R9D_Monty_State of Biscayne Bay_28Jun17_Compressed_11Dec17Jamie Monty
Miami-Dade County
Division of Environmental Resources Management
The State of Biscayne Bay:
Bay Overview & DERM Projects
City of Miami Beach Commission Meeting
December 13, 2017
-Thank you, X, for the warm introduction
-My name is Jamie Monty, and I oversee non-regulatory monitoring programs for Miami-Dade County’s Division of Environmental Resources Management
-After
seeing a longer version of this presentation at the BB Marine Health Summit, Commissioner Rosen-Gonzalez requested I provide a condensed version to you, CMB Commission
-Thank you all,
and especially Commissioner Rosen Gonzalez, for the opportunity
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Biscayne Bay
35 miles long
Between ¼ and 8 miles wide
Depths 1-10’ (dredged portions 30-40’)
Contains more than 40 islands
Borders 14 municipalities
Supports 2.7M people
-BB is 35 miles long
{CLICK} read first 2 bullets
{CLICK} read last 3 bullets
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EstuarySaltwater Exchange
Haulover Inlet
Haulover Inlet
Government Cut
Norris Cut
Bear Cut
Safety Valve
Ceasar’s Creek
Broad Creek
Angelfish Creek
Ceasar’s Creek
Safety Valve
Bear Cut
Norris Cut
Government Cut
Angelfish Creek
Broad Creek
-BB is an Estuary, one of the most productive coastal habitats, where salt and fresh water meet
-receiving tidal exchange through {CLICK} 8 inlets (Government Cut 1905, Haulover Inlet
1925)
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EstuaryFreshwater Exchange
Oleta River
Miami River
-and historical freshwater input through natural {CLICK} rivers, {CLICK} sheet flow, and {CLICK} even freshwater springs,
but more recently, through a system of {CLICK} canals (Miami
River channelized 1917, most others followed ~1948)
-While this dredging and channelization did provide for flood control, as it was designed to do,
it turned freshwater in to point
source of pollution – delivering more, faster, and without natural treatment along the way
-{CLICK} so that looking south from the miami river in 1907, {CLICK} versus today - a very
different landscape
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Biscayne Bay Watershed
Evergladesplan.org
Biscayne Bay = 428 mi2
Biscayne Bay Watershed = 938 mi2
-BB doesn’t just drain the land within MDC, but an area up to Orlando
-The BB watershed and is part of, the Kissimmee/Okeechobee/Everglades watershed
-its watershed is more than double
the size of the Bay itself
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North Bay
Central/South Bay
~10% of the Bay area
~40% of bottom modified
95+% of shoreline hardened
Highest density of commercial, industrial, and residential land use
Most affected by urban runoff
~90% of the Bay area
~75-80% of bottom natural
~75-80% of shoreline natural
Lower densities of development
Most affected by agriculture runoff
-although we talk about BB, it is not the same throughout its 428 sq mi
North and South Bay differ in their area {CLCIK}
natural bottom and shoreline {CLCIK} x2
Surrounding land use
{CLCIK} x5
And therefore sources of runoff {CLCIK} x5
{CLICK} As you can see, it is extremely altered and developed versus natural
NORTH:
~10% of the Bay area
~40% of bottom modified
(dredge)
95+% of shoreline hardened (seawalls)
High flushing rates (canal discharge & inlets)
Highest density of commercial, industrial, and residential land use
Most affected by urban
runoff
CENTRAL/SOUTH:
~90% of the Bay area
~75-80% of bottom natural
~75-80% of shoreline natural
Tidal flushing varies from very high (Central) to very low (Barnes Sound)
Lower densities
of development
Most affected by agriculture runoff
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Seagrass & Algae
Hardbottom
Mangrove
Coral Reef
Bare
Homestead
Coral Gables
Miami
Aventura
Biscayne Bay Habitats
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-BB contains a number of ecologically important habitats that provide Food, shelter, and nursery grounds for species that live in and adjacent to the bay
-these habitats are what allow
for the high species diversity and high ecological productivity in the Bay
Including our use of it for food, transportation, for residents and tourists
Threatened & Endangered Species
Critical Habitat
Florida manatee
American crocodile
Johnson's seagrass
Wood stork
These critical habitats provide food, shelter, and nursery grounds for many species,
including several threatened and endangered, such as {CLICK x 3}
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Special Protections
1967 National Monument -> 1980 Biscayne National Park
1975 Biscayne Bay Aquatic Preserves -> 1982 Outstanding Florida Waters
1980 Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge
1990 Florida
Keys National Marine Sanctuary
1991 Bill Sadowski Critical Wildlife Area
In fact, BB is so special that portions of it has been given several protections over the years,
including National Monument/expanded to Park
{CLCIK} BBAP,
{CLICK} NWR,
{CLICK} NMS,
(Card and Barnes Sounds)
{CLICK} CWA
Each with their own goals/objectives and management plans/protections
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Ecological Importance
Providing habitat, shelter & food for fish and wildlife, especially juveniles
Protect and improve water quality
Store floodwaters & recharge aquifer
Stabilize shoreline & prevents
erosion
Cycle nutrients
Sequester carbon (mangrove)
Oxygenate the water (seagrass)
-And that’s in recognition of the ecological importance of BB, which provides
{CLICK} 1st three bullets,
{CLCIK} 2nd three bullets,
{CLICK} 3rd 3 bullets
One out of every three
Floridians (8 million people) rely on the Everglades for their water supply
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75% of all recreationally important and 90% of all commercially important fish live as least part of their life cycle in mangrove habitat
Seagrass habitat in Miami-Dade County supported
$5M commercial harvest of these crab, shrimp, lobster, and fish species
In 2004, Biscayne Bay related uses (shipping, fishing, recreation) generated:
$6.3 billion in income
$627 million
in tax revenues
137,500 jobs
Economic Importance
Seagrass habitat in Miami-Dade County supported $5M commercial harvest of these crab, shrimp, lobster, and fish species
In 2004, Biscayne Bay related uses generated:
$6.3 billion in
income within the County,
$627 million in tax revenues (SFWMD/Hazen Sawyer 2005)
137,500 jobs
The most significant ‘Activities’ were:
Income Tax Revenue Jobs
Recreation $2,100
million $257 million 57,100
POM shipping $3,900 million $331 million 74,000
Miami River ship $ 339 million $ 37 million 6,100
Commercial Fishing $ 17 million $
2 million 470
TOTALS $6.325 Billion $627 million 137,500
+
=
And all of these ecological factors translate into actual dollars and cents that support our local economy
75%...
