Climate change pushes Florida’s mangroves north

Mangroves are prevalent in tropical south Florida, but the plants have been moving farther north as climate change makes freezing weather less common. Hari Sreenivasan from PBS Newshour Weekend reports on the plant’s encroachment and what it means for the future of coastal ecosystems. This story is produced in partnership with Climate Central as well as Peril and Promise.


TRANSCRIPT

Hari Sreenivasan:

The effects of climate change can be hard to see – but in Florida there is a clear visual marker: the mangrove. As freezing cold weather in some parts of the state become less common, this tropical plant has been taking root –and further north of its usual range.

It’s a transition that scientists are closely following and a climate change story where there may actually be some positive side effects.

This story is produced in partnership with climate central, a nonprofit science and news organization and is part of our ongoing series, “Peril and Promise: The Challenge of Climate Change.”

Hari Sreenivasan:

This is the site of an outdoor laboratory on the banks of the intracoastal waterway in northeast Florida. It’s part of a research project on the interaction of climate change and coastal ecosystems. And getting here is not easy.

Samantha Chapman:

That is not warm!

Hari Sreenivasan:

That’s a little chilly.

It’s not so coincidentally called the WETFEET project.

Samantha Chapman:

If you sink at all you wont go far…You won’t go… but you can sink up to your waist sometimes.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Samantha Chapman is an ecology professor at Villanova University and the primary investigator on this project. I’m following her and her team into this marsh where they’re studying the impact of climate change on a tropical plant that’s been migrating further and further north: the mangrove.

Samantha Chapman:

We’re in this sort of encroachment and spread phase where they’re moving northward and taking over rather rapidly.

Hari Sreenivasan:

There are three species of mangroves that grow in florida: white, black, and red. What they have in common is an ability to grow with their roots submerged in salty water and soil. An environment that kills many other plants. Mangroves grow around the world, thriving in tropical conditions generally within a set distance of the equator. But this spot in Florida, near St. Augustine, is north of that range.

Here in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas Research Reserve, or GTM, mangroves are growing, in a region that was previously thought to be too cold for them to permanently take root. Matt Hayes is post-doctoral researcher at villanova.

Matt Hayes:

Historically they have been up here before. So we know from looking at historical records from early botanists and explorers they have spoken about seeing mangroves around here even just north of here. But then once these cold snaps came that was enough to kill them off and then they’d be pushed right back again further south of here.

Hari Sreenivasan:

As climate change makes these cold snaps less frequent, researchers are studying how permanently warmer temperatures will affect this ecosystem.

Each of these chambers is a glimpse into the future. By shielding it from the elements, the temperature inside is a couple of degrees centigrade warmer. By doing this, scientists can study what happens to the salt marsh and the mangrove in here at these higher temperatures versus what’s outside.

Samantha Chapman:

What we see at least in our first six months of data is that the mangroves seem to be growing faster in the warming chambers.

Hari Sreenivasan:

The WETFEET Project is a multi-year initiative, funded by the National Science Foundation. Researchers pull water samples to measure data, including salinity.

Samantha Chapman:

It’s kind of like getting blood from a stone, right?

Hari Sreenivasan:

They use bluetooth-connected sensors to track environmental conditions like temperature and humidity; both inside and outside of the chambers.

Is this mangrove going to replace that marsh?

Samantha Chapman:

Likely, yes. Unless there’s a deep freeze, it’s going to overtop the marsh and as it does so it’s going to shade out the marshes under it and it will just take over.

Hari Sreenivasan:

But a “take over” might not necessarily be a bad thing. Mangroves are the foundation of an extremely productive coastal ecosystem in their own right. To see the benefits that these plants provide, we traveled more than 180 miles south to a research site near the coastal town of Ft. Pierce. Here, it’s a more tropical environment, and a place where mangroves traditionally thrive.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

This is solid mangrove. We have pretty much 100 percent cover of mangroves.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Our guide is Candy Feller, an emeritus scientist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. She’s been studying mangroves for more than three decades.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

Mangroves are known as a nursery of the sea so in Florida it’s been shown that most of the commercial fishes spend part or all of their their lives in the mangroves so if you get rid of the mangroves and you’ve lost a whole lot of your catch.

