Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 17, 2026

Supralittoral zone

The supralittoral zone, also known as the splash zone, spray zone or the supratidal zone, sometimes also referred to as the white zone, is the area above the spring high tide line, on coastlines and estuaries, that is regularly splashed, but not submerged by ocean water. Seawater penetrates these elevated areas only during storms with high tides.

Last revised
Jun 17, 2026
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The supralittoral zone, also known as the splash zone, spray zone or the supratidal zone, sometimes also referred to as the white zone, is the area above the spring high tide line, on coastlines and estuaries, that is regularly splashed, but not submerged by ocean water. Seawater penetrates these elevated areas only during storms with high tides.12

Organisms here must cope also with exposure to air, fresh water from rain, cold, heat and predation by land animals and seabirds. At the top of this area, patches of dark lichens can appear as crusts on rocks. Some types of periwinkles, Neritidae and detritus feeding Isopoda commonly inhabit the lower supralittoral.3

See also

See also

Notes

Notes

  1. Thurman et al., p. 512.
  2. "Marine biology; rocky get out; littoral; supralittoral; eulittoral; sublittoral; underwater cave". biophysics.sbg.ac.at. Retrieved 2021-01-11.
  3. Yip and Madl
References

References

  • Thurman H.V. and Trujillo A.P. 1993.Essentials of Oceanography.Upper Saddle River, NJ:Prentice Hall
  • Yip, Maricela and Madl, Pierre (1999) Littoral University of Salzburg.