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| Typography (1839) |
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| Typography (2020) |
Like morning dew in the glare of a rising sun, the Louisiana
coast is vanishing before our very eyes.
It’s a loss that threatens our traditions, our livelihoods and,
equally as important for many, our fisheries. Once gone, most
of the tracts of marsh are irreplaceable, and so too are the fisheries
they supported.
Home to 40 percent of the nation’s coastal wetlands, Louisiana
experiences an astounding 80 percent of the entire nation’s coastal
wetland loss.
The cost to the nation to fix the long-ignored problem — $14
billion — is only a fraction of the inevitable cost if the inaction
continues — $100 billion in infrastructure alone.
The loss of the Bayou State’s jagged coast line will beharmful
for America, and for Louisiana it will be devastating
The Louisiana coast is, by far, the most productive fishing ground
in North America. A full 95 percent of all Gulf
marine life spends at least a portion of its existence in Louisiana,
and native and visiting anglers who have sampled the marsh fishing
along the Bayou State coast don’t find that figure hard to believe.
Texas and Florida, both states with speckled trout resources
that are far better known nationwide, have creel limits of 10
and minimum length limits of 15 and 14 inches, respectively, on
the species. Anglers in those states admit, however, that trips
resulting in limits are rare events.
But in Louisiana, anglers expect to go out and catch their liberal
limits of 25 fish exceeding a mere 12 inches in length on every
trip. The Bayou State’s fishery is truly second to none.
The reason that fishery is so special is because Louisiana sits
at the mouth of the world’s third-largest river basin. For thousands
of years, the Mississippi River collected sediment and other deposits
from the Plains and Midwestern states and hand-delivered them
to the shallow edges of the continental shelf along the Louisiana
coast.
Over time, this sediment would build up and eventually block
the path of the river, so she’d jump her banks and, by the powers
of gravity, find a less-obstructed path to the Gulf. Then the
land-building process would begin anew along another section of
the Bayou State.
The parishes of Plaquemines, St. Bernard, Orleans, Jefferson,
St. Charles, St. John, Lafourche, Terrebonne and St. James and
portions of Assumption, Ascension, Livingston, Tangipahoa and
St. Tammany owe their very existence to the alluvial soils deposited
by the Mississippi River.
The shallow, broken marshes the river left behind were the perfect
breeding and nursery grounds for a cornucopia of marine life,
including speckled trout and redfish. Indeed, if a group of biologists
had gotten together to design a place where specks and reds would
thrive, it wouldn’t have looked much different than coastal Louisiana
prior to 1927.
The outer coast was lined with barrier islands and their bait-filled
beaches and adjacent deep-water passes, where specks and reds
could feast and spawn during the summer months.
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| Photos courtesy U.S. ARMY CORPS OF
ENGINEERS |
| To relieve pressure on inferior levees
in 1927, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was forced to blow
up the earthen wall on the east bank of the river near Caernarvon.
The resulting flood was catastrophic for residents, and it
led to the government completing the levee system still in
existence today. |
Inside of those islands were endless stretches of cord-grass
flats, broken only by tidal ponds and lakes filled with shrimp,
minnows and crabs. In these fertile marshes, baby speckled trout
and redfish, the fruit of the spawn swept in with the tides, could
eat at will and grow rapidly through the fall, winter and spring,
fully protected from the larger predators of the exterior bays.
Erosion and saltwater intrusion occurred in that near-perfect
ecosystem, but only in isolated areas that were being ignored
for that season while the Mississippi built land elsewhere. Before
long, the river or one of her fingers would return with the land-building
load.
The death throes of this idyllic world began in 1927, when the
great river carried run-off from torrential rains up north into
the Bayou State, flooding Louisiana towns from Bordelonville to
Braithwaite. Houses were swept away like sand castles in a rising
tide, and businesses and family farms were destroyed, covered
with several inches of pure Mississippi muck. A full 700,000 people
were left homeless, and 500 others died.
