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RECREATION AND EDUCATION FOR THE NEXT GENERATION

LESSON 8

THE MAGICAL POWERS OF THE ESTUARIES

Estuaries May Be Magical, But Solutions to Their Problems Aren't

 

BY BOB BERGEN

PROFESSOR OF SCIENCE, RETIRED

AND TEEN ANGLER MENTOR

"If we would just leave them alone...."

-- and not pollute, overfish and destroy them, they would come back.

We wish.

The fact is, we do all those things, and we are one of the most environmentally conscious countries on the planet. Yet even we still allow estuaries to be polluted, overfished and insulted in other ways.

So what can we do?

You've started already, just by being a member of Teen Anglers. I'll have more to say about this later.

Meantime, what are we actually doing to bring estuaries and other wetlands back to health?

I can't speak for other states; I don't live there. But I do know a little about national efforts, and about what we're doing here in Florida. So here goes.

I mentioned earlier there are four basic problems here: habitat destruction, suspended solids, dissolved materials, and overfishing. Obviously, these are interconnected, and as I go through these, see if you can find some of the connections. I'll point some out, too.

One more general note before I get specific. Money is always involved. Destroying some part of an estuary generally makes money or saves money for someone, or some corporation. It may be a developer creating expensive waterfront property by destroying a grass flat, it may be a city which doesn't want to raise taxes for advanced wastewater treatment, it may be an industry that doesn't want to cut into its profits to treat its chemical wastes - or it may be a commercial fisherman trying to make enough money to pay for his boat and keep his family together.

Generally speaking, I have a lot of admiration for commercial fishermen. Most barely make a living, and only fish because they love the water so much. It is sad that this often involves damaging or even destroying the very resource they depend upon.

So what do we do?

First, stop destroying habitat. We have laws - which are pretty well enforced - to stop destruction of shallow bottoms by dredge and fill projects, to stop siltation by requiring silt barriers, to regulate in varying degrees how much change you can make in the littoral zone. These laws, when they are well enforced, go a long way to prevent physical destruction of habitat. Here in Florida, some of this enforcement is by the state through our Department of Environmental Protection and other agencies, and the remainder by our local county commissions. How about where you live? Your county probably has a web site; check for the environmental department, and see what they have posted about local situations.

I live in Port St. Lucie on the East Coast (find it on a map of Florida), and we are trying to put in a third parkway from US 1 west to I-95. But there is a protected river in the way. We will have to build a bridge to cross it, but the area we need to cross is a State Preserve. It is estimated it will take at least five more years to come up with a design for that bridge that the state will approve. Some construction projects here, especially when they involve wetlands, may require permits from more than two dozen different county, state and federal agencies. These generally take years to be approved.

Suspended solids, the second problem. Some states do pretty well with this problem, but from the Middle Atlantic States to New England, streams bring loads of suspended solids with them. They come from clearcutting hillsides, and from mining of coal. Try Googling it: maybe start with "suspended solids + pollution + coal mines" and see what you get. Try other keywords, too: siltation, storm runoff, things like that. Remember that suspended solids from these sources get into the waterways after rainfall events.

Dissolved materials, the third problem. Again, the situation varies state to state. Look into the effluent from sewage treatment plants, what happens to "pig ponds" - ever smell pig excrement? Wholesale pig producers take the feces (imagine how much from a 400 pound pig!) and usually just dump them into a pond, which stinks and may overflow when there's a lot of rain or when a nearby river floods. Those feces are not only suspended solids to start, but as they dissolve, the nitrates and phosphates are added to the river, stream, lake, estuary - whatever.

Look into the states of North Carolina and Missouri to find problems associated with pig ponds. Many of the environmental group websites have bulletins or articles about pig farms; check Audubon, the National Wildlife Federation, maybe the Sierra Club. You might also check River Keepers. Look especially into Hurricane Floyd and the effects of its flooding on the Neuse and Tar Rivers in North Carolina, and the subsequent effects of river runoff flooding on both Albemarle Sound and Pamlico Sound.

Industries of many kinds are major contributors of dissolved materials. Even a "clean" industry like electronics gets involved. They use acids of many kinds to clean components as they are manufactured, and those acids have to go somewhere. For you New Jerseyites, I can remember in the 1940s betting with my brother what color the Raritan River would be as we went to pick up my dad, who worked for Bakelite, a major plastics company. The colors in the Raritan came from Calco, another plastics firm. Some days it would be white as snow, sometimes red, or purple - or black.

Finally, overfishing. I'll share with you a lesson I learned from a Professor at Appalachian State University about managing wild populations which are subject to either hunting or fishing (just another kind of hunting). What he said was this:

Suppose you have a population of animals which are prized by fishermen or hunters. Let's say freshwater trout in a stream. As the population dwindles, there are typically three steps which are taken, usually in the following order, to bring the population back.

1. Rules and regulations. Size limits, bag limits, open and closed seasons are the typical ones. In Florida, we also limit nets.

The population continues to decrease, so more is needed. The rules and regs are kept, and something is added.

2. Restocking. Raise wild animals and turn them loose, to be "taken" (killed) by hunters or fishermen. Game farms and fish hatcheries are common in many states.

While I was in North Carolina during the 1970s, we had what is called a "put'n'take" fishery for rainbow trout. Every Tuesday the hatchery truck would dump 7 inch trout at specific points (which everyone knew), Wednesday was no fishing, and on Thursday folks would go out and catch these hatchery trout on corn niblets. The niblets resembled the food pellets the hatchery fish were used to eating.

Result: the native populations continue to decline. Time for the third step, which often made the difference and allowed native populations to rebuild.

3. Habitat restoration. Control and remove sources of pollution, prevent habitat destruction, and actually rebuild (or replant) habitat. In the Indian River Lagoon, we are replanting cordgrass and mangroves and experimenting with seagrass restoration. In many lakes, FADs (fish attracting devices) are placed on the bottom of the lake to provide what fishermen call "structure," an important hiding place for fish. In many streams, downed logs may be used to create eddies in the current where fish can rest and to increase the diversity of species living in the stream.

The most important of these is controlling and/or removing sources of pollution. It is also the most difficult.

4. Overfishing. Lots of rules and regs, and more importantly, a change in attitude among many fishermen. Becoming more and

common is the philosophy of "catch and release." This is especially important with the bigger fish; the difference in egg production between a ten pound grouper and the same grouper at fifty pounds is thousands of times more eggs. More eggs,

more young, more grouper to eat. YUMMMM!

Yes, we're getting better. Most people are much more environmentally conscious today than even just ten years ago, and support for all of the things I have mentioned continues to grow.

Remember I mentioned that being a member of Teen Anglers was a good start? You can go further!

Seriously consider joining one of the conservation organizations which are both nationwide and even worldwide. Generally, a donation of $25 to $50 makes you a member, and brings their magazine or newsletter to you. Some you might consider include the National Audubon Society, the National Wildlife Federation, the Sierra Club, Greenpeace, the Sea Shepherd Society, Ducks or Trout Unlimited, the Rainforest Alliance, Zero Population Growth - and there are many more. Google 'em.

At no cost, you can take part in public hearings about conservation issues, read your local newspaper about issues, write letters to the editor, join blogs on the web - just keep the overall goal in mind. Conservation first!

One last thought. If you get involved in discussions about conservation issues, remember always that honey gets better results than vinegar. Ask your parents.


Test Lesson 8 

 

Bob Bergen, Professor of Science, Retired. Teen Angler Mentor
Copyright © 2008[National Teen Anglers]. All rights reserved.
Revised: February 10, 2010

 

 

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