Hari Sreenivasan:

In addition to anchoring a whole ecosystem, mangroves play an important role in defending in shorelines from the sea. A 2017 study found that about 5.5 feet of mangroves can reduce wave height by about 90 percent. By comparison, it takes 57 feet of salt marsh to do the same.

In the 1980s, Florida adopted its first rules to protect mangroves, but globally they are threatened by agriculture and aquaculture, including shrimp farming, as well as coastal development.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

The Achilles heel of mangroves is that they’re occupying that part of the landscape that people really covet.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Researchers estimate that as much as a third of the world’s mangrove habitat has been lost since 1980. But about 80 miles up the Florida coast, Feller took us to an area that has seen a mangrove explosion in the last 15 years.

Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge – near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center – is home to hundreds of bird species from Glossy Ibises to Great Blue Herons. It’s also part of what’s known as the ecotone: part salt marsh, part mangrove environment.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

I remember the day when I was looking out there and it was just about as much salt marshes as it was mangroves but it looks like it’s pretty much all mangroves now doesn’t it?

Hari Sreenivasan:

The transformation here has been so fast that an informational sign is now completely out-of-date.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

I think this is extraordinary. This is what we’re looking at here. It says the marsh to the east is a grassland community. That is no longer a grassland community. It’s a mangrove forest.

Hari Sreenivasan:

The changes look just as dramatic from above. Researchers measure the expansion of mangroves using satellite images, and in this region alone mangrove cover increased by nearly 70 percent from 2003 to 2010.

Samantha Chapman:

They are really flexible like snorkels too.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Back at the WETFEET Project, about two hours up the coast, researchers bring us to another site where mangroves are encroaching on salt marsh.

Samantha Chapman:

Here’s the little root that sticks out.

Hari Sreenivasan:

This is a mangrove propagule, the plant’s seedling.

Samantha Chapman:

And then it essentially lifts up its head and then it pops out its first two real leaves.

Hari Sreenivasan:

It’s not just the growth of mangroves popping up in this salt marsh that researchers are studying. They are also measuring a hidden benefit of mangroves that’s trapped in the ground beneath them.

The mud that I’m standing in, this really dark stuff, that is thousands of years worth of carbon that’s been captured and locked in by this salt marsh. Now as these mangroves work their way up the coast researchers are trying to figure out how that affects the rate at which that carbon is stored.

Samantha Chapman:

These wetlands are like little strips and so by area they’re not the biggest carbon stores, but they can take up carbon really quickly and lock it away.

Hari Sreenivasan:

As mangroves grow they absorb carbon dioxide and other climate change-causing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. These elements are converted by the mangroves to organic matter and trapped in the soil below. This stored carbon is known as blue carbon, and by growing quickly and decomposing slowly, mangroves store more of it, on a per area basis, than any other type of forest on earth.

Samantha Chapman:

I think this system is one in which we’re seeing some hope. The vegetation, the plants are adapting to climate change. They are moving into a place where they couldn’t be before because it’s warmer and that may, and that’s what we are trying to figure out, end up helping us with issues like carbon storage and sea level rise.

Hari Sreenivasan:

But the transition from grassy salt marsh to bushy mangrove is not seen as beneficial by everyone.

Nikki Dix:

It’s not that either one is better than the other, it’s just how is it going to change

Hari Sreenivasan:

Nikki Dix is the research director at GTM, and a scientist working on the WETFEET Project.

Do the people that live around here understand the difference between an invasive species and what a mangrove is, what a mangrove does?

Nikki Dix:

Yes, some do some don’t. So we try to educate people the best we can. When people are not used to seeing mangroves out their backyard they’re used to this nice flat marsh view. And then you start getting trees blocking your view. They immediately think oh it’s an invasive we’ve got to cut it down. So we work a lot with different folks trying to get the word out but it’s hit or miss.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Yea.

Danny Lippi:

You can’t touch it. People don’t like that. They don’t like being told no especially people that can afford to live on the water.

Hari Sreenivasan:

To “touch” a mangrove in Florida, you usually need the help of someone like Danny Lippi. He’s an arborist near where the WETFEET Project is underway and he’s licensed by the state to trim mangroves. He had to travel all the way to south Florida to learn about the state regulations around mangroves.

Danny Lippi:

When I was at the class I said, ‘hey, I’m from St. John’s County’ and they said, ‘what are you doing here? You know, you don’t have mangroves where you are.’ I said, ‘yeah we do. And some of them are 20 feet tall.’ They had no clue.

