Cowichan Eelgrass Stewardship Project
The objectives of this project are to: 1. restore eelgrass habitat by transplanting harvested shoots 2. monitor transplant sites for change 3. engage, train and educate locals in eelgrass stewardship and 4. collaborate with local planners and government.
Seagrasses, including eelgrass have been used as indicators or nearshore ecosystem health in many areas of the world. The complex and intricate food webs of an eelgrass meadow rival the world’s richest farmlands and tropical rainforests. From an unstructured muddy/sandy bottom grows a myriad pattern of leaves that supply nutrients to fish, shellfish, waterfowl and about 124 species of faunal invertebrates. The plants offer surface area for hundreds of species. The high biological diversity available in eelgrass systems provides food in several ways. In the Trent River delta on Vancouver Island, for example, 124 species of birds have been identified, over 38,000 individuals. Forty eight per cent were observed using the intertidal eelgrass (Z. japonica) of the delta for feeding, foraging or preening at some time during the year.
Only about 5% of eelgrass is consumed by direct grazing. Only a few species eat the leaves. Among the consumers are snails and amphipods, important prey for fish and birds. Great Blue herons, dabbling ducks, widgeon, pintail and mallard ducks and Black Brant geese are among the millions of shorebirds that use eelgrass beds for foraging. Over 2.3 million birds, representing 150 species, use the intertidal flats of the Fraser River annually. Recently, in the Strait of Georgia, green urchins and Canada Geese have been observed consuming significant amounts of eelgrass and seriously impacting the local eelgrass populations. (C. Durance, pers. com.) Central to the marine food web is the Pacific herring, contributing 30% to 70% to the summer diets of Chinook salmon, Pacific cod, lingcod, and harbour seals in southern B.C. marine waters. Herring roe constitutes an important component of the diets of migrating seabirds, grey whales, and invertebrates. About 500 linear km of B. C. coastline turn milky-white every March and April as a result of the herring’s release of sperm around the eggs (roe) spawned directly on eelgrass and also on algae which is often epiphytic on eelgrass. Eelgrass detritus provides the basis for a chain of consumers in the open ocean living as far as 10,000 meters in depth. The extensive root system of the plants helps stabilize sediments and prevent erosion along the BC coastline. Damage to eelgrass can affect an entire ecosystem as well as the stability of our shorelines. Click here to view past eelgrass monitoring projects. |