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Eelgrass Restoration

Eelgrass Meadows

Eelgrass meadows provide important services for the ecosystem’s health, as well as coastal communities. Despite its values, eelgrass habitat is declining. Eelgrass meadows are federally protected as an “Essential Fish Habitat” and a “Habitat of Particular Concern,” and as such, many restoration and conservation efforts have taken place in order to re-establish this important natural resource in The Sound 

Community Science

iSeaGrass is a community science project where volunteers monitor the extent and condition of eelgrass in Salem Sound. A camera attached to a PVC frame is lowered from a boat to help scientists map the locations and health of eelgrass in our area. The photos are also used to measure water depth and clarity. 

 

To the right: Citizen scientist volunteers monitor Salem Sound eelgrass and collect specimen samples.

Citizen Scientists on a boat with tools used for monitoring eelgrass meadows in Salem Sound.
Citizen scientists on a boat and in the water grabbing samples of eelgrass from Salem Sound for research and study.

Eelgrass Restoration

Planting efforts have taken place in Juniper Point and Fort Pickering in Salem, as well as off Woodbury Point in Beverly. Volunteers thread eelgrass shoots through burlap disks, called “tortillas. The eelgrass tortillas are then planted by DMF divers at locations that need extra support, where they will reestablish and promote further growth.

School to Sea Healthy Harbors students and teachers spent a day planting eelgrass in the shallow waters of Essex Bay with the Massachusetts Bay Partnership.
A Salem Sound Coastwatch Professional Development teacher with students knee deep in the ocean and looking at samples of local eelgrass.

Above: A teacher shows students specimens of  local Salem Sound eelgrass.

To the left: School to Sea Healthy Harbors students and teachers spend a day planting eelgrass in the shallow waters of Essex Bay with the Massachusetts Bay Partnership. 

What can you do to protect eelgrass beds?

Eelgrass Studies

Ongoing eelgrass studies that aim to improve conservation and restoration efforts are also taking place. Salem Sound Coastwatch partnered with MassBays National Estuary Partnership and Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) to map eelgrass beds along the coast of Massachusetts. The study, titled “A Comparison of Eelgrass Mapping Methods,” utilized various survey methods, such as satellite imagery, drone footage, and side-scan sonar, to determine the accuracy of different methods.

We have also studied the effect floating docks have on eelgrass beds along Marblehead’s west shore. In this study, Salem Sound Coastwatch and the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (DMF) used sensors under docks to measure the available light. Divers then recorded the amount of eelgrass under and surrounding the docks. The results of this study indicate that floating docks block a significant amount of light and reduce eelgrass’ ability to grow.  

Future studies will investigate new methods of restoration, such as the role that eelgrass seeds can play in restoration efforts. 

Photo Credit: MassBays

Discover more about eelgrass and how actions on land affect the ocean!