core sound estuary1
TRANSCRIPT
A North Carolina TreasureKella Randolph M.Ed.
Core Sound Estuary
• Locationo Importance• Plant life
oAnimal life• Rivers, streams and other waterways that feed into
the soundoThreats to the Core Sound Estuary
Core Sound Estuary
Location of the Core Sound Estuary
Core Sound is a bay located just 16.2 miles from Harkers Island, on the east coast of North Carolina.
Cape Lookout National Seashore is a 56 mile long stretch off of the Southern Outer Banks consisting of 3 undeveloped barrier islands - North Core Banks, South Core Banks, and Shackleford Banks. In the early 1500s, Florentine explorer, Giovanni da Verrazzano, allegedly reported native people living on the banks, and between 1540 and 1570 it is said that Spain sent several explorers to investigate the area.
Estuaries are some of the most productive ecosystems in the world. Many animal species rely on estuaries for food and as places to nest and breed. Human communities also rely on estuaries for food, recreation, and jobs. (NOAA)
Estuaries are bodies of water as well as their surrounding coastal habitats typically found where rivers meet the sea. Estuaries harbor unique plant and animal communities because their waters are brackish—a mixture of fresh water draining from the land and salty seawater. (NOAA)
Importance of the Core Sound Estuary
• Estuaries are coastal bodies of water that have mixed fresh and salty water. The water in estuaries is mixed because they are fed by rivers but also have a connection with oceans. Estuaries have a barrier to the sea, similar to lagoons, that protects them from ocean energy, but, unlike lagoons, estuaries still connect with the sea. Because of this connection with the sea, estuaries are strongly influenced by tides (NOAA).
Estuaries
Estuaries’ unique environment makes them a good place for humans and animals. Humans benefit from the beauty of estuaries and the food and resources they provide. Estuaries are often tourism attractions or harbors and ports. The mix of fresh and saltwater makes a great feeding ground and habitat for many types of wildlife (EPA).
This water mixture also results in a mixture of types of sediment. Though estuaries have sediment from both upstream rivers and from the ocean, most of the sediment is relatively fine grained (McNally, pg. 3). The type of sediment, and the abundance of it, affects human and animal involvement with estuaries. Too much sediment makes it hard for plants to photosynthesis and limits human use of the estuary since sediment can be deposited, making the estuary unsuitable for ship traffic. If there is too little sediment in the estuary then the land bordering it may be eroded away and increase predation rates in some species (McNally, pg. 2)
Fresh water mixes with ocean water.
Bar built estuaries are behind some sort of natural bar between the estuary and the ocean, such as a spit. (ONA).
Coastal plain estuaries form from the rise of sea level. The rising sea level then fills an already existing river valley with water, creating an estuary.
Coastal plains estuaries
Plants of the Core Sound Estuary
Salt hay Spike grass Black rush
Smooth cordgrass
Pickleweed
Animals of the Core Sound Estuarync-culture.com, http://core.ecu.edu/BIOL/luczkovichj/core_sound/core_sound.html
Baby fox
Diatoms & algae
Ray
Sharks
Bay anchovies
Pinfish
Bivalves (scallops, clams)
Penaeid shrimp
River otter
Photos used under Creative Commons
Starry flounder
Hermit crabs
Great blue heron
Great egret
Core Sound produces the most valuable seafood catch in the basin, followed by Bogue Sound and the Newport River.White Oak River is a remote, scenic, 48-mile river that spills into Bogue Sound past the picturesque town of Swansboro. Still farther east is the basin’s Newport River, which begins near Havelock and flows into the eastern end of Bogue Sound. The shortest and eastern -most river in the basin is the North River, which empties into Back Sound near Harker's Island.http://www.eenorthcarolina.org/Documents/RiverBasin_pdfs/final_web_whiteoak.pdf
Rivers, streams and waterways of the Core Sound Estuary
Tucked between the eastern portions of the Neuse and Cape Fear river basins, the
White Oak River Basin abounds with coastal and freshwater wetlands. The basin includes four river
systems, or sub-basins, that feed into highly productive
estuaries ofBack, Core and Bogue sounds.
White Oak River Basin
• http://www.ncwildlife.org/Portals/0/Conserving/documents/NCRiverBasins/WhiteOakRiverBasin/WORB-FULL.pdf
• http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/circ1173/circ1173b/chapter08.htm
This basin lies entirely within the coastal plain, and includes four small separate river systems (New River, White Oak River, Newport River, and North River). The White Oak River basin encompasses 1,264 sq. miles, 446 stream miles, and 130,009 estuarine acres (NCDWQ 2001). Sixteen municipalities (towns) are located in whole or in part of the basin.
