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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Tue Feb 14, 2017, 09:29 AM Feb 2017

Coastal Everglades In Serious Trouble; Mangroves Moving Inland, Peat Formations Disintegrating

Long article, but really interesting.

Shark River - At the bottom of the Everglades along the mouth of the Shark River, a towering mangrove forest stands in a place few people outside anglers and researchers ever see: at the edge of a vast shallow bay where the salty sea and freshwater marshes conspired to erect a cathedral of trees. In the current fight over restoration, this isolated region often gets overlooked. While Lake Okeechobee pollution to the north grabs headlines and gets the attention of Florida lawmakers, it’s actually here where damage may be most profound.

For the last 16 years, nearly 80 scientists and their students from 29 organizations — including all the state’s major universities, the National Park Service and the South Florida Water Management District — have embarked on one of the longest and largest studies ever conducted on South Florida’s coastal Everglades. They now fear the system may be at what lead investigator Evelyn Gaiser calls a “tipping point,” where change is happening faster than scientists expected and spinning into a self-perpetuating cycle of decline.

The mangroves ringing the coast are moving inland, overtaking vital freshwater marshes. Growing swathes of peat, the rich mucky soil that formed over a few thousand years, are collapsing. And periphyton, the spongy brown mats of native algae that form the foundation of the food chain, is shrinking.

Aside from losing one of the planet’s rarest ecosystems, changes happening in the system could also have global consequences, damaging one of the region’s main defenses against climate change fueled by greenhouse gases. “The threat here is we’re changing the system from one that is very good at sucking carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere,” said Gaiser, a Florida International University aquatic ecologist, “to one that’s very rapidly losing it.”

EDIT

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article132530084.html

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Coastal Everglades In Serious Trouble; Mangroves Moving Inland, Peat Formations Disintegrating (Original Post) hatrack Feb 2017 OP
Sad (eom) Petrushka Feb 2017 #1
Sounds like big changes ahead of us in the not too distant future. Canoe52 Feb 2017 #2
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