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Planting Seagrass Gardens to Help Restore the Caloosahatchee River

Five "herbivore exclusion cages" rest over planted seagrass to protect seedlings from being grazed before becoming established.
WGCU / Andrea Perdomo
Five "herbivore exclusion cages" rest over planted seagrass to protect seedlings from being grazed before becoming established.

Of the many issues facing the Caloosahatchee River and its estuary, the major decline in seagrass beds is one of the most obvious signs of the ecosystem’s decline. Seagrass beds used to be found throughout the waterway and estuary, but that’s changed drastically in recent years, mostly because of shifting salinity levels throughout the year, often caused by freshwater releases from Lake Okeechobee, and lack of sunlight because of dark water, and more recently the major bloom of toxic blue-green algae which blocked even more sunlight.

But, a project to try to grow small underwater gardens as a source of seeds to begin restoring seagrasses throughout the system are starting to show signs of progress. This project is led by the Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program, in partnership with local citizens and a Winter Garden-based company called Sea & Shoreline. We’re joined in studio today by the CHNEP's Executive Director, Jennifer Hecker, to learn more.

We'll also check in withJoanna Fitzgerald, Director of the Von Arx Wildlife Hospital at the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, to find out what she's dealing with, as dead dolphins are washing up on area beaches, and seabirds are falling out of the sky.

Copyright 2018 WGCU

Julie Glenn is the host of Gulf Coast Live. She has been working in southwest Florida as a freelance writer since 2007, most recently as a regular columnist for the Naples Daily News. She began her broadcasting career in 1993 as a reporter/anchor/producer for a local CBS affiliate in Quincy, Illinois. After also working for the NBC affiliate, she decided to move to Parma, Italy where she earned her Master’s degree in communication from the University of Gastronomic Sciences. Her undergraduate degree in Mass Communication is from the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
Mike Kiniry is producer of Gulf Coast Live, and co-creator and host of the WGCU podcast Three Song Stories: Biography Through Music. He first joined the WGCU team in the summer of 2003 as an intern while studying Communication at Florida Gulf Coast University.