Title: COASTAL AWARENESS
1COASTAL AWARENESS
- Lesson 2
- LOOKING CLOSER
- MANGRAL ECOSYSTEM
2- Together, beach sands, mangroves, and seagrasses
work together to help maintain a healthy,
productive and ecologically balanced near shore
environments. This is because, within all of
these ecosystems, there is a set of fragile,
interconnecting food webs and environmental
conditions. Small changes in a food web or in any
of the environmental conditions, like temperature
or pollution can destroy the ecological balance
and prevent these "partner ecosystems" from
providing the benefits that they do.
3- Mangroves are trees that grow along muddy beach
shorelines. This area of the shoreline is called
the tidal zone. In contrast with other trees that
grow on land, mangroves grow in saline or salty
waters. They grow closest to the ocean and have
prop roots which are submerged under water during
high tide but are exposed during low tide,
sticking out of the muddy substrate.
4- Mangroves are important to the near shore
environment because they provide - 1) coastal protection from erosion
- 2) a place for small fish and other marine life
to grow - 3) leaves and leaf matter for fish to eat.
Mangroves, with special help from their prop
roots, slow down strong ocean waves and, in this
way protect the beach shoreline from erosion. - 4) As mangroves grow, the leaves of trees drop
into the water and become rotten. This litter
known as detritus serves as food for some fish
and marine life that live in the mangrove forest,
as well as for those that live on the nearby near
shore environment. They also provide a good
source of nutrients.
5Mangroves in the United States
- Around the entrance to Port Everglades in Fort
Lauderdale are several stands of a formerly much
more extensive covering of mangroves. Miami Dade
County's Biscayne Bay was formerly extensively
fringed in mangroves. Most of these have been
attrited by development down to isolated stands,
however the Oleta River, an estuary in northern
Miami Dade County has a rather large mangal that
is still relatively intact and is now a state
recreation area. - Southern Biscayne Bay and Card Sound have
extensive fringing mangroves intact, as do the
lee side of most of the Florida Keys. - The southern tip of the Florida Peninsula is the
largest intact mangal in the continental United
States. It comprises the whole southern part of
the Everglades National Park and South Florida. - There are several scattered stands of mangrove on
the west coast of Florida. Like their
counterparts on the east coast, they were
formerly much more extensive, but have been
attritted by development.
6Mangroves in the United States
- Because of their sensitivity to sub-freezing
temperatures, mangroves in the continental United
States are limited to the coastal Florida
Peninsula from Cape Canaveral on the east around
the keys and up to Tampa Bay on the west. The
mangal of the Banana and Indian Rivers of Brevard
County and within the confines of the Kennedy
Space Center is significant. - The Keys and Everglades mangrove community is
critical as a nursery for the commercially
important Keys shrimp industry. Other important
species that breed or live part of their life
cycle in this habitat are the tarpon, snook,
lemon shark, nurse shark, snapper, spiny lobster,
trout, and bonefish. It is also the exclusive
habitat of the american crocodile.
7Mangroves in Mexico
- Although mangrove ecoregions are similar, the
Mexican ecosystem holds some of the tallest
mangrove trees, a species of red mangrove which
serves as a nursery to fish and invertebrates,
and provides refuge for many endangered animals.
- Costa Alegre is constituted by 5 coastal zones
Bahia de Navidad, Bahia Tenacatita, Costa
Careyes, Bahia de Chamela y Costa Majahuas, each
one with different architectural and geographic
characteristics. - Coastal mangroves, like the 52 acres in La
Manzanilla, are part of a complex and fragile
ecosystem that connect many terrestrial and
marine species in a protective and nurturing web
of life.
8Mangroves in Mexico
- The mangroves on the Pacific Coast of Chiapas
have been recognized as some of the tallest
mangroves in Mexico, with trees reaching heights
of 25 m. - They are also home to the unique yellow mangrove
tree (Rhizophora harrisonnii), a species that was
originally thought to be exclusive to Ecuador and
Costa Rica - Red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle), white mangrove
(Laguncularia racemosa), yellow mangrove (R.
harrisonii) and black mangrove (Conocarpus
erectus) trees, as well as water zapotón (Pachira
aquatica) dominate the tree species in this
ecoregion. Some fruit trees including Cynometra
petusa, chicozapote, fig trees, and guanacaste
grow in association with mangrove trees, as do
other plant aggregations, including coastal
scrub, tule (Typha spp.), coastal dune
vegetation, and palm trees.
9Red mangrove Rhizophora mangle
- Kingdom Plantae
- Phylum/Division Tracheophyta
- Class Angiosperm
- Order Myrtales
- Family Rhizophoraceae
- Genus Rhizophora
- Identifying Characteristics
- Size/Form The red mangrove is a tall tree that
reaches 70' to 80' in height in the tropics
however in Florida, it is characterized as a
short bushy tree reaching about 20' in height. It
is characterized by its numerous above ground
roots called prop roots.
