Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

20
Florida’s Seagrasses Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent

Transcript of Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Page 1: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Florida’s SeagrassesFlorida’s Seagrasses

Maia McGuire, PhDFL Sea Grant Extension Agent

Page 2: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

SeagrassesSeagrasses

• Fully submerged marine plants; true angiosperms– True roots, vascular system, flowers– Reproduce asexually using rhizomes

• 6-7 species; 3 common– Turtle grass, Shoal grass, Manatee

grass– Star grass, Paddle grass, Johnson’s

seagrass, – Widgeon grass (freshwater grass with

high salinity tolerance)

Page 3: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Thalassia testudinumThalassia testudinumTurtle grassTurtle grass

• Largest and most robust of Florida’s seagrasses

• Flat, wide (4-12 mm) leaf blades (10-35 cm in length)

• 2-5 leaves per shoot• Forms extensive

meadows

Page 4: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Halodule wrightiiHalodule wrightiiShoal grassShoal grass

• Early colonizer of disturbed areas or areas too deep or shallow for other seagrasses– Tolerates wide range of T, S

• Leaves flat (1-3 mm wide), 10-20 cm long

• Tips of leaves have 2-3 points

Page 5: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Syringodium filiformeSyringodium filiformeManatee grassManatee grass

• Leaves are round (like spaghetti); 1-1.5 mm in diameter; length varies but can reach 50 cm

• Commonly found mixed with other seagrasses or in small monospecific patches

Page 6: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Halophila engelmanni, H. Halophila engelmanni, H. decipiens, H. johnsoniidecipiens, H. johnsonii

• Relatively sparsely distributed • Paddle-shaped leaf blades• Johnson’s seagrass is listed as a

threatened species

Page 7: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Ruppia maritimaRuppia maritimaWidgeon grassWidgeon grass

• Often found alongside Halodule in areas of lower salinity

• Important food for waterfowl

• Primarily a freshwater plant

Page 8: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Seagrass distributionSeagrass distribution

Thalassia testudinum

Syringodium filiforme

Halodule wrightii

Halophila engelmanii

Halophila decipiens

Halophila johnsonii

Page 9: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Ruppia maritimaRuppia maritima distributiondistribution

Page 10: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Seagrass biologySeagrass biology• Growth

– Thalassia blades can grow as much as 1 cm/day

– Growth is slowed by cooler temperatures

– Extremes in temperatures (hot or cold) can kill leaf blades

– Optimal temperature range 20-30° C– Optimal salinity range 24-35 ppt– Extensive seagrass beds not found

deeper than 10-15 m (light and pressure are both factors)

Page 11: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

ZonationZonation

• Halodule grows in shallowest water and has highest tolerance to exposure

• Thalassia is most dominant; forms large meadows in waters up to 10-12 m deep

• Syringodium forms meadows in deep water (up to 15 m)

• Halodule and Halophila can grow in even deeper water, but sparsely

Page 12: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

ProductivityProductivity

• For Thalassia, range of 0.9 – 16 grams C/m²/day– 10 g C/m²/day = 3.65 kg C/m²/year– Measurements usually include

associated plants (macroalgae, epiphytes)…

• Highly productive ecosystems• Important food source, for grazers

and as detritus

Page 13: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Other seagrass community Other seagrass community membersmembers

• Macroalgae– Caulerpa spp.– Several species of calcareous green

algae• Halimeda, Penicillus, Udotea

Page 14: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

• Epiphytic algae– 113 species identified on

Thalassia (Humm, 1964)– Include coralline red algae– Includes N-fixing blue-

greens– Leaf tips usually more

heavily epiphytized

Page 15: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

InvertebratesInvertebrates

• Mollusks– Conch (Strombus gigas),

tulip shell (Fasciolaria tulipa), nudibranchs, emerald nerites (Smaragdia viridis), pen shell (Atrina spp.), scallops

• Echinoderms– Sea urchins, sea stars– Sea cucumbers

Page 16: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

• Crustaceans– Amphipods, shrimp, crabs

• Corals• Sponges• Polychaetes

– E.g. Medusa worm

Page 17: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

VertebratesVertebrates

• Fish– Permanent Residents

• Pipefish, seahorses, gobies, lizardfish, parrotfishes, eels…

– Seasonal Residents• Pinfish, spot, spotted seatrout, silver

perch, pigfish & other juvenile grunts, snappers, sheepshead, red drum, gag grouper, sharks…

Page 18: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

• Reptiles– Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas)

• Birds– Great blue heron, great egret, osprey,

brown pelican…

• Mammals– Manatee, bottlenose dolphin

Page 19: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Role of seagrass bedsRole of seagrass beds

• Primary producer– Food for grazers; produce detritus

• Habitat– Nursery grounds– Permanent home for many species

• Sediment stabilization

Page 20: Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent.

Threats to seagrassesThreats to seagrasses

• Physical damage– Dredging, prop scars/blowouts

• Eutrophication• Salinity stress• Temperature stress