unfamiliar world. Perhaps it is a broad mud flat where curious holes, mounds, or tracks give evidence of a hidden life alien to the land; or perhaps it is a meadow of rockweeds lyi
ng prostrate and sodden now that the sea has left them, spreading a protective cloak over all the animal life beneath them. Even more directly the tides address the sense of hearing, speaking a language of their own distinct from the voice of the surf. The sound of a rising tide is heard most clearly on shores removed from the swell of the open ocean. In the stillness of night the strong waveless surge of a rising tide creates a confused tumult of water sounds—swashings and swirlings and a continuous slapping against the rocky rim of the land. Sometimes there are undertones of murmurings and whisperings; then suddenly all lesser sounds are obliterated by a torrential inpouring of water.
On such a shore the tides shape the nature and behavior of life. Their rise and fall give every creature that lives between the high- and low-water lines a twice-daily experience of land life. For those that live near the low-tide line the exposure to sun and air is brief; for those higher on the shore the interval in an alien environment is more prolonged and demands greater powers of endurance. But in all the intertidal area the pulse of life is adjusted to the rhythm of the tides. In a world that belongs alternately to sea and land, marine animals, breathing oxygen dissolved in sea water, must find ways of keeping moist; the few air breathers who have crossed the high-tide line from the land must protect themselves from drowning in the flood tide by bringing with them their own supply of oxygen. When the tide is low there is little or no food for most intertidal animals, and indeed the essential processes of life usually have to be carried on while water covers the shore. The tidal rhythm is therefore reflected in a biological rhythm of alternating activity and quiescence.
On a rising tide, animals that live deep in sand come to the surface, or thrust up the long breathing tubes or siphons, or begin to pump water through their burrows. Animals fixed to rocks open their shells or reach out tentacles to feed. Predators and grazers move about actively. When the water ebbs away the sand dwellers withdraw into the deep wet layers; the rock fauna brings into use all its varied means for avoiding desiccation. Worms that build calcareous tubes draw back into them, sealing the entrance with a modified gill filament that fits like a cork in a bottle. Barnacles close their shells, holding the moisture around their gills. Snails draw back into their shells, closing the doorlike operculum to shut out the air and keep some of the sea's wetness within. Scuds and beach fleas hide under rocks or weeds, waiting for the incoming tide to release them.
All through the lunar month, as the moon waxes and wanes, so the moon-drawn tides increase or decline in strength and the lines of high and low water shift from day to day. After the full moon, and again after the new moon, the forces acting on the sea to produce the tide are stronger than at any other time during the month. This is because the sun and moon then are directly in line with the earth and their attractive forces are added together. For complex astronomical reasons, the greatest tidal effect is exerted over a period of several days immediately after the full and the new moon, rather than at a time precisely coinciding with these lunar phases. During these periods the flood tides rise higher and the ebb tides fall lower than at any other time. These are called the "spring tides" from the Saxon "sprungen." The word refers not to a season, but to the brimming fullness of the water causing it to "spring" in the sense of a strong, active movement. No one who has watched a new-moon tide pressing against a rocky cliff will doubt the appropriateness of the term. In its quarter phases, the moon exerts its attraction at right angles to the pull of the sun so the two forces interfere with each other and the tidal movements are slack. Then the water neither rises as high nor falls as low as on the spring tides. These sluggish tides are called the "neaps"—a word that goes back to old Scandinavian roots meaning "barely touching" or "hardly enough."
On the Atlantic coast of North America the tides move in the so-called semidiurnal rhythm, with two high and two low waters in each tidal day of about 24 hours and 50 minutes. Each low tide follows the previous low by about 12 hours and 25 minutes, although slight local variations are possible. A like interval, of course, separates the high tides.