10Red mangrove Rhizophora mangle
- Identifying Characteristics
- LeavesThe persistent leaves are oppositely
arranged, 3" to 5" long and 1" to 2" wide. They
are elliptical in shape, dark green on top, and
paler below. Leaf margins are smooth. - Flowers The flowers on the red mangrove are a
pale yellow and appear in the spring. - FruitThe leathery fruit is a rusty-brown conical
berry. Before it falls from the tree, one seeds
germinate and send down an initial root, 6" to
12" long. When the fruit falls this root lodges
in the soil and the top begins to grow
immediately. This is a unique plant adaptation to
the wet environment.
11Red mangrove Rhizophora mangle
- Identifying Characteristics
- BarkThe thick gray to gray-brown bark is ridged
and scaly. - HabitatThe red mangrove grows in brackish areas
along creeks, bays, andlagoons.
12white mangrove Laguncularia racemosa
- Kingdom Plantae
- Phylum/Division Tracheophyta
- Class Angiosperm
- Order Myrtales
- Family
- Genus Laguncularia
- Identifying Characteristics
- Size/Form The white mangrove is a small low
sprawling shrub or tree that reaches 40' to 60'
in height. It is characterized by its narrow
rounded crown.
13white mangrove Laguncularia racemosa
- Identifying Characteristics
- Leaves The persistent leaves are oppositely
arranged and are 1" to 3" long. The leaves are
leathery and possess small glands on the bottom
of the leaf towards the outer edges. - Fruit The leathery fruit is a reddish-brown
drupe that contains a dark red seed. - Bark The 1" thick reddish-brown bark is ridged
and scaly - .Habitat White mangrove grows in areas where
tides may be high and also in lagoons.
14black mangrove Avicennia germinans
- Kingdom Plantae
- Phylum/Division Tracheophyta
- Class Angiosperm
- Order Myrtales
- Family Avicennia
- Genus Avicennia
- Identifying Characteristics
- Size/Form Black mangrove is a small to
medium-sized tree that reaches heights of 50'. It
is small and shrub-like toward the north end of
its range.
15black mangrove Avicennia germinans
- Identifying Characteristics
- LeavesThe leaves are simple, oppositely
arranged, persistent, and 2" to 4" long by ¾" to
1 ½" wide. The oblong shaped leaves usually have
shiny upper surfaces coated with salt crystals
while the underneath surface is hairy. The leaf
base is wedged and the leaf tip is rounded. The
leaf margin is smooth and sometimes slightly
rolled down along the side edges. - Fruit The egg-shaped capsule is green and 1 ½"
long by 1" wide, has splits along two edges, and
contains one seed. - Bark The dark-brown bark has long, vertical
furrows between flat, scaly, squarish blocks. The
bark sloughs off to reveal an orange-red inner
bark. - Habitat Black mangrove grows in the wet soils of
coastal high-tide shores of Florida in the
mangrove ecosystem.
16black mangrove Avicennia germinans
17yellow mangrove R. harrisonii
- Identifying Characteristics
- Roots Buttresses at the base of the trunk and
knee roots. - Leaves Small (up to 7 cm long), yellow-green,
oval- shaped leaves occurring in groups at the
end of branches. The leaves are often orientated
straight up in the air to avoid strong midday
sunlight. - Flowers and Fruit Small green-brown flower buds
with pale orange petals. See propagules of the
three Ceriops species. - Bark Cream coloured bark with dark brown spots.
- Habitat Often occurring as short, stunted trees
(especially in very saline environments), they
may grow to 5 m high in areas having some
freshwater influence.
18Buttonwood Conocarpus erectus
- Kingdom Plantae
- Phylum/Division Tracheophyta
- Class Angiosperm
- Order
- Family Conocarpus
- Genus Conocarpus
- Identifying Characteristics
- Size/Form Buttonwood is a small tree that seldom
reaches heights of 40'. It is usually small and
shrub-like.
19Buttonwood Conocarpus erectus
- Identifying Characteristics
- Leaves The leaves are simple, alternately
arranged, persistent, and are 1" to 4" long by ½"
to 1 ½" wide. The oblong shaped leaves usually
have dark, shiny green upper surfaces while the
underneath surface is paler and smooth with silky
hairs. The leaf base is wedged with a pair of
marginal glands. The leaf tip is tapering and the
margin is smooth. - Fruit The fruit is a tiny reddish, leathery
drupe. The scale-like drupes are borne in heads
that resemble a cone that is 1" in diameter. - Bark The dark-brown to black bark has irregular
fissures that form flat, interlacing, scaly
ridges. - Habitat Buttonwood grows in the silty, muddy
shorelines of tidal bays and lagoons, commonly
landward of the fringe of mangrove community and
above high tides. They are also found on the
edges of hammocks, salt flats, marshes, and sandy
rocklands.
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