By Paula Berntson, Space Coast
Daily, May 31, 2019
BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA – Most
often in spring and fall, piles of seaweed or “wrack” can wash up onto Space
Coast beaches during and after an offshore storm or high wind event.
The beach wrack is a natural
occurrence which is made up mostly of the alga sargassum and contains many
small plants and animals that provide the base of an important coastal food
web.
The wrack is also a valuable
resource that catches and traps windblown sand and helps prevent beach erosion.
Many visitors travel to Brevard
County each year just to beach comb and collect sea beans from the wrack line.
In fact, the International
Sea-Bean Symposium and Beachcombers’ Festival is an annual event that is held
each October in Cocoa Beach.
“The beach wrack is a reason why
the Space Coast is such a great place for families to take their kids,” said Peter Cranis, Executive Director
of the Space Coast Office of Tourism.
It becomes a rich food source for
birds, crabs and other wildlife. And it is one of the reasons we are the number
one place in the U.S. for sea turtle nesting. A lot of destinations believe
they are doing a service to their visitors by “cleaning” their beaches of
seaweed, but we take a different approach that is more eco-friendly and at the
end of the day actually provides a greater vacation experience.”
Unlike many other areas of
Florida, Brevard County’s beaches host tens of thousands of endangered sea
turtle nests each year with the majority of those occurring south of Patrick
Air Force Base.
Additionally, the southern 20
miles of Brevard County’s beaches are within the boundaries of the Archie Carr National Wildlife
Refuge which hosts the largest living population of loggerhead and
green sea turtles in the United States.
In 2016, there were 22,161 sea
turtle nests recorded in the Refuge which equates to an average of more than
1,000 nests per mile.
After leaving the beach, small
post-hatchling sea turtles take refuge and float in the sargassum in surface
currents offshore.
During and after storm events,
these turtles are often blown ashore in the sargassum and end up on the beach
as “washbacks” hidden in the wrack line.
In the fall of 2007, over 1,000
protected sea turtle “washbacks” were rescued by volunteers from the wrack line
in Brevard County.
This prompted the Sea Turtle
Preservation Society to recruit and train a volunteer network that respond and
comb the wrack line in search of hatchlings each time the wind and surf
conditions cause a washback event along our shoreline.
Brevard County’s beaches also
host protected shorebird populations that forage in the wrack line while
resting and nesting.
In summary, Brevard County does
not remove the wrack line from our beaches because it provides valuable
ecosystem benefits.
Most often in spring and fall,
piles of seaweed or “wrack” can wash up onto Space Coast beaches during and
after an offshore storm or high wind event. The wrack is a valuable resource
that catches and traps windblown sand and helps prevent beach erosion. Many
visitors travel to Brevard County each year just to beach comb and collect sea
beans from the wrack line.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!