1 / 41

Mangroves: Coastal Ecosystems and Restoration

Explore the importance of mangroves, their distribution, key genera, geomorphological and hydrodynamic settings, adaptations, and the impact of hurricanes. Also learn about USAID's sustainable seafood development projects and mangrove restoration initiatives.

lisab
Download Presentation

Mangroves: Coastal Ecosystems and Restoration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A. Mangroves • Or Mangal • from mangue (tree) and grove (stand of trees) • Replace salt marsh as the dominant coastal ecosystem in subtropical and tropical regions • Facultative halophytes

  2. c. Distribution • 240,000 km2 worldwide • 2,700 km2 in Florida • 68 spp worldwide • 10 spp in the Americas

  3. Distribution Continued • Found on coastlines between 25 N and 25S latitude, dependent on temperature • Rhizophora - survive 2-4 C for 24 hrs • Avicennia – survives 2-4 C for several days

  4. B. Three Main Genera • Rhizophora (red mangrove) • R. mangal and R. racemosa most common New World spp • High prop roots and dangling roots are common • Less cold tolerant

  5. b. Avicennia (black mangrove) i. A. germinans most common in New World • ii. Can tolerate very high salinity (60 ppt) and very anoxic conditions • iii. Known for having pneumatophores

  6. Laguncularia (white mangrove) • L. racemosa most common in New World • Affinity for lower salinity areas

  7. C. Geomorphological settings • need gentle wave/tidal action to bring nutrients • salinity allows them to out compete FW species

  8. D. Hydrodynamic settings • Fringe – protected shorelines, some canals, rivers and lagoons • Grow to 13 m tall • Accumulate organic matter • Found in S. Fla, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Texas • Avicennia found in salinity to 59 ppt, Rhizophora to 39 ppt • Overwash islands – one type of fringe mangrove • Rhizophora dominated • sensitive to ocean pollution

  9. b. Riverine – along tidal affected rivers • Grow to 21 m tall • Rhizophora dominated, but with few prop roots • Avicennia and Lagunicularia also present • Salinity 10-20 ppt

  10. c. Basin- inland depressions, behind fringe, in stagnant water • Grow to 9m tall • Soil conditions: highly anoxic, saline • Avicennia and Lagunicularia with many pneumatophores • If salinity >50ppt: Avicennia, if low: Laguncularia, 30-40ppt mixed forest

  11. d. Dwarf – isolated, low productivity, low FW, low nutrients • Grow to 2-5m shrubs • Fringe of everglades, Florida Keys • Hammock – one type • buildup of peat • Rhizophora dominated

  12. E. Understory – lacking due to variety of stressors • Mangrove ferns (Acrostichum spp) are common, 3 spp worldwide

  13. F. Salinity • Not required for mangroves • Much higher in soil than in water

  14. G. Zonation

  15. H. Adaptations • Salinity – exclusion and excretion • Prop roots and drop roots – Rhizophora • Pneumatophores – Avicennia – 20-30 cm above sediment • Lenticels found on a & b, let oxygen into plant, moves through arenchyma to root rhizosphere • Viviporous seedlings – Rhizophora – seeds germinate on tree i. Hypocotyls (seedling) drops, floats till touches sediment, roots

  16. Crabs – mangrove maintenance • Burrow, oxygenate soil, drag leaves into soil, aid in decomposition • Selectively eat dropped hypocotyls

  17. J. Hurricanes

  18. Hurricanes Continued • mangrove succession to stable community in average time between major hurricanes • Wipe out larger mangroves, small trees in gaps survive and act as a seed bank

  19. K. Mangrove effects on estuaries • Net export of organic matter and nutrients • Provides nursery areas and food sources for fisheries

  20. Current Activities and Plans for the Futurein Mangroves and Coastal Related Sectors:USAID Sustainable Seafood Development Project Kevin Fitzsimmons USAID Developing a Sustainable Seafood Industry Infrastructure in Myanmar  

  21. Overview • Mangrove ecosystems have been negatively impacted by some aquaculture practices. • USAID recognizes the critical environmental services provided by mangroves • This project will conduct mangrove restoration projects associated with aquaculture operations.

  22. Introduction • USAID project started in January 2015. • Will continue for three years • Administered by University of Arizona with Dr. Kevin Fitzsimmons as Director

  23. Aquaculture and mangroves • Some aquaculture operations have impacted mangroves as farmers cut trees, built dikes and otherwise reduced natural water flow • Mangroves not available to filter water discharges from farms.

  24. Mangrove friendly aquaculture has been demonstrated in several countries • Common in several ASEAN neighbors • Project will support three demonstration projects at farm sites • Will test water quality before and after to determine if mangroves help to improve

  25. Tumbes, Perureplanted shrimp ponds

  26. Banda Aceh, Post tsunami Replanted shrimp ponds 200620092011

  27. Good Practices certifications • Most international certifications for Good or Best Aquaculture Practices support mangrove friendly aquaculture

More Related