South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Waterway leaves wetland forests in peril

- Orlando Sentinel kspear@orlandosen­tinel. com

The Apalachico­la River descends 106 miles across the Panhandle to the Gulf of Mexico as the creator and caretaker of Florida’s largest forested floodplain, sandbar beaches, breezy bluffs, coastal marsh and a fertile relationsh­ip with Apalachico­la Bay.

Tan, old but fast for a Florida river, the “Apalach” was a waterway for indigenous tribes, carried barges until late into the last century and lures kayakers today. It is the state’s largest river by volume and a United Nations biosphere reserve.

The river hosts giant mussels and ancient sturgeon, embodies mazes of incoming tributarie­s and outgoing distributa­ries, and ends by nourishing a bay that brought Florida fame for its oysters.

But the Apalach and its greater ecosystem are dying of thirst and starving to death.

“There is clearly a fix,” said Georgia Ackerman, director of the Apalachico­la Riverkeepe­r group. “It should have been done long ago.”

This year, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission closed Apalachico­la Bay for oyster harvesting and on Dec. 16 is expected to approve locking down the closure for five years, meant to give the shellfish a chance at a comeback — even though no one can say for sure why they’re gone.

The move might have been treasonous by North Florida norms and economic hardships. But the “oyster capital of the world” was dead already and not resuscitat­ing for reasons yet to be confirmed.

The collapse began nearly a decade ago with drought that left bay water lethally salty. Oystermen continued to harvest more than the bay could sustain. Resentment toward Georgia and Alabama turned more venomous, with the two states being blamed for inflicting artificial drought by extracting too much river water for farming, industry and cities.

It’s possible, too, scientists say, that climate change had crept in, afflicting the bay’s ecosystem with hotter weather and disrupted rainfall.

But the decline and death of the Apalach is far more complex.

“It’s an oversimpli­fication,” Ackerman said. The fuller explanatio­n, she said, ties also to the dismantlem­ent of the river channel, the severing of its adjoining wetlands and the distress of its floodplain forests.

Ackerman, a former kayaking tour operator, set out on the river this past winter for a regular checkup of its conditions. Her group is part of the internatio­nal Riverkeepe­r Alliance of river and bay watchers.

Also along were Michael Hill, a retired state biologist who focused on Apalachico­la fish; his daughter, Heather, a recent Florida State University biology graduate; and Roy Ogles, retired from federal research of the river and as a veteran manager of Florida state parks.

Current tugged their boat away from a dock at the Florida Panhandle town of Chattahooc­hee, and the Apalachico­la came into panoramic view.

It resembles its siblings, the splendorou­s Suwannee to the east and untamed Choctawhat­chee to the west. Each is born in another state and cuts across Florida to the sea.

The Suwannee and “Choc” flow freely. Apalach waters must escape a straitjack­et of dams.

Coming into fuller view, the Jim Woodruff Dam, completed in the 1950s at the Florida-George state line, walls off upstream scenery with a concrete face 1,000 feet wide.

That’s where major rivers, the Chattahooc­hee and Flint, join and become the Apalachico­la. It’s the last of dams along the Chattahooc­hee and Flint rivers that benefit Georgia’s and Alabama’s farmers, power plants, cities and boaters, but dehydrate the ecology — to an extent fiercely contested by the three states — of the Apalachico­la River and Bay.

The three states’ three decades of legal war over the three rivers has resolved little.

River conceals its ailments

The Riverkeepe­r vessel cut away from the dam and motored downstream under a confetti of white pelicans and bald eagles, and between shorelines of heavy tree canopy. The river’s personalit­y is extravagan­t and beckoning.

Of Florida rivers, the Apalachico­la probably was the most populated with indigenous tribes because of game, forage foods and access to the Appalachia­ns, said University of South Florida archaeolog­ist Nancy White. “The Apalach went far into the interior where there were other resources,” she said.

The river’s flamboyanc­e conceals its ailments, but for those on the Riverkeepe­r boat, the wounds are as vivid a body tattoo.

Even the water is a victim. The dams and their reservoirs strip out sediment, leaving river water “sand starved.” Hungry for mud, current scours into the river bed, relentless­ly digging it unnaturall­y deeper.

A deeper channel holds more water, which lessens the amount that floods outward, as nature intended, into adjoining wetland forests.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took that a large, mechanized step further.

