Miami Herald

Scientists call for action on Gulf Coast to avoid a repeat of Space Coast ecosystem collapse

- BY RYAN BALLOGG rballogg@bradenton.com Ryan Ballogg: 941-745-7024, rballogg

New surveys of seagrass on Florida’s Gulf Coast shows the vital marine plant is continuing to lose ground at a rapid pace in Tampa and Sarasota Bay.

Since 2016, the Southwest Florida Water Management District has documented losses of almost 30% of Tampa Bay’s seagrass and around 26% in Sarasota Bay.

The decline comes after local waters were swamped with pollution from the Piney Point industrial site and severe red tides over the past several years.

But the seagrass losses also have increased despite many areas meeting state water quality targets, which environmen­talists say need changing.

Scientists say action must be taken to prevent Tampa and Sarasota’s seagrass ecosystem from collapsing like the one in the Indian River Lagoon on Florida’s east coast, where manatee deaths are highest.

Any ecologist will tell you that seagrasses are one of the ocean’s MVPs (most valuable plants).

From sheltering and feeding marine life to storing carbon and preventing erosion, the marine greens are a vital part of the ecosystem — not to mention the preferred produce of the iconic Florida manatee.

Unfortunat­ely, seagrass meadows are also one of the most imperiled ecosystems in the world; climate change, pollution, red tides and other human-influenced problems are top threats.

A die-off is now playing out on Florida’s Gulf Coast, where seagrass meadows are disappeari­ng at an alarming rate.

Scientists take it as a warning sign for the overall health of area waters.

“It’s further evidence that we really need to get our act together quickly,”

said David Tomasko, executive director of the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program.

In Tampa Bay and Sarasota Bay, the seagrass losses came despite many areas meeting state water quality targets.

“Old Tampa Bay and Hillsborou­gh Bay are examples of that,” said Chris Anastasiou, chief scientist of water quality and the lead of seagrass mapping efforts for the Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD). “We are meeting the criteria, yet we’re still seeing reductions of seagrass and in some cases increases in macroalgae or drift algae.”

Tomasko and SBEP are recommendi­ng that the state adopts stronger and more comprehens­ive water quality standards to address the disconnect.

“The state of Florida reports on the health of estuaries based only on what was captured in a water bottle,” Tomasko said. “We think that’s not enough.”

Currently, Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection standards call for measuring phosphorou­s and nitrogen (nutrients that can feed harmful algal blooms) and levels of chlorophyl­l-a,

an indicator of algae abundance, in samples collected from from waterways.

But a water sample collected at the surface doesn’t necessaril­y capture a complete picture of an ecosystem’s health.

“You can have a macroalgae bloom that’s burying a seagrass meadow, but the water looks fine at the surface,” Tomasko said. “The current standards are missing a lot of the problem.”

The estuary program issues “ecosystem health report card” for Sarasota Bay that considers a more diverse set of factors. It includes concentrat­ions of nitrogen, but also seagrass health and the presence of various types of algae throughout the water column.

Water managers are also taking another look at how much nitrogen the bays can handle.

When it is overabunda­nt, nitrogen can feed multiple kinds of algae that can grow out of control, choking seagrass beds and blocking their access to sunlight.

“We’re trying to understand the pathway of nitrogen once it’s in the water,” said Anastasiou.

He and the SFWMD work closely with estuary

programs to monitor the health of bays and develop new recommenda­tions for improving conditions. The recent seagrass losses have underlined that a new approach may be necessary to keep up with the increasing strain on Florida’s waters as population and developmen­t expand.

“What we’re doing more and more is taking that holistic approach,” Anastasiou said. “Do all the indicators suggest that this estuary is healthy?”

With the proper response, Anastasiou believes seagrass can bounce back.

“It absolutely can be turned around,” he said.

Every two years, the state conducts a seagrass survey of five estuaries along the Suncoast, including Tampa Bay and Sarasota Bay.

