CENTRE FOR RESEARCH ON ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF COASTAL CITIES
A COMMONWEALTH SPECIAL RESEARCH CENTRE
The University of Sydney
ABOUT THE CENTRE

ABOUT THE CENTRE

The Centre for Research on Ecological Impacts of Coastal Cities provides the strategic research to understand what cities do to animals and plants in coastal and estuarine habitats.

This research is designed to provide information to numerous end-users.

Director: Professor A.J. Underwood
Phone: (61) 2 9351 2590
Fax: (61) 2 9351 6713

Studies at the Centre

Ecological issues such as:

 

Life-history
Diversity
Responses to disturbance

Dispersal
Rarity
Recolonization

Genetic linkages
Patchiness
Invasion of new habitat

 

at the appropriate scales in relevant habitats such as:

 

Rocky shores
Saltmarshes
Seagrass beds

Rocky reefs
Mangrove forests
Mudflats

Kelp-beds
Subtidal sediments
Artificial structures

 

Leading to new understanding of systems and better ecological models, interpretation and theory and solutions to practical problems such as:

 

Run-off
Boating
Foraging
Outfalls
Dredging

Reserves
Sewage
Trawling
Management
Pollution

Fishing
Restoration
Built Environment
Piers
Conservation

I

 

 

EICC-Our Role

 

 

Summary of the role of the Centre

No species lives in a vacuum. Before we can understand the ecology of coastal habitats, we need to link together knowledge about life-histories, interactions and patterns of change in the diverse sets of species which live with us on the coast.

Experimental work in coastal habitats has provided insight into the way species respond to disturbances. Most of this work has necessarily been done at a small scale and does not integrate patterns and dynamics from one habitat to another, even though the animals and plants often live across wide ranges of habitats.

We know much, for instance, about the ecology of rocky shores, mangroves and seagrasses, but little is known about how these habitats interact. Urban areas provide opportunities to develop better understanding of these patterns and dynamics because of their mixture of natural and disturbed habitats and because many types of new habitats and structures are created by urban development.

Until we develop better methods of understanding, and predicting the way animals and plants respond to disturbances, there is little chance that we can manage or conserve the numerous, unique species on our coast-lines. We need new types of research to solve the problems which arise in managing pollution, building, fishing and all of the other problems caused by coastal cities.

The Centre for Research on Ecological Impacts of Coastal Cities is doing the necessary research to improve our understanding of the ecological processes affected by coastal changes so that we can make better progress in our protection and use of coastal habitats.

Our team includes some of the world's leading researchers in various related fields. The Centre is able to do the research to integrate ideas and models across habitats, to understand the processes of recolonization after disturbances, to interpret the way populations persist when they are disturbed and to predict the patterns of occupation of new habitats when they are built.

The research focuses on the development of new methods to assess ecological changes and on procedures for interpreting changes when they occur. Both require long-term, large-scale studies in disturbed and other habitats. We are using modern experimental techniques to test theories about responses to disturbances, so that predictions will be improved for our future responses to environmental changes.

Research is being done to increase the success of programmes of restoration and rebuilding of habitats, where these activities are possible.

By bringing together expertise from a range of ecological disciplines (including experimental design, statistical analysis, genetics, population processes and modelling), the Centre has created a new focus for understanding natural changes in addition to those changes brought about by coastal development.

The Centre also provides improved training for postgraduate students and environmental professionals in methods and understanding of the coastal habitats.

By focusing on the core ecological processes that maintain diverse systems of species, the Centre's work provides new opportunities for improved management of habitats that are increasingly threatened by our coastal activities.


For more information contact Karina Cheah  admin@eicc.bio.usyd.edu.au


© Copyright (1997-2008)
Centre for research on Ecological Impacts of Coastal Cities
University of Sydney

Last modified: January 23, 2008
Comments to: eicc@eicc.bio.usyd.edu.au