Hari Sreenivasan:

He recently trimmed these mangroves from around 12 feet down to 8 feet, after a months-long regulatory process. The penalty for removing or improperly pruning a mangrove is up to 5,000 dollars per plant.

Danny Lippi:

Every once in a while you’ll get a pretty good client that understands the benefits. But I’d say most of my clients don’t care about any of that. They just want to have a view this plants in their way and the state says that they can’t remove it when they want to.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Our final stop with Candy Feller was nearly 40 miles north of the WETFEET Project on Amelia Island, near the border with Georgia. She’s brought us to the northernmost known mangrove on the eastern seaboard.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

That tree got there, about 15 years ago. We think that it probably arrived during or after the 2004 hurricanes.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Researchers believe the plants’ northern march is spurred by extreme weather events like hurricanes physically spreading mangrove propagules. That push from a hurricane, combined with no significant freezes, means this plant has been able to take root.

Ilka “Candy” Feller:

The predictions are that we’re going to have less intense and fewer freezes. We’re going to have more and more intense hurricanes, which means that mangroves who can be pushed further and further up the coast. So these become like a sentinel of, a biological sentinel of the effects of climate change.

Hari Sreenivasan:

Back at the GTM reserve, there are more than 72,000 acres of protected land, including almost 40 miles of coast. as climate change continues, researchers believe this ecosystem will see more and more mangroves. It’s an encroachment that could permanently change this landscape in ways that researchers are racing to understand.

TRANSCRIPT

>> Sreenivasan: THE EFFECTS OF

CLIMATE CHANGE CAN BE HARD TO

SEE, BUT IN FLORIDA THERE IS A

CLEAR VISUAL MARKER: THE

MANGROVE.

AS FREEZING COLD WEATHER IN SOME

PARTS OF THE STATE BECOME LESS

COMMON, THIS TROPICAL PLANT HAS

BEEN TAKING ROOT-- AND FURTHER

NORTH OF ITS USUAL RANGE.

IT'S A TRANSITION THAT

SCIENTISTS ARE CLOSELY FOLLOWING

AND A CLIMATE CHANGE STORY WHERE

THERE MAY ACTUALLY BE SOME

POSITIVE SIDE EFFECTS.

THIS STORY IS PRODUCED IN

PARTNERSHIP WITH CLIMATE

CENTRAL, A NONPROFIT SCIENCE AND

NEWS ORGANIZATION AND IS PART OF

OUR ONGOING SERIES, "PERIL AND

PROMISE: THE CHALLENGE OF

CLIMATE CHANGE."

THIS IS THE SITE OF AN OUTDOOR

LABORATORY ON THE BANKS OF THE

INTRACOASTAL WATERWAY IN

NORTHEAST FLORIDA.

IT'S PART OF A RESEARCH PROJECT

ON THE INTERACTION OF CLIMATE

CHANGE AND COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS.

AND GETTING HERE IS NOT EASY.

>> THAT IS NOT WARM!

>> Sreenivasan: THAT'S A LITTLE

CHILLY.

IT'S NOT SO COINCIDENTALLY

CALLED THE WETFEET PROJECT.

>> IF YOU SINK AT ALL YOU WONT

GO FAR... YOU WON'T GO, BUT YOU

CAN SINK UP TO YOUR WAIST

SOMETIMES.

>> Sreenivasan: SAMANTHA CHAPMAN

IS AN ECOLOGY PROFESSOR AT

VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY AND THE

PRIMARY INVESTIGATOR ON THIS

PROJECT.

I'M FOLLOWING HER AND HER TEAM

INTO THE MARSH WHERE THEY'RE

STUDYING THE IMPACT OF CLIMATE

CHANGE ON A TROPICAL PLANT

THAT'S BEEN MIGRATING FURTHER

AND FURTHER NORTH: THE MANGROVE.

>> WE'RE IN THIS SORT OF

ENCROACHMENT AND SPREAD PHASE

WHERE THEY'RE MOVING NORTHWARD

AND TAKING OVER RATHER RAPIDLY.

>> Sreenivasan: THERE ARE THREE

SPECIES OF MANGROVES THAT GROW

IN FLORIDA: WHITE, BLACK, AND

RED.

