Good News on the Chesapeake:More duck food and better habitat for crabs & fish.

Carl

Well-known member
Staff member
http://www.vims.edu/newsandevents/topstories/sav_2008_report.php

Big increase in grassbeds on the Chesapeake, esp. on the Susquehanna Flats. More duck food and better habitat for crabs & fish.
Encouraging news on Bay grasses
by Travis Loop & David Malmquist | April 29, 2009

The Virginia Institute of Marine Science’s annual bay grass monitoring program shows that the abundance of underwater grasses in Chesapeake Bay increased by 18 percent last year, from 64,917 acres in 2007 to 76,861 acres in 2008. This is the fourth largest total acreage of bay grasses recorded since the bay-wide survey began in 1984. Bay grasses are an excellent barometer of Bay health because of their sensitivity to small changes in water quality.
The Chesapeake Bay Program's yearly report on grass health in the Bay is based on aerial surveys conducted by the Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) program at VIMS, led by Professor Bob Orth. The survey also relies on ground surveys conducted by VIMS staff and by colleagues in Virginia and Maryland. (Interactive maps and data concerning the current as well as past annual surveys are now available via Google Earth at http://www.vims.edu/bio/sav/maps.html.)
The 11,943-acre increase observed between 2007 and 2008 was driven by the continued expansion of bay grasses on the Susquehanna Flats, and the steady recovery of eelgrass and widgeon grass in the middle and lower Bay. Bay grasses increased in all three geographic zones of the Chesapeake Bay for the first time since 2001. The total bay grass abundance is 42 percent of the Chesapeake Bay Program’s goal of 185,000 baywide acres.
Underwater bay grasses serve many essential functions and are among the most closely monitored habitats in the Bay. Grasses provide critical shelter to young striped bass, blue crabs and other key species; improve water clarity by helping sediment settle to the bottom; add oxygen to the water; reduce shoreline erosion and are a major source of food for over-wintering waterfowl.
About 60 percent of grass beds in 2008 were high-density, which is the highest percentage since 1984. These high-density beds are better at removing pollution, filtering sediment, producing oxygen, providing shelter for fish and shellfish, and generating food for waterfowl.
Eelgrass, a species typically found in the saltier waters of the Bay, continued its comeback from a 2005 baywide dieback. Growth of eelgrass, along with widgeon grass, accounted for about 60 percent of the baywide increase. These notable gains include 1,337-acres (11%) in the Tangier-Smith Island region, 1,092-acres (9%) in the eastern lower Chesapeake Bay and 1,794-acres (29%) in Mobjack Bay. Widgeon grass showed a very strong resurgence in the 2,985-acre increase (24%) in the Honga River.
“The continuing recovery of eelgrass in the lower portions of the Bay is an extremely positive sign, particularly in light of the dramatic losses of eelgrass in 2005 following its baywide die-off," says Orth.
Expansion of grass beds by 2,642 acres on the Susquehanna Flats continued a decade-long trend and accounted for 22 percent of the bay-wide increase last year. The trend is due in part to lower amounts of nitrogen entering the Bay from the Susquehanna River. The vast bay grass beds in the Susquehanna Flats may now be improving local water quality enough to allow bay grasses to expand into new areas.
These beds, which include three of the five largest beds in the Bay, are filtering water so effectively that plumes of clear water are visible flowing down-Bay. This has improved conditions for bay grasses in the upper Chesapeake Bay, which showed a 70% increase in 2008, and a notable improvement in water clarity.
"The expansion of bay grasses in most of the fresh water areas in the Chesapeake Bay is impressive and encouraging," said Lee Karrh, a biologist with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources and chair of the Chesapeake Bay Program’s Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Workgroup. “It is particularly good news that 13 Bay fresh water rivers have exceeded the bay grass restoration goals, with another 4 on the verge of passing benchmarks. As we continue to make strides towards reducing pollution, we anticipate these large bay grass beds will persist and maybe even expand in the future.”
While not as dramatic as the upper Bay, the upper Potomac continues to show increases and at 6,517 acres of bay grasses exceeds its restoration goal by 41 percent. This growth is due in part to improvements in wastewater treatment at the Blue Plains facility in Washington, D.C. in 2001.
However, there were areas that had significant decreases in bay grasses. In the middle Bay, bay grass acreage at the mouth of the Choptank River decreased by 63 percent, or 798 acres, from 2007 and the lower Potomac River decreased by 42 percent, or 282 acres. In both of these rivers, water clarity is fair to poor and has not shown improvement over the last decade. Additionally, 21 of the 44 middle Bay segments remained unvegetated in 2008. In the lower Bay, the Chickahominy River lost 269 acres from the previous year and 11 of the 28 segments remained unvegetated.
For more information about the VIMS aerial Bay grass survey, visit www.vims.edu/bio/sav/maps. Additional bay grass resources are www.chesapeakebay.net/baygrass.htm, www.dnr.maryland.gov/bay/sav, and in the 2008 SAV Backgrounder (pdf).
The Chesapeake Bay Program is a regional partnership that has coordinated and conducted the restoration of the Chesapeake Bay since 1983. Partners include the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, representing the federal government; the U.S. Department of Agriculture; the states of Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia; the District of Columbia; the Chesapeake Bay Commission, a tri-state legislative body; and advisory groups of citizens, scientists, and local government officials.
 