For decades, the agency labored to make the Apalachico­la more suitable for shipping. It dredged the river bottom, straighten­ed bends and, to encourage a uniform current, built “training dikes,” or jetties made of rock or timbers extending from shorelines toward the river’s center.

The overall result is that Apalach is strongly encouraged to keep out of the 100,000 acres of adjoining floodplain, an area larger than the city of Tallahasse­e.

The harm done to the river “just slaps you in the face,” said Ogles, who was driving the Riverkeepe­r boat. After two decades with Florida’s park service, he worked for 20 years at the Apalachico­la National Estuarine Research Reserve.

Ogles said what strikes him as particular­ly offensive are the masses of rubble from dredging. The rock and gravel were dumped on wetlands adjoining the Apalach. It was biological murder. The river carries water but the wetlands produce life.

The dredging spoils also were deposited in the critical sloughs, pronounced “slews,” which are wetland channels that carry river water back and forth from deep into the adjoining floodplain.

Under heavy criticism for inflicting harm, the Corps ceased dredging a decade ago and left behind a legacy of buried wetlands, sloughs and gouged-out river bottom.

Stepping from the Riverkeepe­r boat, Hill, the retired state fish biologist, led a hike to a dry slough. It was impressive­ly shaped, with steep banks and brown earth.

When it fills with floodwater­s, Hill said, schools of sunfish, bluegills and largemouth bass will forage and spawn where he was standing.

“I’ve seen fish weighing 20 and 30 pounds jump from the water,” Hill said of swollen sloughs far from the river. “It’s pretty spectacula­r.”

It’s not just fish that depend on the river flooding into adjoining forests and swamps. Trees do as well. The relationsh­ip between trees and flooding is critical for the river’s larger ecosystem.

Retired U.S. Geological Survey scientist Helen Light spent much of her career measuring the declining frequency and volume of Apalachico­la flooding.

They correlated that decline with the shriveling of tupelo forests.

The floodplain has water tupelos that are straight and provide quality timber and Ogeechee tupelos that are gnarly like goblins and famed for the honey at roadside stands.

The two tupelos provide a major portion of the leaf litter that drops into floodwater­s and becomes the base nutrition for the greater food web that powers the Apalachico­la River ecosystem.

To thrive, tupelo saplings require a specific depth of floodwater at specific times, Light said.

“The duration of time the seedlings must endure without water during peak growing season is now one or two months longer than it used to be,” Light said.

The density of trees has declined dramatical­ly since the 1970s. The loss of millions of trees has brought an accelerati­on of assaults.

A thinning tupelo canopy admits more sunlight, which dries out wetland soils and encourages an invasion of ground plants that prevent tupelo seedlings from sprouting.

“The real problem is the lack of flow in the summers,” Light said of declining volumes in the Apalach. “We now have what people who I have worked with for decades call ‘flatline’ summers.”

The popular explanatio­n for the Apalachico­la’s collapse has been about the dams, the theft of water by neighborin­g states and the resulting decimation of oysters in a lethally salty bay.

Missing from the narrative, Ackerman said, are what the dams and the Corps of Engineers have done to the floodplain. The tupelo forests are dying of thirst and, with less of the leaf litter they provide, the larger ecosystem is starving for the nourishmen­t prescribed by nature.

The Apalach’s forested floodplain in distress is like watching the late-stage deteriorat­ion of a suffering patient, Ackerman said.

A death blow may come soon from the Supreme Court’s review of a long-running lawsuit that has played out badly for Florida’s interests.

But the river’s champions, including Ackerman, are not standing down. They’ve taken up small-scale, handto-hand battles to reverse the Corps of Engineers maltreatme­nt of the river.

“I believe the Apalachico­la River is still recoverabl­e,” Ackerman said. It’s an optimism she’s supposed to share as the head of a group dedicated to the river. “But you hear scientists referring to it as dying.”

 ??  ?? This maze of waters along the Apalachico­la River leads to the Apalachico­la Bay.
This maze of waters along the Apalachico­la River leads to the Apalachico­la Bay.
 ?? KEVIN SPEAR/ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS ?? Georgia Ackerman, director of the Apalachico­la Riverkeepe­r group, tours the waters of the river’s final stretch at the Apalachico­la Bay.
KEVIN SPEAR/ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS Georgia Ackerman, director of the Apalachico­la Riverkeepe­r group, tours the waters of the river’s final stretch at the Apalachico­la Bay.

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