WHAT THEY HAVE IN COMMON IS AN

ABILITY TO GROW WITH THEIR ROOTS

SUBMERGED IN SALTY WATER AND

SOIL-- AN ENVIRONMENT THAT KILLS

MANY OTHER PLANTS.

MANGROVES GROW AROUND THE WORLD,

THRIVING IN TROPICAL CONDITIONS

GENERALLY WITHIN A SET DISTANCE

OF THE EQUATOR.

BUT THIS SPOT IN FLORIDA, NEAR

ST. AUGUSTINE, IS NORTH OF THAT

RANGE.

HERE IN THE GUANA TOLOMATO

MATANZAS RESEARCH RESERVE, OR

G.T.M., MANGROVES ARE GROWING,

IN A REGION THAT WAS PREVIOUSLY

THOUGHT TO BE TOO COLD FOR THEM

TO PERMANENTLY TAKE ROOT.

MATT HAYES IS A POST-DOCTORAL

RESEARCHER AT VILLANOVA.

>> HISTORICALLY THEY HAVE BEEN

UP HERE BEFORE.

SO WE KNOW FROM LOOKING AT

HISTORICAL RECORDS FROM EARLY

BOTANISTS AND EXPLORERS THEY

HAVE SPOKEN ABOUT SEEING

MANGROVES AROUND HERE EVEN JUST

NORTH OF HERE.

BUT THEN ONCE THESE COLD SNAPS

CAME THAT WAS ENOUGH TO KILL

THEM OFF AND THEN THEY'D BE

PUSHED RIGHT BACK AGAIN FURTHER

SOUTH OF HERE.

>> Sreenivasan: AS CLIMATE

CHANGE MAKES THESE COLD SNAPS

LESS FREQUENT, RESEARCHERS ARE

STUDYING HOW PERMANENTLY WARMER

TEMPERATURES WILL AFFECT THIS

ECOSYSTEM.

EACH OF THESE CHAMBERS IS A

GLIMPSE INTO THE FUTURE.

BY SHIELDING IT FROM THE

ELEMENTS, THE TEMPERATURE INSIDE

IS A COUPLE OF DEGREES

CENTIGRADE WARMER.

BY DOING THIS, SCIENTISTS CAN

STUDY WHAT HAPPENS TO THE SALT

MARSH AND THE MANGROVE IN HERE

AT THESE HIGHER TEMPERATURES

VERSUS WHAT'S OUTSIDE.

>> WHAT WE SEE HAPPENING-- AT

LEAST IN OUR FIRST SIX MONTHS OF

DATA-- IS THAT THE MANGROVES

SEEM TO BE GROWING FASTER IN THE

WARMING CHAMBERS.

>> Sreenivasan: THE WETFEET

PROJECT IS A MULTI-YEAR

INITIATIVE, FUNDED BY THE

NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION.

RESEARCHERS PULL WATER SAMPLES

TO MEASURE DATA, INCLUDING

SALINITY.

>> IT'S KIND OF LIKE GETTING

BLOOD FROM A STONE, RIGHT?

>> Sreenivasan: THEY USE

BLUETOOTH-CONNECTED SENSORS TO

TRACK ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS

LIKE TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY;

BOTH INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF THE

CHAMBERS.

IS THIS MANGROVE GOING TO

REPLACE THAT MARSH?

>> LIKELY, YES.

UNLESS THERE'S A DEEP FREEZE,

IT'S GOING TO OVERTOP THE MARSH

AND AS IT DOES SO IT'S GOING TO

SHADE OUT THE MARSHES UNDER IT

AND IT WILL JUST TAKE OVER.

>> Sreenivasan: BUT A "TAKE

OVER" MIGHT NOT NECESSARILY BE A

BAD THING.

MANGROVES ARE THE FOUNDATION OF

AN EXTREMELY PRODUCTIVE COASTAL

ECOSYSTEM IN THEIR OWN RIGHT.

TO SEE THE BENEFITS THAT THESE

PLANTS PROVIDE, WE TRAVELED MORE

THAN 180 MILES SOUTH TO A

RESEARCH SITE NEAR THE COASTAL

TOWN OF FT. PIERCE.

HERE, IT'S A MORE TROPICAL

ENVIRONMENT, AND A PLACE WHERE

MANGROVES TRADITIONALLY THRIVE.

