Treyarnon Bay (Porth Trearnen)

Yellow Graphic of a family of three walking. A man, woman and a child.

Treyarnon Bay (Cornish: ‘Porth Trearnen’, meaning ‘Garnen’s Farm’) is a north-west facing beach in north Cornwall. The beach is located at the mouth of the Treyarnon Stream, which flows down the centre of the beach. Treyarnon Stream has a small number of tributaries, all of which flow down a gentle sloped, largely agricultural, catchment. 

Treyarnon Bay is a narrow, elongated sandy beach, fringed by the moderately low, steep cliffs and rocky reefs of Trethias Island to the south and Treyarnon Point to the north. Treyarnon is considered a rural beach, though one that has been moderately developed, with properties, holiday parks and parking encircling the beach.  

The sand associated with Treyarnon rolls back into a small dune system. A small caravan park creates a break between the natural and built environment, which will eventually result in the dune becoming squeezed. There are small number of coastal defence structures associated with the smaller coves on the northern flank of the beach, which protect a private road. The failure of these walls could potentially impact on access to numerous properties. 

Yellow Graphic of a family of three walking. A man, woman and a child.
Yellow Graphic of two children walking. A boy and girl.

Coastal Change

The coastline of Cornwall is an ever-changing environment. It is energetic, dynamic, never still and changes with each wave and each tidal cycle. Some of the changes we see are gradual and barely noticeable, whilst others, such as rockfalls, happen suddenly and often shockingly.  

From one visit to the next it can sometimes be difficult to see how a beach and dune system has changed, but information has been collected, and is being collected through the Making Space for Sand project, to help us better understand how the coastline is changing. The purpose of this section of the website is to understand each location has changed over time, how it could change in the future and understand the policies that influence how we can respond to these changes.  

Shoreline Management Plans (SMP)

The Shoreline Management Plan (SMP) is a strategic planning and management assessment tool that helps identify and measure the risk associated coastal erosion and coastal flooding. The document makes a number of policy recommendations over short, medium and long term timeframes setting out a strategic approach to managing the built, natural and historic environments associated with the coastline. Within SMP there are four policy approaches which have been assigned to stretches of coastlines. The four policies are: No Active Intervention (NAI), Hold the Line (HTL), Managed realignment (MR), and Advance the line (ATL).  

Treyarnon Bay sits within Policy Development Zone 13 (PDZ13), in Management Area 33 (MA33), within Policy Unit (PU) 33.7. The policy recommendations for this policy unit are detailed in the table below and the SMP can be accessed through the Cornwall Council website.

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to scroll the below table

Policy Unit SMP2 Policy Plan
2025 2055 2105 Comment
33.1 Undefended cliffs

Main Policy

Sub Policy

 

 

NAI

DnD

 

NAI

DnD

 

 

NAI

DnD

Will meet high level objectives and satisfy AONB and heritage coast criteria.  Allow natural coastal evolution to occur to support conservation of designated features.
33.7 Treyarnon

Main Policy

Sub Policy

 

 

NAI

DnD

 

NAI

DnD

 

NAI

DnD

Policy intent is to allow natural coastal evolution to occur, as little in the way of property / assets are risk. Privately owned roads would need to be maintained due to access needs. Potential need to review policy to reflect this local need.
Key Main Policy: HTL - Hold the Line, A - Advance the Line, NAI – No Active Intervention, MR – Managed Realignment

Sub Policy: DnD – Do not Defend.

 

 

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Graphic of a yellow beach plant

National Coastal Erosion Risk Mapping (NCERM)

National Coastal Erosion Risk Mapping (NCERM) provides a baseline of coastal erosion, for the coastline of England, over short, medium and long-term timeframes. The data is based on the natural and defence characteristics of the coastline and provides rates of erosion at differing levels of confidence to help better plan for worse case scenarios. The data provided is for guidance and does not estimate the absolute location of the future coastline. 

The basic NCERM lines show erosion estimates for the Short Term (ST-20 years), Medium Term (MT-50 years) and Long Term (LT- 100 years).  The data is further categorised by probability: 05 is 5% probability (a 1 in 20 chance of being exceeded) Red Shading, 50 is 50% probability of being exceeded (a 1 in 2 chance of being either exceeded or not exceeded) Orange Shading and 95 is 95% probability (a 19 in 20 chance of being exceeded) Yellow Shading.  Click the link below to access the Cornwall Council NCERM Mapping site read the about section then click on layers.

Yellow Graphic of a beach plant.