White Oak River
Salt marshes are salty because they are flooded by seawater every day. They are marshy because their ground is composed of peat. Peat is made of decomposing plant matter that is often several feet thick. Peat is waterlogged, root-filled, and very spongy. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/tutorial_estuaries/media/supp_est06a_salt.html
Salt marshes are a mosaic of snaking channels called tidal creeks that fill with seawater during high tides and drain during low tides. Fish species including flounder and mullet live most of their lives in marsh creeks.http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/tutorial_estuaries/media/supp_est06a_salt.html
Salt marsh
Core Sound Salt MarshBecause salt marshes are waterlogged and contain lots of decomposing plant material, oxygen levels in the peat are extremely low—a condition called hypoxia. Hypoxia promotes the growth of bacteria which produce the rotten-egg smell that is attributed to marshes and mud flats.Salt marshes are covered with salt-tolerant plants, or halophytes, like salt hay, black rush, and smooth cordgrass. However, these plants do not grow together in the same area. Marshes are divided into distinct zones, the high marsh and the low marsh. (NOAA)
The low marsh floods daily at high tide. The high marsh usually floods about twice a month during very high tides associated with new and full moons. The more often an area is flooded, the more saline it is. Plants living in salt marshes have different tolerances to salt. Those with higher tolerances are found in the low marsh, and those with lower tolerances to salt are found in the high marsh zones. Plants from one marsh zone are never found in the other.
Salt marshes are covered with salt-tolerant plants, or halophytes, like salt hay, black rush, and smooth cordgrass. However, these plants do not grow together in the same area. Marshes are divided into distinct zones, the high marsh and the low marsh. The difference in elevation between these two areas is usually only a few centimeters, but for the
plants that inhabit each of these zones, a few centimeters makes a world of difference.
Salt marshes experience flooding during high
tide, and some draining during low tide.
Flood video from NOAA
Tides
One type of natural disturbance is the continual pounding of ocean waves. In many estuaries, barrier beaches protect inland habitats from wave erosion. If these beaches are destroyed, salt marshes and inland habitats adjacent to the estuary may become permanently damaged. Waves can also dislodge plants and animals, or bury them with sediments, while objects carried by the water can crush them. Large storms are especially destructive to estuaries, particularly in areas like Florida and the Carolinas, where barrier beaches are common. (NOAA)
Estuaries are fragile ecosystems that are very susceptible to disturbances. Natural disturbances are caused by the forces of nature, while anthropogenic disturbances are caused by people. Natural disturbances include winds, tidal currents, waves, and ice. Anthropogenic disturbances include pollution, coastal development, and the introduction of non-native species to an area. (NOAA)
Threats to the Core Sound Estuary
City Sewage Treatment Plants Industry
Agriculture and ForestryDevelopmentConsumers
What causes the problems?
• Install a water efficient toilet. In the meantime, put a brick or 1/2 gal container in the standard toilet tank to reduce water use per flush.
• Run the dishwasher or clothes washer only when you have a full load. This conserves electricity and water.
• Use the minimum amount of detergent and/or bleach when you are washing clothes or dishes. Use only phosphate free soaps and detergents.
• Minimize the use of pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers. DO NOT dispose of these chemicals, motor oil, or other automotive fluids into the sanitary sewer or storm sewer systems. Both of them end at the river.
• If your home has a sump pump or cellar drain, make certain it does not drain into the sanitary sewer system.
http://www.simsbury-ct.gov/water-pollution-control/pages/ten-things-you-can-do-to-reduce-water-pollution
Ten Things You Can Do To Reduce Water Pollution• DO NOT pour fat from cooking or any other type of
fat, oil, or grease down the sink. Keep a “fat jar” under the sink to collect the fat and discard in the solid waste when full.
• DO NOT dispose of household chemicals or cleaning agents down the sink or toilet.
• DO NOT flush pills, liquid or powder medications or drugs down the toilet. For recommendations on proper disposal for all types of medical wastes, visit the CT DEP publication here.
• Avoid using the toilet as a wastebasket. Most tissues, wrappers, dust cloths, and other paper goods should be properly discarded in a wastebasket. The fiber reinforced cleaning products that have become popular should never be discarded in the toilet.
• Avoid using a garbage disposal. Keep solid wastes solid. Make a compost pile from vegetable scraps.
EPA. Retrieved from http://water.epa.gov/type/oceb/nep/about.cfm.
McNally, W. H., Mehta, A. J. Retrieved from http://www.eolss.net/Sample-Chapters/C09/E2-06-01-04.pdf.
NOAA. Retrieved from http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/tutorial_estuaries/welcome.html.
ONA Retrieved from http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/habitats/estuaries1.htm.http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/tutorial_estuaries/media/supp_est06a_salt.htmlhttp://www.eenorthcarolina.org/Documents/RiverBasin_pdfs/final_web_whiteoak.pdfPhotos courtesy of Creative Commons and NOAA
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