>> THIS IS SOLID MANGROVE.

WE HAVE PRETTY MUCH 100% COVER

OF MANGROVES.

BOTH OF THESE ARE SMOOTH--

>> Sreenivasan: OUR GUIDE IS

CANDY FELLER, AN EMERITUS

SCIENTIST AT THE SMITHSONIAN

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH CENTER.

SHE'S BEEN STUDYING MANGROVES

FOR MORE THAN THREE DECADES.

>> MANGROVES ARE KNOWN AS A

NURSERY OF THE SEA, SO IN

FLORIDA IT'S BEEN SHOWN THAT

MOST OF THE COMMERCIAL FISHES

SPEND PART OR ALL OF THEIR LIVES

IN THE MANGROVES.

SO IF YOU GET RID OF THE

MANGROVES AND YOU'VE LOST A

WHOLE LOT OF YOUR CATCH.

>> Sreenivasan: IN ADDITION TO

ANCHORING A WHOLE ECOSYSTEM,

MANGROVES PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE

IN DEFENDING SHORELINES FROM

THE SEA.

A 2017 STUDY FOUND THAT ABOUT

5.5 FEET OF MANGROVES CAN REDUCE

WAVE HEIGHT BY ABOUT 90%.

BY COMPARISON, IT TAKES 57 FEET

OF SALT MARSH TO DO THE SAME.

IN THE 1980s, FLORIDA ADOPTED

ITS FIRST RULES TO PROTECT

MANGROVES, BUT GLOBALLY THEY ARE

THREATENED BY AGRICULTURE AND

AQUACULTURE, INCLUDING SHRIMP

FARMING, AS WELL AS COASTAL

DEVELOPMENT.

>> THE ACHILLES HEEL OF

MANGROVES IS THAT THEY'RE

OCCUPYING THAT PART OF THE

LANDSCAPE THAT PEOPLE REALLY

COVET.

>> Sreenivasan: RESEARCHERS

ESTIMATE THAT AS MUCH AS A THIRD

OF THE WORLD'S MANGROVE HABITAT

HAS BEEN LOST SINCE 1980.

BUT ABOUT 80 MILES UP THE

FLORIDA COAST, FELLER TOOK US TO

AN AREA THAT HAS SEEN A MANGROVE

EXPLOSION IN THE LAST 15 YEARS.

MERRITT ISLAND NATIONAL WILDLIFE

REFUGE-- NEAR NASA'S KENNEDY

SPACE CENTER-- IS HOME TO

HUNDREDS OF BIRD SPECIES FROM

GLOSSY IBISES TO GREAT BLUE

HERONS.

IT'S ALSO PART OF WHAT'S KNOWN

AS THE ECOTONE: PART SALT MARSH,

PART MANGROVE ENVIRONMENT.

>> I REMEMBER THE DAY WHEN I WAS

LOOKING OUT THERE AND IT WAS

JUST ABOUT AS MUCH SALT MARSHES

AS IT WAS MANGROVES BUT IT LOOKS

LIKE IT'S PRETTY MUCH ALL

MANGROVES NOW DOESN'T IT?

>> Sreenivasan: THE

TRANSFORMATION HERE HAS BEEN SO

FAST THAT AN INFORMATIONAL SIGN

IS NOW COMPLETELY OUT-OF-DATE.

>> I THINK THIS IS

EXTRAORDINARY.

THIS IS WHAT WE'RE LOOKING AT

HERE.

IT SAYS THE MARSH TO THE EAST IS

A GRASSLAND COMMUNITY.

THAT IS NO LONGER A GRASSLAND

COMMUNITY.

IT'S A MANGROVE FOREST.

>> Sreenivasan: THE CHANGES LOOK

JUST AS DRAMATIC FROM ABOVE.

RESEARCHERS MEASURE THE

EXPANSION OF MANGROVES USING

SATELLITE IMAGES, AND IN THIS

REGION ALONE MANGROVE COVER

INCREASED BY NEARLY 70% FROM

2003 TO 2010.

>> THEY ARE REALLY FLEXIBLE LIKE

SNORKELS, TOO.

>> Sreenivasan: BACK AT THE

WETFEET PROJECT, ABOUT TWO HOURS

UP THE COAST, RESEARCHERS BRING

US TO ANOTHER SITE WHERE

MANGROVES ARE ENCROACHING ON

SALT MARSH.

