Growing Mangroves: Level
Growing Mangroves: Level
Growing Mangroves: Level
Level You may be able to grow a mangrove from seed so long as the
seed is not collected from a national park or marine park, or
3-8
from Queensland, (where all mangroves and their seeds are
Key question protected). Educational centres may be able to obtain a permit
How can mangroves be in Queensland particularly if the centre has a shade house.
raised from seed?
Key outcome What you need
To review the growth and Spade
development of Seed raising mix
mangroves. Plant pot
Seed pods or seedlings of mangroves
What you do
Seedlings of mangroves are produced while they are still on
the parent tree. Avicennia marina (grey mangrove), the most
widespread mangrove found in both tropical and temperate
Australia, can hold onto seedlings until they are some 30 cm
long. This process is called viviparity. Seedlings may drop off
the tree, float in the water and then settle in fine mud. Or,
some may be picked from the tree.
Adapted from Edfish, DPI, Seedlings can be dug up and replanted into a plant pot in fine,
Queensland, and from field silty mud. Or, seeds of grey and other mangroves can be placed
notes of the Department of in a seed raising mix in a plant pot. The seedlings can be watered
Education, Northern Territory. with freshwater (or left in the rain), and once a week, need a
water with salt water. This should preferably come from the sea,
but you can mix your own by dissolving two teaspoonfuls of
table salt in a litre of water. If you place the plant pot in a bucket
of semi-salt water, the mangrove seedling is more likely to
develop aerial roots (pneumatophores) after at least six months.
The plants can be examined for salt crystals coming through
the salt glands on the surface of leaves.
If the seedling is removed from the silt in the pot and carefully
rinsed, the fine network of feeding roots can be observed.
Extension
The seedling can eventually be replanted in a mangrove forest.
In areas where collection of mangroves is not permitted,
students can locate a suitable seedling, tag it using plastic
ribbon and regularly visit it to observe and record growth. It
can be watched for salt crystal development. The full
flowering cycle may also be observed in the field.
Reference
Claridge, D. and Burnett, J. 1993, Mangroves in Focus, Wetpaper
105 Publications, Ashmore.
Mangrove Fieldwork
106
Mangrove Fieldwork
Use the key (& also the accompanying ID & treasure hunt sheets).
Leaf comparisons
Find some different mangrove types and compare their leaves. What is the biggest leaf on a
mangrove tree? The smallest?
Are leaves succulent, or shiny, or waxy in feel? Do they have hairs? Is this a sticky milky sap (do
not touch the sap)? Would any of these features help the plant survive in salty mud and high
temperatures?
Reproduction
What ways do mangroves have of reproducing? Can you find seeds and young plants? How did
the seedling develop?
Other vegetation
What vegetation lives behind the mangroves on the inland side? Would these plants have salt
tolerance too? What adaptations to the conditions can you see? Use the information sheet to assist.
Birds
Can you identify the birds you see or hear? Are they feeding in the mud? What would they eat?
Are they sheltering in the mangroves? Would birds in wetlands like these need special features to
help them live here? Use the bird pictures to help.
My senses
Shut your eyes and listen and smell for two minutes. Which sounds dominate? Which smells
dominate? Which do you dislike?
Mini trail
Pretend you are an ant in this area. Use your eyes or a magnifying glass to follow a short trail-
what do you notice?
I spy
The group is divided into couples, who then wonder along shore or mud flats. Meet back at a
central point. Each individual finds one natural item (animal, vegetable or mineral), and then
describes it without stating what it is to the partner. You need to include some habitat description,
some indication of major features (e.g. does it have a shell, is it moving, can it move, what
colour). The partner has to locate the item and attempt an identification.
107
Mangrove Fieldwork
Swamp Oak
Leaf
Remnant
109
Mangrove Fieldwork
Crested Tern
Mangrove
Honeyeater
Silver Gull
Australian Gannet
Pled Oyster
Catcher
White-cheeked
Honeyeater
Pled Cormorant
Rainbow-bee
Catcher
Sacred Ibis
Great Egret
112
The Mangrove Ecosystem
Reflection
Infer what might happen to an animal in the mangroves if the
trees were not there? In groups discuss, investigate and report
on your conclusion.
Discuss the importance of each element of the mangrove
ecosystem and their interrelationships.
113
The Mangrove Ecosystem
In the field
Undertake one of the mangrove field studies (‘Mangrove Community’, ‘Marine Trailing’
or ‘Comparing Plant Communities’).
Extensions
Look back at the concept maps, lists and investigations and use the information to draw a
large wall chart of the mangroves with the tide-out.
Identify and describe the links between animals, plants, and other organisms that live or
visit the area.
114
The Mangrove Ecosystem
I Live I Eat
Algae Algae
Mostly microscopic
single celled plants. Green algae is a
Largest are the green plant, it makes its
seaweeds Base of own food
many food chains.
Mudskipper Mudskipper
I Live I Eat
Bacteria Bacteria
Food: plays an
Unknown number of important role in
species present in breaking down plant
water, mud and plants debris and in the
decay process of
dead animals
King prawn King prawn
Part of life cycle
Food: detritus
spent in the
feeder
mangroves
White-bellied White-bellied
sea eagle sea eagle
Common in many Food: fish,
Australian coastal carrions, small
habitats birds, flying foxes
The Mangrove Ecosystem
I Live I Eat
Mullet Mullet
Free swimmer,
common in Food:
mangrove lined detritus, algae
rivers and creeks
Zooplankton Zooplankton
Microscopic Food:
animals which microscopic
drift in water plants, algae
Amphipod Amphipod
Common name Food: vital food
‘beach hopper’, one chain link between
of the smallest microscopic
crustaceans in protozoa and small
marine habitats fish
Thais Thais