The 2020-22 survey showed major seagrass declines for both bays. Tampa Bay lost 12% of its seagrass coverage, or over 4,100 acres, and Sarasota Bay took a 6% hit of over 570 acres.

In Tampa Bay, it’s the third survey in a row that has revealed shrinking seagrass meadows — a record since the monitoring program began in

1988. Within that region, Hillsborou­gh Bay lost 51% of mappable seagrass, and Old Tampa Bay lost 38%.

Sarasota Bay’s loses are also stacking up.

“It’s a mixed bag,” Tomasko said. “In 2020-22, we lost 5% of our seagrass meadows. The two years before that, we lost 18%.

If there’s any good news, it’s that is doesn’t look like the losses are accelerati­ng,” he added. “This isn’t necessaril­y going to get worse and worse. We hope it’s bottoming out.”

Up until 2016, Tampa Bay and Sarasota Bay seagrass abundance was at healthiest levels seen in decades. But six years marred with severe red tides, industrial pollution and sewage spills wiped out a big chunk of that progress.

“If you lose too much seagrass, there’s a concern that you’ll be a different system moving forward,” Tomasko said. “You won’t have seagrass; you’ll have a system dominated by algae.”

The Manatee River, which feeds into Lower Tampa Bay, lost 19% of its mappable seagrass between 2020 and 2022.

“All the loss we saw was much further up the river,” Anastasiou said. “It’s not good, we don’t want to see loss. But when you look at it in context, it’s not as bad as the numbers might suggest.”

There were also pockets of seagrass gain in Sarasota and Tampa Bay despite the overall loss.

A bright spot in the survey was at the north end of the district near the Pinellas-Pasco border. In St. Joseph Sound and Clearwater Harbor, SWFMD’s survey found net seagrass gains that put the estuaries at record high levels of seagrass coverage.

Estuaries in Southwest Florida did not fare so well. Overall seagrass losses were recorded in Dona and Roberts Bay, Lemon Bay and Charlotte Harbor.

On March 30, 2021, the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection authorized the emergency release of 215 million gallons of contaminat­ed water from Piney Point, a retired phosphate processing plant in Manatee County on the edge of Lower Tampa Bay.

According to estuary program scientists, the environmen­t is still reeling.

“Piney Point was probably the worst thing that happened to Tampa Bay for 50 years,” said Tomasko, who has worked on multiple studies tracing the pollution event’s impact. “It was like 200 million gallons of liquid fertilizer. It’s going to take awhile for us to get through this. It’s going to have manifestat­ions.”

What happens when a key species like seagrass disappears from its ecosystem? The effects can be disastrous. Once sand and seagrass, the bottom of the Indian River Lagoon on Florida’s east coast is now covered in muck and wildlife are in crisis.

Anastasiou said Florida’s Gulf estuaries and the Indian River Lagoon are ecological­ly very different. However, the threat of major marine habitat loss for Florida’s Gulf Coast is very real, he said.

Scientists believe the best way to help seagrass meadows return and thrive is to crack down on water pollution, especially nitrogen, from all sources.

In the Sarasota Bay region, Tomasko said local government­s in Manatee and Sarasota counties have allocated a combined $1 billion for wastewater upgrades and stormwater retrofits.

Anastasiou with SWFWMD said the seagrass survey is doing exactly what it’s designed to do: getting everyone’s attention when something is going wrong beneath the surface.

“We have many groups that are working on tackling these issues on the technical level all the way up to the policy level,” Anastasiou said.

 ?? TIFFANY TOMPKINS ttompkins@bradenton.com ?? Much has changed at Piney Point, the site of last year’s discharge. While the site has been approved for closure, a crew works to repair a leak in the New Gypsum Stack South liner.
TIFFANY TOMPKINS ttompkins@bradenton.com Much has changed at Piney Point, the site of last year’s discharge. While the site has been approved for closure, a crew works to repair a leak in the New Gypsum Stack South liner.

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