Estuaries: 1999
Publications
Author:
Thomas, R.G.
Title: Fish
habitat and coastal restoration in Louisiana.
Publication: American
Fisheries Society Symposium Series 22: 240-251, 1998.
© American Fisheries Society
Notes:
The magnitude of changes
occurring in Louisiana's estuaries creates a unique set of
challenges in fish habitat management. Louisiana leads the nation
in rate of coastal land loss, with some 70% of national losses.
Both natural and anthropogenic factors are involved in coastal
land loss in Louisiana: subsidence, erosion, sediment and
freshwater deficits, channelization, and rising mean sea level.
Disruption of the natural deltaic cycles of the Mississippi River
has been particularly detrimental to estuarine fish habitat.
Navigation and flood control needs have resulted in the near-total
leveeing of the river, preventing normal overbank flooding,
channel filling and switching, delta and subdelta development, and
sediment nourishment of adjacent and down-current marshes. The
resulting system is one in which the quantity and quality of
estuarine habitat are linked to rapidly degrading wetland
environments. Although the relative production value of subsiding
marsh surfaces is often very high, this condition is not
sustainable. Steep declines in fish production have been forecast
for the next century. Federal, state, and local coastal
restoration projects are attempting to address the loss of
estuarine habitat with a number of techniques that may produce
localized changes in fisheries production and distributions.
Temporary resource displacements can result in increased harvest
costs, and basin-scale changes may be particularly hard to accept
for resource users who are satisfied with current conditions.
Harvesters have demonstrated reluctance, and may lack the
financial flexibility, to forfeit expected current catches for
predicted enhancement of long-term fisheries production. In some
instances, both sportfishers and commercial resource users have
expressed concern over estuarine freshening and turbidity from
restoration inputs from riverine sources. Additional public
perception difficulties with restoration efforts arise from
misunderstandings of the nature of estuarine functions,
particularly of the importance of nursery habitat and of the value
of low-salinity marshes as nursery habitat. Significant
improvement in the outlook for estuarine fish habitat in Louisiana
will require long-term and large-area vision from resource
managers and the public.
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