Keep exploring
Find even more resources on life in an estuary in our searchable resource database.
Estuaries are areas of water and shoreline where rivers meet the ocean or another large body of water, such as one of the Great Lakes. Organisms that live in estuaries must be adapted to these dynamic environments, where there are variations in water chemistry including salinity, as well as physical changes like the rise and fall of tides. Despite these challenges, estuaries are also very productive ecosystems. They receive nutrients from both bodies of water and can support a variety of life. Because of their access to food, water, and shipping routes, people often live near estuaries and can impact the health of the ecosystem.
Keep exploring
Find even more resources on life in an estuary in our searchable resource database.
What are estuaries?
Many different types of plant and animal communities call estuaries home because their waters are typically brackish — a mixture of fresh water draining from the land and salty seawater. This unique combination of salty and fresh water creates a variety of habitats. Some common estuarine habitats are oyster reefs, kelp forests, rocky and soft shorelines, submerged aquatic vegetation, coastal marshes, mangroves, deepwater swamps, and riparian forests. With so many places to live and so many niches to fill it is no wonder why estuaries are some of the most productive ecosystems in the world.
Hi! My name is Jonah Pereyra, and I am a scholar in the Ernest F. Hollings Scholarship class of 2022. This past summer, I had the pleasure of interning at Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (Rookery Bay NERR) in Naples, Florida.
Importance of estuaries
Estuaries are very important to the lives of many animal species. They are often called the “nurseries of the sea” because numerous animal species rely on estuaries for nesting and breeding. Most of the fish and shellfish eaten in the United States, including salmon, herring, and oysters, complete at least part of their life cycles in estuaries. Besides being a source for food, humans also rely on estuaries for recreation, jobs, and even our homes. A majority of the world’s largest cities are located on estuaries. This can be both a good and a bad thing. Estuaries filter out sediments and pollutants from rivers and streams before they flow into the ocean, providing cleaner waters for humans and marine life. However, coastal development, introduction of invasive species, overfishing, dams, and global climate change have led to a decline in the health of estuaries.
Welcome to a day in the life of a Hollings scholar featuring Ellie Madigan! I spent my summer at Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) in Naples, Florida. My research focused on the diet of black skimmers (Rynchops niger), a seabird, as an indicator of ecosystem health.
Estuary stewardship
Ensuring the health of our estuaries is vital to the survival of the plant and animal communities that call them home and the humans that depend on them for their way of life. To preserve our estuaries, the National Estuarine Research Reserve System was established to protect more than 1.3 million acres of estuarine habitat for long-term research, monitoring, education, and stewardship throughout the coastal United States. However, you can also help protect estuaries at your home by planting native plants, using fertilizers sparingly, and cleaning up after your pets.
The “Step into STEM” mentoring and workshop series, initiated and co-led by a Margaret A. Davidson Fellow at the Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve in Massachusetts, guided these students on crucial first steps toward science, technology, engineering, and math careers.
EDUCATION CONNECTION
Education also plays an important role in protecting our estuaries. An estuarine literate person understands the interconnectedness and interdependency of estuarine systems with other earth system in both time and space, can communicate about estuaries in a meaningful way, and is able to make scientifically informed and responsible decisions regarding estuaries and coastal areas. To create an estuarine literate society, the National Estuarine Research Reserve System has developed six estuarine principles and concepts. Educators can use this framework to build lessons and curricula that will teach their students the importance of estuaries and what they can do to help protect them.
Keep exploring
Find even more resources on life in an estuary in our searchable resource database.