Historical Images of Treyarnon

Historical photographs provide a powerful insight into how the Cornish coastline has changed within the past Century. The Making Space for Sand project are working in collaboration with the Francis Frith collection and have been given permission to share historical images on a number of beaches considered within the project.     

 

In looking back, we can better understand how the coastline has changed, helping us understand not only how the coastal fringe has developed but also the potential future changes that we my observe. When this is considered alongside forecasts of coastal erosion and sea level rise it will help enable us to better adapt to our changing coastline. 

Image of Treyarnon from the dunes in 1936 (Courtesy of the Francis Frith collection) and in 2023

White wave graphic
Graphic of a yellow beach plant

Modelling Coastal Change

Using data that has already been collected, combined with data collected through the Making Space for Sand project, a series of models will be carried out at each location. This will help us better understand how each location may respond to sea level rise and gain a deeper understanding of how coastal sediments move and behave. 

The complexity of the modelling, and the data collection that helps inform it, means that modelling outputs will not be the same on all sites. Some locations will be more thoroughly investigated to understand more complex issues and provide data that can be more widely applied to other sites with similar characteristics.   

As the project develops this section of the website will expand, sharing new reports and coastal change projections when they are produced.  

LiDAR surveys, which are explained on the Data Modelling page, have been carried out by the South West Coastal Monitoring program at this location. The image shared here visualises where sand has eroded (areas shaded in red) and where it has built up (areas shaded in blue), between the LiDAR surveys carried out in 2003 and 2019. The darker the shade of red or blue the greater the amount of sand erosion or accumulation has been observed. The image helps visualise that beaches are areas that change shape over time and will continue to do so as sea levels rise.

Treyarnon LiDAR difference model between 2003 and 2019
Blue wave graphic
Yellow Graphic of a beach plant.

Beach & Dune Ecology

Beaches and dunes represent an important transition between the marine environment and the terrestrial environment. This transition creates a range of special habitats and exposes a range of interesting features, which that can result in these spaces being highly designated and protected. The Making Space for Sand project will survey a number of dune systems. These surveys will help highlight how they may be changing, will identify rare species, will map invasive species, help us understand overall dune condition and identify potential constraints to improving their condition. 

There are a range of designations that recognise a variety of different features. There are also a number of dunes systems where data has been collected to understand their habitat value. These are explored, on a site-by-site basis, in the section below.  

Yellow Marram Grass Graphic

Designations

Designated Cornwall National Landscape Area

From November 2023, all areas previously know as Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, or AONBs, were re-named National Landscape and in Cornwall became Cornwall National Landscape. However, the Management Plan still references the term AONB as this was formally adopted by Cornwall Council and cannot be amended until the next plan is produced.

Cornwall National Landscape areas are protected landscapes whose distinctive character and natural beauty are so outstanding that it is in the nation’s interest to safeguard them. As such they have been nationally designated by the same legislation as National Parks and have the same status and level of protection. 

Image of Bedruthan Steps

The Carnewas to Stepper Point section of the Cornwall National Landscape

The Carnewas to Stepper Point section covers an area of 2,365 hectares, which is 2.6% of the total Cornwall National Landscape. The key landscape characteristic of this section is the variety of coastal scenery due to the diverse geology including hard greenstones, which form the elevated headlands, the more easily eroded slates and shales that back the bays and coves between the headlands and the extensive coastal sand dunes

Image of the spectacular coastline of North Cornwall

Marine Conservation Zone (MCZ)

A Marine Conservation Zone (MCZ) is a type of marine protected area, designated in English, Welsh and Northern Ireland territorial offshore waters, to protect a range of nationally important, rare or threatened marine habitats or species by halting or reversing damage and degradation caused by human activities

The Padstow Bay and Surrounds MCZ covers an area of approximately 90 km2, extending from Park Head near Trenance to Com Head, just east of Pentire Point and The Rumps. The MCZ contains deeper water and intertidal rocky and sandy habitats home to a diversity marine creatures. In the more shallow waters large kelps and some smaller red seaweeds, that are capable of withstanding the powerful water surges, are able to flourish, whilst marine animals dominate the deeper water rocky habitats. 

Image of a Celtic sea slug on the edge of a rockpool

Sign up to Making Space for Sand

If you would like to get involved in helping to make dunes more resilient and biodiverse, want to help develop coastal adaptation and emergency plans or just want to know more about what the project is learning about coastal change, please click here:

Yellow Graphic of a beach plant.
Yellow Graphic of a beach plant.