'Littoral' refers to the coast of an ocean or sea, or to the banks of a river, lake or estuary. It is usually used as an
adjective, but may also be used as a
noun. The 'littoral zone' is defined as the area between the high water and low water marks. The word is derived from the
Latin noun ''litus, litoris'', meaning "shore". (The doubled 't' is a late mediaeval innovation and the word is sometimes seen in the more classical-looking spelling 'litoral'.)
In lakes, where tides are usually negligibly small, other definitions of "littoral" must be used. The
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources defines littoral as that portion of the lake that is less than 15
feet in depth.
[1] This zone is home to most of the aquatic plantlife (both rooted and floating) in a pond or lake because the high amount of sunlight reaching it allows for significant
photosynthetic activity.
The adjacency of water gives a number of distinctive characteristics to littoral regions. Water's
erosive power results in particular types of
landforms, such as
sand dunes, and
estuaries. The natural movement of the littoral along the coast is called the
littoral drift. Biologically, the ready availability of water enables a greater variety of plant and animal life, and the additional local
humidity due to evaporation usually creates a
microclimate supporting unique types of organisms.
The littoral zone is bordered by the supra-littoral zone, also known as the "spray zone", and the
sublittoral zone, which runs to the edge of the
continental shelf.
See also
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Foreshore
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Supralittoral zone
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Sublittoral zone
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Benthic zone
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Limnetic zone
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Profundal zone
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Intertidal zone
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Littoral combat ship
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Littoral warfare
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Shingle beach
References
1. Fisheries lake surveys