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Press Release

Brevard County, Florida - The Mangrove Replenishment Initiative (MRI) an organization dedicated to restoring mangrove forests, in cooperation with Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) District 5, are planting thousands of mangrove trees in various areas of the Indian River Lagoon. As part of Earth Day, a worldwide effort to promote and protect the environment, volunteers in Brevard County will plant mangroves along the shorelines of the SR-520, Pineda and Eau Gallie causeways. The project includes volunteers from Thomas Jefferson and Herbert Hoover Junior High Schools, the Boy Scouts of America and from several community organizations that are coming together April 22 and 25, as part of Earth Day 1998 to restore mangrove habitat.

Earth Day activities typically include environmental clean-up and restoration projects, and provide meaningful opportunities for celebration, education and action. Earth Day observances develop support for environmental programs and help implement wide-scale awareness that bring people together to act for the common good.

"MRI replenishment projects are particularly appropriate for Earth Day 1998, since the United Nations has proclaimed this the International Year of the Oceans," according to John Drysdale of the Earth Society Foundation, New York. "Mangroves offer habitat for birds, crustaceans, and fish as-well-as contribute to improved water quality and protect shorelines from erosion."

To ensure success of the planting projects, an innovative methodology developed by Bob Riley of Melbourne Beach, is used in which mangrove seedlings are "encased" inside PVC pipes. "Restoration projects in Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico have also shown that the PVC protects the seedlings from predators like crabs, and from wave action," says Marcia Taylor, University of the Virgin Islands. MRI projects in other areas have demonstrated an added benefit of this unique method of planting -- the phototropic effect actually results in accelerated growth. Encased plants have demonstrated that during the first year their rate of development can exceed twice that of plants fully exposed to sunlight.

Numerous programs have been initiated by MRI in an ambitious effort to re-establish mangrove stabilized shorelines in Florida's estuaries and lagoon system from Cape Canaveral to Biscayne Bay. Loss of wetland habitat has been a major problem since approximately 75 percent of wetlands in the lagoon have been destroyed by shoreline development or impounded for mosquito control. In addition, miles of mangrove fringed shoreline have been replaced by sea walls and bulkhead.

MRI Executive Director, Mark Russell sees these programs as ambitious and essential efforts to develop self-sustaining mangrove shorelines. "Mangroves provide critical habitat," notes Russell. "In addition to development, hurricanes and frost have also taken their toll on mangroves. That's why efforts by volunteer groups like these are so important. We're creating habitat for the future by planting today." For more information, contact MRI Executive Director, Mark Russell at 407-722-2955 or visit the MRI Web site on-line at "http://MANGROVE.ORG/".

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Mangroves offer significant and unique habitat to birds, mammals, crustacea, and fish populations through a complex marine food chain, creation of breeding habitat, and establishment of restrictive areas that offer protection for maturing offspring. In addition, mangroves contribute to improved water quality by filtering and assimilating pollutants, stabilizing bottom sediments, and protecting shorelines from erosion."> Inadequacies in conventional red mangrove replenishment methods are primarily a result of their sensitivity to water depth, tidal action, and wave activity. A major problem in successful planting is the difficulty in finding suitable locations with adequate and appropriate environmental conditions favorable to the rooting and sustenance of the mangrove during its early stages of development. To have any potential of establishing thriving mangroves when using conventional methods, the seedlings must be planted only in areas adequately shielded from any substantial wave action or upland run-off. These conditions translate into restrictions not simply on the geographic location of a potential replenishment project, but also on the relative size and range of any replanting. Many areas that would be desirable for mangrove planting present formidable factors that prohibit the successful introduction of the tree.

The necessity of implementing mangrove replenishment projects is supported by the documented reduction in mangrove trees throughout Florida's estuary systems. Increases in population, water-front development, agriculture, boating and related activities have resulted in significant increases in the types and quantities of pollutants reaching intracoastal and coastal waters. Additionally these factors have contributed to a significant decline in mangrove habitat necessary to maintain commercial and recreational fisheries. Therefore, the importance of mangroves to a healthy marine ecology has dramatically increased. As natural members of estuary systems, mangroves mitigate the environmentally adverse and destructive effects of development and consequential pollution. In an effort to promote mangrove replenishment on a wide geographic basis an alternative planting method, called "Encased Replanting", has been developed. This new planting method is not subject to the limitations of conventional techniques.

