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From the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes www.ian.umces.edu Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick

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Page 1: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

From the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean:

Definingseagrasshabitats

toassesssystem

processes

www.ian.umces.edu

Tim Carruthers

R.P

. van

Dam

G. K

endr

ick

Page 2: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Outline• A curious history – of an ugly duckling

• Developing a process based comparative framework for seagrasses

• Example 1: Indian Ocean - SW Australia

• Example 2: Caribbean – Yucatan

• Example 3: Caribbean – Panama

• Current Applications

Page 3: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Seagrasses evolved in a very different marine environment from today

Hydrocharitaceae

Cymodoceacea

Zosteraceae

Page 4: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Seagrasses evolved in a very different marine environment from today

Hydrocharitaceae

Cymodoceacea

Zosteraceae

Page 5: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Seagrasses evolved in a very different marine environment from today

Hydrocharitaceae

Cymodoceacea

Zosteraceae

Page 6: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Seagrasses are abundant in tropical and temperate regions

Halophila: Bocas del Toro, Panama

Thalassia: Kuna Yala, Panama

Ruppia: Morro Bay, USA

Zostera: Ria Formosa, Portugal

Page 7: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Seagrasses are valuable and threatened compared to other major marine habitats

Page 8: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Research effort on seagrasses increasing, but lagging behind other coastal habitats.

Page 9: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Within widely accessed media, reports of seagrass are lacking

Page 10: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Bottom line: less seagrass research doneAND it isn’t broadly publicized

Page 11: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Some possible reasons….• Seagrasses are largely invisible

(shallow, subtidal)• Fauna in seagrass are often small and cryptic

(unlike coral reefs)• Charismatic megafauna are increasingly rare

and elusive (Dugongs, Manatees, Turtles)• BUT ALSO…

it may be helpful to define seagrass habitats to reflect seagrass form, processes and functions

Page 12: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Framework one: Genera based• Benefits:

Large step forward from ‘seagrass’or ‘SAV’Good for documenting, referencing

• Limitations:Difficult to draw process based generalitiesBetween species differences can be vast(Zostera leaves can vary from <5cm to 3+m between sp)

Page 13: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Framework two: Geographic based• Benefits:

Good for documenting and referencingReflects reality of researchReflects interest of funding bodies

• Limitations:Difficult to draw process based generalitiesSeagrass ≠ seagrass !Different lineages between species

Page 14: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Framework three: Process based• Initial assessments using three examples of a

process based approach to synthesizing seagrasshabitats

• Example 1: Indian Ocean - SW Australia

• Example 2: Caribbean – Yucatan

• Example 3: Caribbean – Panama

Page 15: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Example one: Southwest Australia

• 18 (of 60) species• 1240 km of seagrass

(Cambridge MD toJacksonville FL)

• Quite Possible the largest area of continuous seagrassin the world

Page 16: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

SW Australia in context of other systems

• Key features of south west Australia and seagrass response• High water motion results in robust seagrass

• SW west coast 1.5(-7)• SW south coast 2.2(-10)• SW estuaries <0.5• NE Australia <2.0• Florida bay <0.5• Caribbean <1.0• Chesapeake <1.5

Waveheight Tide

Maxdepthlimit

PorewaterNH4

+Nutrient

limitation

Page 17: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

SW Australia in context of other systems

• Key features of south west Australia and seagrass response• High water motion results in robust seagrass• Small tides results in subtidal seagrass

• SW west coast 1.5(-7) 0.8-1.0• SW south coast 2.2(-10) 0.8-1.0• SW estuaries <0.5 <0.1• NE Australia <2.0 4-6• Florida bay <0.5 0.2-0.6• Caribbean <1.0 <1.0• Chesapeake <1.5 1.0

Waveheight Tide

Maxdepthlimit

PorewaterNH4

+Nutrient

limitation

Page 18: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

SW Australia in context of other systems

• Key features of south west Australia and seagrass response• High water motion results in robust seagrass• Small tides results in subtidal seagrass• Clear water results in extensive depth range

