Coastal and Marine
Suffolk’s coastline stretches for approximately 60 miles from Lowestoft in the north to Felixstowe in the south, encompassing some of the most dynamic and ecologically significant shorelines in England. It is also one of the fastest-eroding coastlines in Europe, losing land to the sea at rates that can exceed several metres a year in places such as Covehithe and Easton Bavents. This constant change – catastrophic in human terms – is ecologically fundamental, generating the bare, disturbed ground and shallow intertidal zones on which many coastal species depend.
Below the tideline, Suffolk’s subtidal habitats include nationally important seagrass beds dominated by dwarf eelgrass (Zostera noltei), which support invertebrate communities and provide nursery habitat for juvenile fish. Subtidal and intertidal reefs, though less extensive than further north, add structural complexity to an otherwise predominantly sandy and muddy seabed. Coastal and floodplain grazing marshes, found at sites such as RSPB Minsmere, North Warren and Havergate Island, function as transitional habitats between the open coast and the farmed interior, supporting breeding waders, wintering wildfowl and a rich invertebrate fauna.
The kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), one of the LNRS’s 21 key species for focused action, nests on coastal structures along the Suffolk coast, representing the southernmost limit of significant breeding colonies on the English east coast. Its presence is a marker of the health of near-shore marine food webs. Suffolk’s coastal and marine habitats face acute pressures from sea-level rise, increased storminess, coastal squeeze, recreational disturbance, and deteriorating water quality, making their protection and sensitive management a priority for the coming decades.
Key
Listed as a conservation priority in Suffolk’s Biodiversity Action Plan.
Identified as a key priority for recovery under Suffolk’s Local Nature Recovery Strategy.
Associated habitats
Intertidal and subtidal reefs: Rocky and biogenic reef structures found between the tidal limits and into shallow subtidal zones support some of the most diverse marine communities along Suffolk’s coast. These habitats provide attachment points for sponges, anemones, bryozoans and seaweeds, and serve as feeding and shelter grounds for fish, crustaceans and seabirds. Even low-profile reefs of shell and gravel can hold significant assemblages where conditions allow.
Seagrass beds: Seagrass meadows are among the most productive and ecologically valuable marine habitats, providing nursery grounds for fish and invertebrates, feeding areas for wildfowl such as brent geese, and important stores of blue carbon. Suffolk’s sheltered estuaries and shallow coastal waters offer conditions in which seagrass can establish, though these habitats have declined significantly through disturbance and poor water quality. Restoration efforts are now underway at several sites around the Suffolk coast.
Shingle beaches: Shingle structures – from exposed storm beaches to more stable vegetated ridges – are a defining feature of the Suffolk coast, with Orford Ness representing one of the largest and most important examples in Europe. Where shingle is stable enough to support plant growth, specialist communities develop, including sea campion, yellow horned-poppy and sea kale. These habitats also provide nesting habitat for little terns and ringed plovers, both of which are of high conservation concern.
Upper saltmarsh and saltmarsh transitions: The upper reaches of saltmarsh, where regular tidal inundation gives way to more occasional flooding, support a transitional community of plants adapted to variable salinity and waterlogging. Sea purslane, sea aster and common saltmarsh grass are typical at lower elevations, while upper fringes may support sea wormwood, sea lavender and a range of halophytic herbs. These transitions are important feeding habitats for waders and wildfowl and are particularly vulnerable to sea-level rise and coastal squeeze.
Image: Sunrise over the rivers Alde and Ore © Colin Barley Photography (link)