To ensure this would never happen again, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers constructed new levees and pieced together existing
ones. This “channelization” of the Mississippi was completed in
the early 1930s, fully estranging the marsh from its lifeblood
and dumping the rich sediment off the continental shelf.
The wholesale erosion began immediately, but it was slow at
first because of the relative health of the marsh. Long and thick
barrier islands blocked most storm waves, and fringe marshes absorbed
what they missed. Sensitive interior wetlands remained unscathed
and largely protected from hurricanes and other of nature’s lesser
demons.
But erosion was not — and is not — the only foe of the marshes
alienated from their nurturing mother, the Mississippi River.
The marshes also began to sink at an astonishing rate of 4 feet
per century in many areas.
This subsidence combined with the erosion has claimed an exponentially
increasing amount of marshland every year since the early 1930s.
As the land vanishes, larger chunks of marsh are made vulnerable
than were at risk the year before. It’s an accelerating cycle
that is very soon going to come crashing down, and for fishermen
the consequences will be overwhelming.
For a time, eroding marshes are actually a boon to fisheries.
As the marsh in an estuary erodes, its vegetative matter breaks
down and suspends in the water as it decays. These microscopic
plant parts are devoured by baitfish and crustaceans, especially
post-larval shrimp, filling the estuary with large and ever-growing
stocks of bait for the next link in the food chain — speckled
trout and redfish, among other game fish species.
Also, the erosion of the marshes helps game fish stocks by increasing
the amount of edge habitat that specks, reds and baitfish love,
according to Rex Caffey, associate professor of wetlands and coastal
resources with the LSU AgCenter and Louisiana Sea Grant.
“The break-up of vegetated marsh causes a short-term increase
in the ingress routes and edge habitat so vital for juvenile estuarine
fish,” he wrote in a study published in 2002.
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| Photos courtesy U.S. ARMY CORPS OF
ENGINEERS |
| Much of the “Louisiana
Delta” area stretching from Arkansas to the coast was impacted
by the 1927 flood, including Moreauville, where this picture
was taken. |
But obviously, since such an estuary is feeding on itself, its
productivity is necessarily self-limiting. Once the amount of
land that remains falls below the threshold required to sustain
the estuary, productivity plummets.
Some experts believe that sections of Louisiana are already
in that collapse phase because, as author Mike Tidwell points
out in his book, Bayou Farewell, the rate of erosion has
begun to slow in Louisiana.
“Net land loss, which had peaked in the 1980s at about 40 square
miles per year, was still going strong at 25 square miles annually
in the mid-1990s. The decrease in the rate of loss was due less
to human restoration efforts than to the fact that there was increasingly
less land left to subside. The coast had tipped toward a final
vanishing act,” he writes.
Caffey agrees.
“Indeed, geologic simulations indicate that Louisiana’s coastal
land-water interface has recently begun to decline,” he writes.
For years, this decline in edge habitat has been masked by the
fact that the eroding and decaying marsh has formed a food base
for creatures at the bottom of the food chain, but that’s obviously
not a desirable situation.
“What I always ask people is, ‘Do you want a system
whose productivity is based on deterioriation or alluviation?’
Right now, for the most part, our system is based on deterioration,”
Caffey said. “At some point — I don’t know whether it’s next year
or 10 years from now — the system is going to collapse. It’s just
a matter of time. We’re eating our seed corn.”
Tipping the scales back the other way will be costly — both
monetarily and in shifting of opportunities for anglers. Historical
fishing holes may have to be destroyed to benefit the rest of
an estuary.
Coastal restoration can be accomplished without ruining the
entire sport of saltwater fishing in Louisiana, but it cannot
without altering it, according to Kerry St. Pe of the Barataria-Terrebonne
National Estuary Program.
“We don’t need to destroy fisheries,” he said. “There will certainly
be changes, but fisheries don’t have to be destroyed. Quite to
the contrary, I think there will be increases; they’ll just be
in different parts of the estuaries.”
Flexibility of recreational and commercial saltwater fisherman
will be essential if our fisheries hope to have a future that
even resembles their past.
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