{CLICK} bullet 1,
{CLCIK} bullet 2
The total economic contribution
of the reefs to each county is the contribution of reef-related expenditures to sales, income, and employment. As residents and visitors spend money in the county to participate in reef-related
recreation, income and jobs are created within the county as a result. Economic contribution includes the direct, indirect, and induced effects of visitor spending and the direct effects
of resident spending.
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Biscayne Bay Projects
Water Quality Monitoring Program
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) Monitoring Program
Artificial Reef Program
Manatee Protection Plan Monitoring
Spoil Island Enhancement & Maintenance
Program
Because of these important resources, MDC DERM has built a strong natural resource management program to help us all better understand the current state of BB
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Monthly sampling
1979 to present
Currently 83 stations
Biscayne Bay & canals/tributaries
Identifies current status, patterns & trends over time
Surface Water Quality
Monitoring
-improved WQ since program began
-Several known impairments for things like Fecal coliform, total nitrogen, working with stormwater and sanitary sewer to improve infrastructure
-currently
finalizing site evaluation for sea level rise, nuisance flooding to ensure we’re capturing its impact on BB
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Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Monitoring
Annual monitoring
1985 to present
101 polygons random sites & 10 fixed sites
Identifies current status, patterns & trends over time
-decreases have occurred at the multiple monitoring stations during the late 1990’s, but are now recovering, with two exceptions
-Macroalgae bloom off of Coral Gables, and seagrass dieoff
JT basin – studying with partners
-currently expanding random monitoring into north BB
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Annual monitoring
1981 to present
7 Bay locations
Habitat restoration (dredge holes), fisheries management, diving opportunities
Artificial Reef Monitoring
-Annual monitoring “and deployments”
-Miami-Dade County program is regarded as the largest (in terms of materials deployed) program of its kind in Florida, which leads the nation in
number of established artificial reef sites.
-fish and benthic species and diversity increase over time as habitat has increased
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ManateeMonitoring
Identifies current status, patterns & trends over time
Supports protection activities identified in the Miami-Dade Manatee Protection Plan
-our manatee program conducts surveys quarterly to monitor manatee distribution throughout Biscayne Bay and tidal tributaries – noting presence, location, adult/calf, behavior
-injury/mortality
due to storm drain infrastructure has decreased over time, but vessel related injuries are on the rise
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Founded in 1981
Enhance habitats, provide educational & recreational
opportunities
Initial goal of reducing turbidity
Spoil Island Enhancement & Maintenance
-BB contains more than 30 islands that were created back in the early 1900s as a result of dredging operations to create the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway (AIWW)
-island enhancement
has reduced BB turbidity, increased public access
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Current State
Biscayne Bay has improved historically, but some of the changes for our convenience had unintended consequences. We can still improve upon the current system, especially in light of
our ever-increasing population and projected effects of climate change
In general, Biscayne Bay Water Quality is stable; there are several impairments (e.g., fecal coliform, total nitrogen)
that are in the process of being addressed through stormwater and wastewater improvements
Historically, Biscayne Bay Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) has been stable, but recently
there has been an increase in algal blooms and seagrass dieoff events
We’ve created and enhanced habitat both above and below the water, with artificial reefs, on spoil islands, by
removing sunken vessels, leftover traps, and debris, and hydrologically
We’ve significantly decreased the most common cause for manatee mortalities
In summary, Biscayne Bay has improved historically (we have wastewater treatment), but some of the changes for our convenience had unintended consequences (faster delivery of freshwater).
We can still improve upon the current system, especially in light of our ever-increasing population and projected effects of climate change
{CLICK} WQ
{CLICK} SG
{CLICK} Rest
{CLICK}
Manatee mortalities – to the point of the species becoming downlisted (from E to T)
All cause for celebration
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Future Outlook
Current state - need to continue:
Monitoring status & trends
Habitat restoration activities
Utility retrofits and infrastructure upgrades
Improved state - need to do more,
better, faster!
Biscayne Bay’s watershed is the most densely populated in Florida and is under continuous pressure
However, the work is not done
BB’s watershed…
{CLICK} In order to keep BB in its current state, we all need to continue to do what we’ve been doing…READ
{CLICK} And if we want to see
improvements in BB, we collectively need to do more
-natural resource management is challenging, it takes a village
-Note that we frequently partner and communicate with staff from
the CMB ENVIRONMENT & SUSTAINABILITY DEPARTMENT on BB and other environmental issues
Great baseline background data gives us a point of reference for events like the JT Basin SG
dieoff, hurricane Irma
Partnering, analyzing data, general consensus, next steps
Magnitude, relative severity, recovery
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Thank You!
Photo By: NOAA AOML
Jamie Monty
Miami-Dade County
Division of Environmental Resources Management
montyj@miamidade.gov
(305) 372-6853
-With that, I’d like to thank you all for your attention, and if you have any questions or would like additional detailed information, I can be reached via the contact info above
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