I am happy to hear that and hope it indicates a turn around and good aquatic vegetation next year and all future years. The Bay needs it badly.

I have seen the Bay cycle from extremes. I grew up on the Bay I can remember grassbeds in the early 1970s so thick that I knew guys using scythes to clear enough grass so they could get their boats to the pier. I vividly remember wading through grassbeds to dipnet peelers (blue crabs shedding their shells and there vulnerable to everything that would eat a soft crab). That all changed in the years after Hurricane Agnes. Between 1980 and 1999 I saw one year at my folks place on the Chester River where the bottom had any grass. In about 1987, the redhead grass grew and it was phenomenally thick. Every other year in that 20 year stretch there wasn't any grass. You could not believe the bird, crap and fish response to the grass that year. I wonder if the improvement in grass this year is due to the rainfall or something more subtle like menhaden recovery. How about some of you folks on the Bay weigh-in.
 
Based on what I have read about the system, the recovery has been long and gradual & a result of a few things:
Recovery from wasting disease, improvement in water quality (reduction in phosphates and nitrogen input) since passing of the clean water act and recovery from Agnes.
They still need to make more gains on the reductions of nutrients but most of the excess input is now from agriculture and other non-point sources (thats you & me), so they are hard-to-get gains.
Rainfall patterns also have an effect on year to year abundance, but the overall trend has been positive in the last 10 years.
They are also doing some very innovative Zostera planting programs using native seeds, which have been very successful on the lower bay.
 
i wasnt sure what the official increase in grass was this year, but i knew it was ALOT. i am a commercial crabber, and man, EVERYTHING is fouling up with grass. huge balls of loose grass are floating on and under water, filling up our pots, and fouling around the lines and buoys. some are so fouled up, it takes 2-3 passes to get the buoy and line in the pot puller, and another hernia or 2 to get the pot in the boat. its a pain, but it is a great thing to see. i cant think of a single creature in the bay that dosnt benifit from eel and widgeon grass, from a commercial or recreational point of view. the grass flats are so much bigger this year, grass growing in areas my boss hasnt seen it in years, and is the most i have ever seen in my 5 years on the water. it is much taller as well, growing up from the bottom 2-3 feet in some areas, as compared to last year, 6" or so.
im in class now, so i didnt get to read it very well, but it seems that the grass filters the water making it clearer and more pure...? that would make since, as the water has been extremly clear this year.
thanks for posting, it is awesome news.
 
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I feel your pain Michael but am so glad the grasses are coming back. I am a member of the "Save the Bay" foundation and applaud any great news like this. the healthier the Bay is the better your harvest will be so putting up with a few tangles will be woth it in the long and short run, Thanks for the post Carl,
Harry
 
The grass beds help a little with clearing the water but actually the relationship is really the reverse: The clearer the water, the deeper & stronger the grass can grow. Water clarity is tied to two things, sediment input & nutrient input. too much nutrients and algea clouds the water & smothers the grass. Once the grass gets established it does help knock down the sediment loads, so it does help with water clarity.
We just finished flying our grassbed mapping last week, I cant wait to see the results. All indications are that our vallisneria beds are recovering nicely from last years one-two punch of tropical weather and drought. A bunch of my hunting spots that were bare last summer are covered with grass this year.
 
I feel your pain Michael but am so glad the grasses are coming back. I am a member of the "Save the Bay" foundation and applaud any great news like this. the healthier the Bay is the better your harvest will be so putting up with a few tangles will be woth it in the long and short run, Thanks for the post Carl,
Harry

oh yeah, it is a pain right now, but thinking about the crabs we'll be catching next year, the specks it will shelter, and the blacks it will feed....its a small price to pay. just finished fishing our pots today, and told my boss about carl's post and the 18% grass increase. "he said, look across this flat here, i cant remember the last time the grass was here". thanks again for the post carl, its some great stuff.
 
Just part of my job, keeping up with this kind of stuff.
Being a biologist is fun (except for all the reports & paperwork!)>
 
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