• SW west coast 1.5(-7) 0.8-1.0 44• SW south coast 2.2(-10) 0.8-1.0 48• SW estuaries <0.5 <0.1 3• NE Australia <2.0 4-6 58• Florida bay <0.5 0.2-0.6 27• Caribbean <1.0 <1.0 40• Chesapeake <1.5 1.0 3

Waveheight Tide

Maxdepthlimit

PorewaterNH4

+Nutrient

limitation

Page 19: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

SW Australia in context of other systems

• Key features of south west Australia and seagrass response• High water motion results in robust seagrass• Small tides results in subtidal seagrass• Clear water results in extensive depth range • Low nutrients results in efficient recycling

• SW west coast 1.5(-7) 0.8-1.0 44 12 not limited• SW south coast 2.2(-10) 0.8-1.0 48 5 balanced NP• SW estuaries <0.5 <0.1 3 13 not limited• NE Australia <2.0 4-6 58 22 N limited• Florida bay <0.5 0.2-0.6 27 79 P inshore N offshore• Caribbean <1.0 <1.0 40 20 P limited• Chesapeake <1.5 1.0 3 200 not limited

Waveheight Tide

Maxdepthlimit

PorewaterNH4

+Nutrient

limitation

Page 20: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Southwest estuarine seagrass habitats

Page 21: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Southwest estuarine seagrass habitats

Page 22: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Tannin rich

Dempster Estuary

Oyster Harbour

Ruppia megacarpa Agricultural inputs Dawesville cut

Page 23: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

West coast seagrass habitats

Page 24: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

West coast seagrass habitats

Page 25: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Shoalwater Bay Success Bank

Pocillopora and Posidonia Seagrass beach wrack Canal development Anchor scarring

Page 26: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

South coast seagrass habitats

Page 27: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

South coast seagrass habitats

Page 28: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Exposed beachGranite headland

Ascidian Seal Rock groyne Fish farm

Page 29: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

sheltered meadows exposed meadows

Features:Dense meadows increase carbon limitation

tight nutrient recycling (36% N)

Low genetic variability

Abundant infauna

Features:Posidonia coriaceae thick vertical rhizomes

Over decades – 50% of area will switch between seagrass and bare sand

Nutrients pumped from sediments

Page 30: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

A ecophysiological framework

Carruthers, Cambridge, Dennison, Kendrick and Walker

Page 31: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

An ecophysiological framework

Carruthers, Cambridge, Dennison, Kendrick and Walker

Page 32: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Example two: Yucatan Mexico

• Low elevation, flat karstic limestone• Low rainfall (0.8-1.2m)• No surface runoff• Caves and underground rivers

Page 33: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Chicxulub crater, the KT boundary and the ‘ring of cenotes’

Sink hole

Submarine spring

Page 34: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Northern estuarine lagoon

Page 35: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Southern reef lagoon

Page 36: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Southern reef lagoon

Page 37: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Low rainfall estuarine and reef lagoons

Estuarine lagoon Back reef lagoon

Page 38: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Example three: Bocas del Toro Panama

•3m annual rainfall•Steep watershed, high erosion•Shallow seagrass depth range (3m)•Diverse habitat (coral/mangrove)

Page 39: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Watershed inputs

Timber production

Riverbank erosion Banana plantationsSlumping and hillslope erosion

Sewage inputs

Page 40: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

First level classification, high vs. low rainfall

High rainfall Low rainfall

Page 41: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Within high rainfall sites:Sediment: carbonate vs. silicate

carbonate silicate

Page 42: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Sediment: carbonate vs. silicate

carbonate silicate

high % CaCO3low % CaCO3

% CaCO3

18 ± 3

90 ± 2

77 ± 8

Page 43: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Example of these habitats from Bocas del Toro (high rainfall)

Carbonate

Page 44: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Example of these habitats from Bocas del Toro (high rainfall)

Carbonate

Silicate

Page 45: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Second level classification, sediment type

Carbonate Silicate

High rainfall Low rainfall

‘Fluvial’

