Transcript
ovayIKDUyk4 • Can South Carolina's Salt Marshes Be Saved?
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Kind: captions Language: en crab cakes gumbo shrimp and grits a lot of seafood depends on something easy to overlook salt marsh the salt marsh estuary is one of the most important ecological habitats in the world not just in our part of the world but in the world the bottom of the food chain starts here fish baby crabs oysters oliver starts right in the marsh the adults live offshore but the babies are carried by the currents into the marsh habitat [Music] this is a nursery ground for many of the species that are so commercially important to consumers like me who like seafood juvenile shrimp juvenile crabs juvenile fish are able to take refuge in these areas they are more protected from predators and have great access to small invertebrates that they can consume as they develop the seafood economy and the health of the marshes are especially important in the southeastern u.s that's where our shrimp reproduce craig reeves has worked as a commercial fisherman for the last 35 years harvesting plants crabs oysters and above all shrimp in a good week he and his crew pack 20 to 30 thousand pounds of seafood fishing is is in in my blood and in my family's blood and it's just we we're we're called to the water we're watermen the marsh also plays a crucial role in shielding people living along the coast says fisheries biologist dion hoskins-brown one of the very important structural functions of the salt marsh is physical protection being a physical buffer from storm surge but there are signs that marsh habitat across the southeast is changing including this one john carr grew up in charleston south carolina a coastal community built atop and alongside salt marsh this is my backyard i'm born and raised right here when i was a little boy that was nothing but large the marsh would be at least five six feet high south carolina boasts the largest expanse of salt marsh of any state along the atlantic but the ecosystem has experienced dieback within the last couple decades including here in carr's backyard about 10-15 years ago it just started dying out when you see the brown that's not healthy it was quite alarming for all this moss to die out and it just kept receding and received and receding this is my son john called the force yeah it was awful on this year i couldn't go back there the marshal was gone by time he all he knows is mud no root system no mod root system as soon as you step in it you're going down you may go down to your waist very dangerous so now i i didn't let him play in it along the central georgia coast one study found that the mass of marsh plants above ground fell between 30 and 40 percent over a 28-year period irvin simmons has noticed changes in the last several decades too he's a crabber out of daufuskie island south carolina just north of the georgia border like his father and grandfather yeah the grass the marsh had seemed much greener when we were younger compared to now a lot of it has washed out pushed back i saw that from where it was over the years he says fishing practices have changed and simmons has witnessed the results firsthand when i was a young boy crab often would be that size we had much more crab much larger crab and um i think that's that's due in part to crabbing or seasonal the different time with year-round crabbing i think in my judgment it's kind of overcraft and you know with some people running so many pots it's throwing everything off it's it's real scarce right now as for the marsh die-off there are a couple possible explanations first drought which threw off the balance of the ecosystem there were changes in marsh snail populations that made the marsh grass more susceptible to fungal infections and those snails normally would have been controlled by blue crabs that were in smaller numbers because we were in the middle of a drought and so consequently there were large patches of marsh grass that died back along the coast once the rains returned the marsh largely recovered the marsh ecosystem is pretty resilient and can bounce back typically from different types of natural interruptions but others worry the problem of marsh dieback is linked to rising sea levels in part a result of climate change here in the charleston harbor we have documented over a foot of silver rise over the last 85 years if this rate stays consistent we can potentially see the next footer sealer rise over the next 20 to 30 years there's potential marsh drowning that's already occurring al george says that if the seas continue to rise faster than marsh grass can colonize slightly higher elevations large-scale die-off may result and it's a problem compounded by subsidence the sinking of land which leads to sea level rise bringing saltier water farther inland al george says protecting the marsh is crucial the hopes that we can keep the mars safe viable and flourishing even under these different changing conditions and this brings us back to john carr and his home along the marsh something is happening because you could see it's starting to grow back in partnership with the south carolina department of natural resources a team of researchers including al george is examining which kinds of grasses fare best in these changing conditions we planted different strands in the area to determine is there another strand that would be better suited to be more capable of handling this different environment that currently exists they came in and they planted different strands of marsh to see which one would survive that's the area over there they planted and this right here is new growth the team has found a kind of marsh grass that's more tolerant of the new conditions one that's better suited to the evolving flow patterns of the area and that is the strand that we're using to replant over half acre of salt marsh in that community to provide them with some hope that we can regenerate that area sort of more quickly and is on track to continue to grow and hopefully see things turn around in that particular area for the best we have to figure out how we take care of the salt marshes because ultimately the health of the entire food web system for the entire atlantic ocean and even our health is dependent on the ecosystem staying intact and staying viable and staying healthy even under these different changing conditions associated with climate change the marsh is still far from being in the clear but a solution would mean greater stability for the coastline i feel happy about i feel like i can have like an experience you know how he had experience in my mind if i instilled in him the pride of what he has then he can pass that on to his children and maybe we get another 150 200 years more of being on this property my father swim down here he taught me how to swim in that greek so i like to get that back before i get too old and to teach him so he could bring his children out here