The range of tide shows enormous differences over the earth as a whole and even on the Atlantic coast of the United States there are important variations. There is a rise and fall of only a foot or two around the Florida Keys. On the long Atlantic coast of Florida the spring tides have a range of 3 to 4 feet, but a little to the north, among the Sea Islands of Georgia, these tides have an 8-foot rise. Then in the Carolinas and northward to New England they move less strongly, with spring tides of 6 feet at Charleston, South Carolina, 3 feet at Beaufort, North Carolina, and 5 feet at Cape May, New Jersey. Nantucket Island has little tide, but on the shores of Cape Cod Bay, less than 30 miles away, the spring tide range is 10 to 11 feet. Most of the rocky coast of New England falls within the zone of the great tides of the Bay of Fundy. From Cape Cod to Passamaquoddy Bay the amplitude of their range varies but is always considerable: 10 feet at Provincetown, 12 at Bar Harbor, 20 at Eastport, 22 at Calais. The conjunction of strong tides and a rocky shore, where much of the life is exposed, creates in this area a beautiful demonstration of the power of the tides over living things.
As day after day these great tides ebb and flow over the rocky rim of New England, their progress across the shore is visibly marked in stripes of color running parallel to the sea's edge. These bands, or zones, are composed of living things and reflect the stages of the tide, for the length of time that a particular level of shore is uncovered determines, in large measure, what can live there. The hardiest species live in the upper zones. Some of the earth's most ancient plants—the blue-green algae—though originating eons ago in the sea, have emerged from it to form dark tracings on the rocks above the high-tide line, a black zone visible on rocky shores in all parts of the world. Below the black zone, snails that are evolving toward a land existence browse on the film of vegetation or hide in seams and crevices in the rocks. But the most conspicuous zone begins at the upper line of the tides. On an open shore with moderately heavy surf, the rocks are whitened by the crowded millions of the barnacles just below the high-tide line. Here and there the white is interrupted by mussels growing in patches of darkest blue. Below them the seaweeds come in— the brown fields of the rockweeds. Toward the low-tide line the Irish moss spreads its low cushioning growth—a wide band of rich color that is not fully exposed by the sluggish movements of some of the neap tides, but appears on all of the greater tides. Sometimes the reddish brown of the moss is splashed with the bright green tangles of another seaweed, a hairlike growth of wiry texture. The lowest of the spring tides reveal still another zone during the last hour of their fall—that sub-tide world where all the rock is painted a deep rose hue by the lime-secreting seaweeds that encrust it, and where the gleaming brown ribbons of the large kelps lie exposed on the rocks.
With only minor variations, this pattern of life exists in all parts of the world. The differences from place to place are related usually to the force of the surf, and one zone may be largely suppressed and another enormously developed. The barnacle zone, for example, spreads its white sheets over all the upper shore where waves are heavy, and the rockweed zone is greatly reduced. With protection from surf, the rockweeds not only occupy the middle shore in profusion but invade the upper rocks and make conditions difficult for the barnacles.
Perhaps in a sense the true intertidal zone is that band between high and low water of the neap tides, an area that is completely covered and uncovered during each tidal cycle, or twice during every day. Its inhabitants are the typical shore animals and plants, requiring some daily contact with the sea but able to endure limited exposure to land conditions.
Above high water of neaps is a band that seems more of earth than of sea. It is inhabited chiefly by pioneering species; already they have gone far along the road toward land life and can endure separation from the sea for many hours or days. One of the barnacles has colonized these higher high-tide rocks, where the sea comes only a few days and nights out of the month, on
the spring tides. When the sea returns it brings food and oxygen, and in season carries away the young into the nursery of the surface waters; during these brief periods the barnacle is able to carry on all the processes necessary for life. But it is left again in an alien land world when the last of these highest tides of the fortnight ebbs away; then its only defense is the firm closing of the plates of its shell to hold some of the moisture of the sea about its body. In its life brief and intense activity alternates with long periods of a quiescent state resembling hibernation. Like the plants of the Arctic, which must crowd the making and storing of food, the putting forth of flowers, and the forming of seeds into a few brief weeks of summer, this barnacle has drastically adjusted its way of life so that it may survive in a region of harsh conditions.
Some few sea animals have pushed on even above high water of the spring tides into the splash zone, where the only salty moisture comes from the spray of breaking waves. Among such pioneers are snails of the periwinkle tribe. One of the West Indian species can endure months of separation from the sea. Another, the European rock periwinkle, waits for the waves of the spring tides to cast its eggs into the sea, in almost all activities except the vital one of reproduction being independent of the water.