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Seagrass and Salt Marsh: Critical Coastal Habitats

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Title: Seagrass and Salt Marsh: Critical Coastal Habitats


1
Seagrass and Salt Marsh Critical Coastal Habitats
  • South Slough National
  • Estuarine Research Reserve

2
What is a Salt Marsh?
  • Salt marshes are transitional areas between land
    and water, occurring along the intertidal shore
    of estuaries and sounds where salinity (salt
    content) ranges from near ocean strength to near
    fresh in upriver marshes.

3
What is a Seagrass Bed?
  • Seagrasses are flowering plants that have adapted
    to living in salt water. Seagrasses are found
    mostly on soft sediment in estuaries and shallow
    coastal waters and are frequently found growing
    in dense beds.

In Pacific Northwest estuaries, the common
species of seagrass is called eelgrass (Zostera
marina), which grows in soft sediments of
intertidal and subtidal zones.
4
Where are seagrass and salt marsh communities
located?
Salt marshes
5
Estuarine Habitats
Salt marshes
Tidal channels
6
1. Open Water- Subtidal
Estuarine Habitats
Salt marshes
Tidal channels
Eelgrass beds
7
1. Open Water- Subtidal
Estuarine Habitats
2. Intertidal mudflat
Salt marshes
Tidal channels
Intertidal mudflat
Eelgrass beds
8
Elevation is a primary determinant of seagrass
and salt marsh location
Transitional Zone
Low and Mid Salt Marsh
Mudflat and/or Seagrass
High Salt Marsh
Mainstem Tidal Channel
Tidal Inundation Period High Marsh- Short Low
Marsh- Long
9
Why are seagrass and salt marsh communities
important? What roles do they play in the
coastal ecosystem?
10
  • In ecological and economic value, they rival
    tropical rainforests and the worlds richest
    farmlands!

11
Seagrass and Salt Marsh Functions
  • Primary Production
  • Fish and Wildlife Habitat (including nursery
    role)
  • Sediment sink
  • Shoreline protection
  • Water Quality

12
Primary Production
Eelgrass and Salt Marsh provide the critical
foundation to the detrital food web
  • Production
  • Shredding
  • Colonization/decomposition
  • Consumption by small organisms (grazers)
  • Consumption by larger organisms (predators)
  • Defecation/Nutrient transformation

13
Fish and Wildlife Habitat Example
  • Juvenile Salmon rearing habitat
  • Foraging
  • Physiological transitions
  • Refuge from predators

14
Fish and Wildlife Habitat Example
  • Resident and migratory bird habitat
  • Shorebirds feed on insects, fish, invertebrates
  • Ducks and geese graze on vegetation Ex. Black
    Brant / eelgrass

15
Water Quality
  • Nutrient uptake
  • Sediment trapping and baffling of wave energy
  • Oxygen production

16
Natural Variability of Salt Marsh and Seagrass
Habitats
  • Plant distribution, species diversity, and
    density can vary substantially over seasons and
    years in response to
  • Precipitation, water table
  • Light availability
  • Temperature
  • Nutrient availability
  • Plant competition/succession
  • Sediment characteristics
  • Oceanic cycles (El NIÑO, PDO)
  • Sea level rise

17
  • Human Impacts on Salt Marsh and Seagrass
  • Direct Impacts
  • Dredging
  • Diking
  • Draining
  • Filling
  • Indirect Impacts
  • Pollution toxics,
  • nutrients, sediments
  • Water diversions
  • Shading i.e. docks,
  • piers, bridges, boats,
  • high water turbidity
  • Invasive species

18
HISTORIC CHANGES OF COOS BAY TIDAL WETLANDS,
FILLED AGRICULTURAL LANDS, AND RESIDENTIAL
COMMUNITIES (1892-1995)
ACRES
YEAR
19
Coos Bay 1900
20
Why Monitor Salt Marsh and Seagrass Habitat?
  • To further our understanding of coastal ecology
  • To document changes over time as an indicator of
    estuarine health
  • To assess changes in sensitive estuarine
    habitats from long term trends in sea
    level rise and climate change
  • To alert us to declines in key habitats and
    guide corrective action
  • To motivate the public to protect existing
    habitat, restore degraded habitat, and improve
    upstream land use practices

21
South Sloughs Monitoring Strategy
  • South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve
    (SSNERR) currently monitors a variety of physical
    and chemical measures as part of a nationwide
    effort to track the status and trends of
    estuarine resources in the United States.
  • Monitoring of eelgrass and salt marsh serve as
    biological indicators of ecosystem health.

22
  • A key advantage of biological indicators of
    estuary health is that they respond to a broad
    variety of environmental variables (temperature,
    salinity, light, pollution, etc), and therefore
    provide an integrated measure of how the
    ecosystem is functioning.

23
The Big Picture Questions
  • Within salt marshes and eelgrass beds, how are
    species composition, abundance, and distribution
    changing over time?
  • What might be causing these changes?

24
Questions about short-term variability in these
habitats
  • How closely linked are the seasonal ecological
    characteristics of these habitats along the
    estuarine gradient?
  • How does the location of a habitat along the
    estuarine gradient affect species diversity,
    spatial cover, and biomass?

25
Questions about long-term variability in these
habitats
  • How are changes in eelgrass and salt marsh
    habitats related to longer-term changes in the
    nearshore Pacific Ocean and/or freshwater inputs
    from the local watershed?

26
Guiding Concepts of Our Monitoring Approach
  • Establish monitoring sites along estuarine
    gradient (marine ? freshwater)
  • Conduct representative sampling using transects
    and plots
  • Repeatable measures
  • Measure both plant community attributes and
    environmental variables
  • Testing both national (NERRS) and International
    (SeagrassNet) protocols
  • Sample quarterly (4x per year) to assess seasonal
    variability

27
Transects and Plots
28
What do we measure at each site?
  • Water depth
  • Water salinity (salt content)
  • Water Table Height
  • Sediment elevation changes
  • Sediment grain size
  • Light using loggers
  • Water temperature using loggers

29
What do we measure at each quadrat plot?
  • Canopy height / Blade width
  • Shoot density
  • Flowers fruits
  • Sediment description
  • Biomass core (0.0035m2)
  • Seagrass cover
  • Species composition
  • Photograph

30
Monitoring sediment elevation changes
31
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32
Current project status?
  • First year of project 3 seasons of data
    collected
  • Data analysis this Fall
  • Ongoing long term monitoring to reveal trends

33
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