Page 46: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

High rainfall, highly carbonate sediment:Sediment: high and low water content

high water content

low water content

Page 47: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Sediment: high and low water content

high water content

low water content

high water content

low water content

water content

21 ± 2

24 ± 1

58 ± 7

Page 48: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

A potential habitat classification for Thalassia meadows in the Caribbean…

Carbonate Silicate

Low water content High water content

High rainfall Low rainfall

‘Fluvial’

‘Coral’ ‘Mangrove’

Page 49: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Thalassia testudinum– Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, to Bermuda

T. hemprichii T. testudinum

Waycott and Barnes, Mar Biol (2001) 139:1021-1028

• Vegetative dispersal over 2700 km• Potential gene flow over entire area

Page 50: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Variation in T. testudinum (in the Caribbean)

CARICOMP 8th ICRS 1 (1997) 647-650 (Caribbean Marine Coastal Productivity Program)

Page 51: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Thalassia habitat type is reflected in seagrass measures

Page 52: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Habitat classification for Thalassiameadows fits variation in tissue nutrients

Carbonate Silicate

Low water content High water content

High rainfall Low rainfall

‘Coral’ ‘Mangrove’

%N 2.6 ± 0.1

%P 0.27 ± 0.02

%N 2.5 ± 0.1

%P 0.26 ± 0.01

‘Fluvial’

%N 2.5 ± 0.1

%P 0.26 ± 0.01%N 2.3 ± 0.1

%P 0.22 ± 0.01

Global medians (Duarte, 1990)

%N 1.8 %P 0.2

%N 1.8 ± 0.14

%P 0.13 ± 0.01

‘Lagoonal’

Page 53: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Current applications: SAVtrends

• Assessing long term patterns and processes in SAV abundance in Chesapeake Bay

• HPL (Mike K, Court S, Evamaria K), VIMS, MDDNR, CBP, IAN

Page 54: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Current applications: NCEAS• Global trajectories of seagrasses: Establishing a quantitative basis for

seagrass conservation and restoration • Development of extensive global database of seagrass gains/losses• International team

Page 55: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Conclusions• Seagrass has a curious history but is the

‘ugly duckling’ of coastal habitats

• Developing a more process based comparative framework for seagrasses may help this dilemma

• SW Australia: provides a framework for environmental relationships to seagrass with global application

• Yucatan: feeds into understanding of point sources

• Bocas del Toro: provides an initial habitat framework which shows promise for expanding to a Caribbean wide synthesis of Thalassia testudinum

Page 56: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline

Sources and Acknowledgments–Robert J. Orth, Tim J.B. Carruthers, William C. Dennison, Carlos M. Duarte, James W. Fourqurean, Kenneth L. Heck, Jr., A. Randall Hughes, Gary A. Kendrick, W. Judson Kenworthy, Suzanne Olyarnik, Fred T. Short, Michelle Waycott, Susan L. WilliamsA Contemporary Crisis for Seagrass Ecosystems. Bioscience (in press)

–Carruthers, T.J.B., Cambridge, M.L., Kendrick, G.A., Dennison, W.C., Walker, D.I.A conceptual framework for the diverse and extensive seagrasses of southwest Australia. Journal of Experimental and Marine Biology and Ecology (in prep)

–Carruthers, T.J.B., Barnes, P.A.G., Jacome, G.E. and Fourqurean, J.W. 2005.Lagoon scale processes in a coastally influenced Caribbean system: implications for the seagrass Thalassia testudinum. Caribbean Journal of Science 41(3), 441-455.

–Carruthers, T.J.B., van Tussenbroek, B.I. and Dennison, W.C. 2005. Influence of submarine springs and wastewater on nutrient dynamics of Caribbean seagrass meadows. Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science 64, 191-199.

Oct 2006

Page 57: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline
Page 58: From the Indian Ocean to the CaribbeanFrom the Indian Ocean to the Caribbean: Defining seagrass habitats to assess system processes Tim Carruthers R.P. van Dam G. Kendrick Outline