>> HERE'S THE LITTLE ROOT THAT

STICKS OUT.

>> Sreenivasan: THIS IS A

MANGROVE PROPAGULE, THE PLANT'S

SEEDLING.

>> AND THEN IT ESSENTIALLY LIFTS

UP ITS HEAD AND THEN IT POPS OUT

ITS FIRST TWO REAL LEAVES.

>> Sreenivasan: IT'S NOT JUST

THE GROWTH OF MANGROVES POPPING

UP IN THIS SALT MARSH THAT

RESEARCHERS ARE STUDYING.

THEY ARE ALSO MEASURING A HIDDEN

BENEFIT OF MANGROVES THAT'S

TRAPPED IN THE GROUND BENEATH

THEM.

THE MUD THAT I'M STANDING IN,

THIS REALLY DARK STUFF, THAT IS

THOUSANDS OF YEARS WORTH OF

CARBON THAT'S BEEN CAPTURED AND

LOCKED IN BY THIS SALT MARSH.

NOW AS THESE MANGROVES WORK

THEIR WAY UP THE COAST

RESEARCHERS ARE TRYING TO FIGURE

OUT HOW THAT AFFECTS THE RATE AT

WHICH THAT CARBON IS STORED.

>> THESE WETLANDS ARE LIKE

LITTLE STRIPS, AND SO BY AREA

THEY'RE NOT THE BIGGEST CARBON

STORES, BUT THEY CAN TAKE UP

CARBON REALLY QUICKLY AND LOCK

IT AWAY.

>> Sreenivasan: AS MANGROVES

GROW THEY ABSORB CARBON DIOXIDE

AND OTHER CLIMATE CHANGE-CAUSING

GREENHOUSE GASES FROM THE

ATMOSPHERE.

THESE ELEMENTS ARE CONVERTED BY

THE MANGROVES TO ORGANIC MATTER

AND TRAPPED IN THE SOIL BELOW.

THIS STORED CARBON IS KNOWN AS

BLUE CARBON, AND BY GROWING

QUICKLY AND DECOMPOSING SLOWLY,

MANGROVES STORE MORE OF IT, ON A

PER AREA BASIS, THAN ANY OTHER

TYPE OF FOREST ON EARTH.

>> I THINK THIS SYSTEM IS ONE IN

WHICH WE'RE SEEING SOME HOPE.

THE VEGETATION, THE PLANTS ARE

ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE.

THEY ARE MOVING INTO A PLACE

WHERE THEY COULDN'T BE BEFORE

BECAUSE IT'S WARMER AND THAT

MAY, AND THAT'S WHAT WE ARE

TRYING TO FIGURE OUT, END UP

HELPING US WITH ISSUES LIKE

CARBON STORAGE AND SEA LEVEL

RISE.

>> Sreenivasan: BUT THE

TRANSITION FROM GRASSY SALT

MARSH TO BUSHY MANGROVE IS NOT

SEEN AS BENEFICIAL BY EVERYONE.

>> IT'S NOT THAT EITHER ONE IS

BETTER THAN THE OTHER, IT'S JUST

HOW IS IT GOING TO CHANGE?

>> Sreenivasan: NIKKI DIX IS THE

RESEARCH DIRECTOR AT G.T.M., AND

A SCIENTIST WORKING ON THE

WETFEET PROJECT.

DO THE PEOPLE THAT LIVE AROUND

HERE UNDERSTAND THE DIFFERENCE

BETWEEN AN INVASIVE SPECIES AND

WHAT A MANGROVE IS, WHAT A

MANGROVE DOES?

>> YES, SOME DO, SOME DON'T.

SO WE TRY TO EDUCATE PEOPLE THE

BEST WE CAN.

WHEN PEOPLE ARE NOT USED TO

SEEING MANGROVES OUT THEIR

BACKYARD THEY'RE USED TO THIS

NICE FLAT MARSH VIEW.

AND THEN YOU START GETTING TREES

BLOCKING YOUR VIEW.

THEY IMMEDIATELY THINK, "OH,

IT'S AN INVASIVE.

WE'VE GOT TO CUT IT DOWN."

SO, WE WORK A LOT WITH DIFFERENT

FOLKS, TRYING TO GET THE WORD

OUT.

BUT, IT'S HIT OR MISS.

