Hidden Damage from Hurricane Ike
Monday, June 22nd, 2015This is Passport to Texas
Few will forget the images from 2008 of the devastation to Galveston Island by Hurricane Ike. Yet, there is Ike caused damage we cannot see.
06- The losses of some of the invaluable habitat associated with Galveston Bay.
Including submerged oyster habitat. Lance Robinson is with coastal fisheries. The hurricane deposited sediment on top of 8-thousand acres of oyster reefs in Galveston Bay. That’s nearly half of the consolidated oyster habitat within the system.
24-That is a huge loss of a valuable resource. Not only from the commercial fishing aspect to it, but for the ecosystem services that they provide that a lot of people don’t really recognize or really see. Such as: water filtration, providing habitat for other fish and crabs and other organisms that are associated with structures. Sort of like an oasis in a desert.
A single adult oyster filters water at a rate of about 50 gallons a day, improving ecosystem water quality.
10-The waste water treatment plants within Houston filter the same amount of water as a hundred and thirty acres of oyster reef; we lost 8-thousand acres of those reefs.
Restoring the reefs–that’s tomorrow.
The Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration project supports our series, and funds diverse conservation projects in Texas.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.