Depression-era drainage ditches emerge as sleeping threat to Cape Cod salt marshes
Tyler Coverdale |
Cape Cod, Massachusetts has a problem. The iconic salt marshes
of the famous summer retreat are melting away at the edges, dying back from the
most popular recreational areas. The erosion is a consequence of an unexpected
synergy between recreational over-fishing and Great Depression-era ditches
constructed by Works Progress Administration (WPA) in an effort to control
mosquitoes. The cascade of ecological cause and effect is described by Tyler
Coverdale and colleagues at Brown University in a paper published online this
month in ESA's journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.
"People
who live near the marshes complain about the die-off because it's not nice to
look at," said Coverdale. "Without cordgrass protection you also get
really significant erosion, retreating at sometimes over a meter a year."
The die-back is ugly, but it is also a substantial loss of a valuable
ecological resource.
When fishermen hook too many predatory fishes out of the marsh's
ecosystem, the fishes' prey go on fruitfully multiplying, unchecked. The reverberations
down the food chain can result in uncomfortable environmental changes for human
residents. The problem for Cape Cod is the native purple marsh crab (Sesarma reticulatum),
which burrows in the mud along the inner shorelines of the marshes, and dines
almost exclusively on the tall and fast-growing low marsh cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) that
lines the marsh edges.
The
tall and sturdy cordgrass is an essential buffer against the friction of tides
and storms. Without it, soft banks erode out from under the other plants and
the water line retreats farther and farther back into the marsh. The unchecked
multitudes of purple marsh crabs have taken a visible toll on the developed
areas of the Cape. By 2008, 50 percent of the creek banks in the marsh had worn
back. Old drainage ditches have expanded from nearly invisible threads to open
channels -- some nearly 30-40 meters wide -- with muddy, exposed edges.
Tyler Coverdale |
Tyler Coverdale |
The purple marsh crabs need tidal creek edge habitat to thrive,
and do not venture into the inner heart of the marsh, where a shorter cordgrass
species (the closely related, but squattier Spartina patens) and
other high marsh plants dominate. The old WPA mosquito ditches also fulfill the
crabs' habitat requirements. Once benign, the ditches nucleated dramatic
reconstruction of the landscape with the loss of blue crab, striped bass, and
smooth dogfish, and the subsequent boom of purple marsh crabs.
One of
the remarkable features of the cordgrass die-off is its tight locality. Some
areas of undeveloped marsh as close as a kilometer to the denuded banks around
private residences and public docks appear healthy and unaffected. Mosquito
ditches that can only be reached by a hard slog through undeveloped marshland
do not display the striking die-off and bank erosion. The pattern cued the
researchers to the possibility that recreational fishing was the trigger,
Coverdale says. Few people wade into the swamp to fish.
Marshes
are excellent model systems for observing the intersection of human impacts
that can trigger environmental degradation, the authors say, because they have
been exploited by humans for centuries, if not thousands of years, and are
easily studied from aerial and satellite images.
"Marshes
are one of the most heavily utilized resources worldwide," said Coverdale.
"They are easily accessible, and provide shellfish, fuel, baitfish and
opportunities for recreational anglers. A lot of those harvests are probably
sustainable."But he is interested in the tipping points at which use of
the marsh becomes unsustainable. The revelation of the slumbering menace of the
mosquito ditches raises the prospect of other submerged impacts that may
surface under the influence of new, contemporary pressures.
In the
early twentieth century, Cape Cod was a very different place from the summer
vacation destination it is today. As land use shifted from agriculture toward
tourism, the local chamber of commerce funded an effort to draw off standing
water through drainage ditches to suppress the mosquito population. The program
was probably not very effective at controlling mosquito-borne disease,
Coverdale says, but it did put a lot of people to work, and they were
industrious. Over 2400 kilometers of old ditches stripe the marshes of the
long, low-lying peninsula. The Cape Cod Mosquito Control Project continues
ditch-dredging under the Barnstable County Department of Health and the
Environment.
The
ditching program had a relatively minor impact on the marshes compared to other
forms of development, however. Following the Second World War, Cape Cod
developed rapidly, nearly tripling in permanent human population between 1940
and 1976, when a new awareness of the ecological and economic benefits of the
marsh brought strict limitations on further development. Ditches claimed only 2
percent of the marsh, compared with the 70 percent affected by roads, houses,
restaurants, marinas, and other hallmarks of a modern coastal community. Alone,
the ditches did not fundamentally alter the marsh ecosystem. The species that
colonized the ditches were already present in the marsh; the WPA's remodeling
project just moved them around. The additional pressure of recreational fishing
changed that equilibrium.
How do
Cape Cod residents and local fishing enthusiasts feel about this news? Coverdale
says the area has a strong conservation ethic. People remember what the Cape
looked like when their parents lived there, and are unhappy with the changes.
As a fishing enthusiast himself, Coverdale does not see ecologists and
fishermen as opposing forces.
"People
enjoy catching fish today, but they come back year after year. They want to see
the fish there tomorrow," Coverdale said. He has faith that the tendency
of residents and long-time visitors to take the long view will make a solution
possible. A system of catch and release could make fishing the Cape sustainable
and allow the local community to retain its fishing heritage.
Source: Ecological
Society of America
DON’T
FORGET TO-
Leave Your Comments!
Posted by Unknown
on Saturday, January 26, 2013.
Filed under
Earth And Climate
.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0