>> Sreenivasan: YEAH.

>> YOU CAN'T TOUCH IT.

PEOPLE DON'T LIKE THAT.

THEY DON'T LIKE BEING TOLD NO,

ESPECIALLY PEOPLE THAT CAN

AFFORD TO LIVE ON THE WATER.

>> Sreenivasan: TO "TOUCH" A

MANGROVE IN FLORIDA, YOU USUALLY

NEED THE HELP OF SOMEONE LIKE

DANNY LIPPI.

HE'S AN ARBORIST NEAR WHERE THE

WETFEET PROJECT IS UNDERWAY AND

HE'S LICENSED BY THE STATE TO

TRIM MANGROVES.

HE HAD TO TRAVEL ALL THE WAY TO

SOUTH FLORIDA TO LEARN ABOUT THE

STATE REGULATIONS AROUND

MANGROVES.

>> WHEN I WAS AT THE CLASS, I

SAID, "HEY, I'M FROM ST. JOHN'S

COUNTY."

THEY SAID "WHAT ARE YOU DOING

HERE?

YOU DON'T HAVE MANGROVES WHERE

YOU ARE."

I SAID, "YEAH, WE DO."

AND SOME OF THEM ARE 20 FEET

TALL.

THEY HAD NO CLUE.

>> Sreenivasan: HE RECENTLY

TRIMMED THESE MANGROVES FROM

AROUND 12 FEET DOWN TO EIGHT

FEET, AFTER A MONTHS-LONG

REGULATORY PROCESS.

THE PENALTY FOR REMOVING OR

IMPROPERLY PRUNING A MANGROVE IS

UP TO $5,000 PER PLANT.

>> EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE YOU'LL

GET A PRETTY GOOD CLIENT THAT

UNDERSTANDS THE BENEFITS.

BUT I'D SAY MOST OF MY CLIENTS

DON'T CARE ABOUT ANY OF THAT.

THEY JUST WANT TO HAVE A VIEW.

THIS PLANT'S IN THEIR WAY AND

THE STATE SAYS THAT THEY CAN'T

REMOVE IT WHEN THEY WANT TO.

>> Sreenivasan: OUR FINAL STOP

WITH CANDY FELLER WAS NEARLY 40

MILES NORTH OF THE WETFEET

PROJECT ON AMELIA ISLAND, NEAR

THE BORDER WITH GEORGIA.

SHE'S BROUGHT US TO THE

NORTHERNMOST KNOWN MANGROVE ON

THE EASTERN SEABOARD.

>> THAT TREE GOT THERE, ABOUT 15

YEARS AGO.

WE THINK THAT IT PROBABLY

ARRIVED DURING OR AFTER THE 2004

HURRICANES.

>> Sreenivasan: RESEARCHERS

BELIEVE THE PLANTS' NORTHERN

MARCH IS SPURRED BY EXTREME

WEATHER EVENTS LIKE HURRICANES

PHYSICALLY SPREADING MANGROVE

PROPAGULES.

THAT PUSH FROM A HURRICANE,

COMBINED WITH NO SIGNIFICANT

FREEZES, MEANS THIS PLANT HAS

BEEN ABLE TO TAKE ROOT.

>> THE PREDICTIONS ARE THAT

WE'RE GOING TO HAVE LESS INTENSE

AND FEWER FREEZES.

WE'RE GOING TO HAVE MORE AND

MORE INTENSE HURRICANES, WHICH

MEANS THAT MANGROVES WHO CAN BE

PUSHED FURTHER AND FURTHER UP

THE COAST.

SO THESE BECOME LIKE A SENTINEL

OF, A BIOLOGICAL SENTINEL OF THE

EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE.

>> Sreenivasan: BACK AT THE

G.T.M. RESERVE, THERE ARE MORE

THAN 72,000 ACRES OF PROTECTED

LAND, INCLUDING ALMOST 40 MILES

OF COAST.

AS CLIMATE CHANGE CONTINUES,

RESEARCHERS BELIEVE THIS

ECOSYSTEM WILL SEE MORE AND MORE

MANGROVES.

IT'S AN ENCROACHMENT THAT COULD

PERMANENTLY CHANGE THIS

LANDSCAPE IN WAYS THAT

RESEARCHERS ARE RACING TO

UNDERSTAND.

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