August 8, 2022
By: Trimmel Gomes
Conservation groups along several states on the
East coast stretching from North Carolina to northeast Florida are working
through a plan to conserve one million acres of salt marsh nearly the size of
Grand Canyon National Park.
When it comes to Mother Nature, state boundaries are non-existent - so
environmental groups, scientists, native communities and state and federal
agencies are working together on the
South Atlantic Salt Marsh Initiative Project.
It's a voluntary, collaborative plan to help states protect channels of coastal
grasslands that do more than meets the eye.
Kent Smith - a biological administrator with the Aquatic Habitat Conservation
and Restoration Section of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission - said salt marshes are extremely good at sequestering carbon from
the atmosphere by forming a thick peat to trap the CO2 in the sediments below.
"They also stabilize the shorelines in coast areas," said Smith.
"So they keep sediments in place and they protect properties from the
impacts of climate change, sea-level rise, tropical storms, things like that."
Smith said coastal development threatens the natural protections salt marshes
provide, and their hope is to spread awareness so communities and developers
can work together to protect these natural habitats.
Jim McCarthy - president of the North Florida Land Trust - is part of the
initiative and works to buy salt marshes to preserve and protect them. He said
manmade solutions to protect areas from things like storm surges don't always
work.
He said one example is in Jacksonville, where marsh grasses were taken out of
an area and replaced with concrete bulkheads. He said that was disastrous
during Hurricane Irma.
"And as the St. Johns River turns east," said McCarthy, "it
literally went over its banks because there is nothing to make the energy out
of it and there is nothing to absorb it, if you will, as there would be if you
had had natural marsh grasses. "
The
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimates that
the U.S. loses 80,000 acres of coastal wetlands, including salt marshes, each
year, driven by development and sea-level rise.
Support for this reporting was provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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