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You are here: Home / Resources / Whitewater to Bluewater W2B / Tampa Bay Seagrass Transplanting Project

Tampa Bay Seagrass Transplanting Project

This project is a seagrass transplanting project within Tampa Bay, Florida.

Background Information

Seagrass loss was first fully documented from photographs in Hillsborough Bay before 1950, although historic navigation charts and earlier snapshots indicate that seagrass loss may have been occurring even earlier.  Seagrasses have been recovering in Hillsborough Bay since the mid-1980s, following significant decreases in nitrogen loading from wastewater treatment plants discharging to the bay and resulting water clarity improvements. 

Seagrass acreage in Hillsborough Bay in 1950 was estimated as 2,321 acres.   By 1988, less than 7 acres total were mapped.  Since 1988, seagrasses in Hillsborough Bay have increased significantly; 565 acres were mapped in 2004, the highest recorded amount since 1950. However, seagrass acreage is still far below the adopted long-term target of recovering seagrass acreage to 1950 levels.

Tampa Bay Watch, in partnership with City of Tampa - Bay Study Group, designed, permitted, and constructed a series of six, 10m x 20m plots of Syringodium filiforme along the southern shoreline of the MacDill Peninsula as part of Permit # 29-0256820-007.  The harvesting and planting of the seagrass plugs was completed by Tampa Bay Watch, Inc. and City of Tampa- Bay Study Group in twelve work days over the summer of 2010 with the help of 73 community volunteers and totaling 365 volunteer hours. 

There are three primary objectives of this project: 1) to enhance and restore seagrass in areas of Hillsborough Bay where they have existed historically; 2) to evaluate the concept that historically present off-shore seagrass meadows were instrumental in maintaining prominent stable long-shore sandbars in Tampa Bay; and 3) to encourage greater stewardship of Tampa Bay natural resources by providing hands-on educational experiences for community and student volunteers. 

This project is the third phase of a highly successful seagrass transplanting program initially supported by the Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County in 2006.  Results of the 2006 program were utilized to design a second transplanting effort adjacent to the Phase 1 sites but within the elevational zone of the greatest seagrass transplant survival and parallel to the shoreline to accelerate recovery and expansion of manatee grass, Syringodium filiforme, along the southern Mac Dill Peninsula shelf. The 2006 donor site recovered to background conditions within the first 12 months of monitoring. The donor site and transplant site monitoring results of Phase 1 were the driving force for the Phase 2 design to transplant a set of six new seagrass plots in the depth zone of the highest survival and coverage of the Phase 1 program.  Similarly, successes of the Phase 2 (2009) program were utilized to design the third phase of the transplanting effort- DEP permit number 29-0256820-007. This transplanting effort took place in the area that is directly adjacent to the east to the Phase 2 design on the same elevational plane

 With the ongoing maintenance of adequate water quality to support seagrass, planting small “starter plots” of seagrass provide the plant material source needed for manatee grass and turtle grass expansion in Hillsborough Bay.  These two species of seagrass rarely set seed in Tampa Bay, and typically expand by rhizomal growth if light and other conditions are adequate to allow their expansion.  Although we do not advocate planting large expansions of seagrass, by hand-planting seagrass in relatively small, carefully-selected plots we expect to provide enough biomass to allow these seagrass species to naturally send out rhizomes and expand the patch sizes in the selected sites over time.

 

Seagrass Transportation
Transporting seagrass for transplant
Approximately 1,200 20cm x 20cm manatee grass sod units with sediment attached were harvested June thru September 2010 within a permitted donor area located in south-eastern Old Tampa Bay.  Harvesting was conducted in a manner designed to minimize impacts to both the sediments and the seagrass of the donor area. Collections of the sod units were spaced over nearly the entire donor area and the removal of individual units were spatially separated by a minimum of 2 meters. Further, harvesting was scheduled during high tides to minimize any potential boat impacts to the area.  The seagrass material was immediately placed in transportation containers and covered with wet burlap following harvesting to ensure that each collected plug was maintained as a near intact unit during handling and transportation.  The donor site was located approximately 9km (transportation distance) from the planting site.

Seagrass Moving
Preparing seagrass for planting
The harvested manatee grass was transported by shallow draft boats, kept shaded and wet, and was planted within a few hours of harvesting at the restoration area near the MacDill AFB. The sod units were carefully removed from the transportation containers and planted level with the surrounding sediment by hand on 1m centers at six 10m by 20m sites.  Planting density was designed to install 20cm plug planting units on one meter centers in staggered rows to enhance coalescence of planted seagrass.  The result of this planting design is the installation of 200 planting units per plot, for a total of 1,200 plugs.  This framework provided an excellent compromise between plot densities, quantity of donor material used, and the ability to construct individual plots on a single day.

2010Seagrass050.jpg
Planting Seagrass
The primary short-term environmental result/benefit from this project is the restoration of approximately 1,675 square meters of new seagrass in Hillsborough Bay.  Tampa Bay Watch conducted the final two-year monitoring of the planting site on November 1, 2012.  The one year survival rate/coverage target for this project was 25%.  At 18-months, we estimated that there is 50% coverage on average over the six plots.  At the two year monitoring we estimated that there is 65% coverage on average over the six plots.

Project ID 075