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Published byKristian Parrish Modified over 9 years ago
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Florida’s Seagrasses Maia McGuire, PhD FL Sea Grant Extension Agent
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Seagrasses 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)
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Thalassia testudinum Turtle 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
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Halodule wrightii Shoal 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
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Syringodium filiforme Manatee 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
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Halophila engelmanni, H. decipiens, H. johnsonii Relatively sparsely distributed Paddle-shaped leaf blades Johnson’s seagrass is listed as a threatened species
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Ruppia maritima Widgeon grass Often found alongside Halodule in areas of lower salinity Important food for waterfowl Primarily a freshwater plant
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Seagrass distribution Thalassia testudinum Syringodium filiforme Halodule wrightii Halophila engelmanii Halophila decipiens Halophila johnsonii
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Ruppia maritima distribution
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Seagrass 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)
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Zonation 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
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Productivity 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
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Other seagrass community members Macroalgae –Caulerpa spp. –Several species of calcareous green algae Halimeda, Penicillus, Udotea
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Epiphytic algae –113 species identified on Thalassia (Humm, 1964) –Include coralline red algae –Includes N-fixing blue-greens –Leaf tips usually more heavily epiphytized
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Invertebrates 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
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Crustaceans –Amphipods, shrimp, crabs Corals Sponges Polychaetes –E.g. Medusa worm
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Vertebrates 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…
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Reptiles –Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) Birds –Great blue heron, great egret, osprey, brown pelican… Mammals –Manatee, bottlenose dolphin
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Role of seagrass beds Primary producer –Food for grazers; produce detritus Habitat –Nursery grounds –Permanent home for many species Sediment stabilization
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Threats to seagrasses Physical damage –Dredging, prop scars/blowouts Eutrophication Salinity stress Temperature stress
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