Encased Replanting applies new methodology and technique in mangrove restoration. With employment of the Encased method, mangroves can be established in areas with significant tidal action, wave activity, and upland run-off. Mangroves offer a logical contribution to coast line protection, estuary restoration and a healthy marine environment. The Encased method effectively enables the establishment of mangrove trees where conventional planting techniques can not succeed. Mangrove trees are an indigenous species to Florida and a major contributor to the state's marine environment. The mangrove tree is a halophyte, a plant that thrives in salty conditions. It has the ability to grow where no other tree can, thereby making significant contributions that benefit the environment. Their coverage of coastal shorelines and wetlands provides many diverse species of birds, mammals, crustacea, and fish a unique, irreplaceable habitat. Mangroves preserve water quality and reduce pollution by filtering suspended material and assimilating dissolved nutrients. The tree is the foundation in a complex marine food chain and the detrital food cycle. The detrital food cycle was discovered by two biologists from the University of Miami, Eric Heald & William Odum, in 1969. As mangrove leaves drop into tidal waters they are colonized within a few hours by marine fungi and bacteria that convert difficult to digest carbon compounds into nitrogen rich detritus material. The resulting pieces covered with microorganisms become food for the smallest animals such as worms, snails, shrimp, mollusks, mussels, barnacles, clams, oysters, and the larger commercially important striped mullet. These detritus eaters are food for carnivores including crabs and fish, subsequently birds and game fish follow the food chain, culminating with man. Many of these species, whose continued existence depends on thriving mangroves, are endangered or threatened. It has been estimated that 75% of the game fish and 90% of the commercial species in south Florida rely on the mangrove system. The value of red mangrove prop root habitat for a variety of fishes and invertebrates has been quantitatively documented. Data suggest that the prop root environment may be equally or more important to juveniles than are sea grass beds, on a comparable area basis. Discovery of the importance of mangroves in the marine food chain dramatically changed the respective governmental regulation of coastal land use and development. In order to overcome the deficiencies in existing replanting techniques, Encased Replanting was developed as a more productive and adaptable alternative to current techniques. The method focuses on isolating the seedling into a controlled environment at the actual replanting site. The encasement artificially creates an environment favorable to the seedling's initial development while protecting the plant long enough to become well established. The isolation physically separates the seedling from surrounding conditions that are unfavorable to early development of the tree. By segregating the seedling from harsh environmental factors the encasement provides protection for the seedling during its formative stages and continues through the first three years of growth. By the third year the young red mangrove starts to sprout its aerial roots which will physically secure the plant to the bottom and ensure its long term survival. The development of aerial roots is a crucial step that ensures viability of the developing tree. The aerial roots provide for the exchange of gases needed for respiration and will enable the tree to root even in mud lacking oxygen. Once aerial roots extend into the bottom they will provide adequate protection from displacement and ensure the continuing subsistence of the plant. Aerial or prop roots are a distinctive root structure of the Red Mangrove and a characteristic that makes the Encased method of planting an effective means of replenishment. The aerial root is the mechanism that will ultimately secure the plant making it resistant to environmental factors that would under normal conditions prohibit development at many potential replenishment sites. The support provided by the aerial roots will hold the trunk of mature trees above the mean high tide water level. Over time an intricate maze of roots will protrude from the stem and end the plant's dependence on the encasement for its survival. In environments that are unfavorable to the seedling's initial development, the encased method will allow the tree to reach a point where its own infrastructure can overcome factors that are hostile to the immature tree. As the plant matures it will establish a dense foundation of prop roots and will continue to develop independent of the encasement. This foundation will enable the mangrove to grow into a healthy, self-supporting tree.