Corps makes good progress on Miami Harbor project

Published July 1, 2014
Acropora cervicornis (staghorn coral, an endangered species), relocated by CSA Ocean Sciences, Inc. scientific divers, seems to be adjusting. GPS coordinates will guide monitors directly to the relocation sites.

Acropora cervicornis (staghorn coral, an endangered species), relocated by CSA Ocean Sciences, Inc. scientific divers, seems to be adjusting. GPS coordinates will guide monitors directly to the relocation sites.

Biologist Terri Jordan-Sellera on the job at Miami Harbor.

Biologist Terri Jordan-Sellera on the job at Miami Harbor.

Healthy corals, like this one, were selected for relocation.

Healthy corals, like this one, were selected for relocation.

Progress is moving swiftly with the Miami Harbor deepening and widening project, including the successful construction of artificial reefs and relocation of about 1,000 healthy corals.

Jacksonville District and its contractors are now at the 35 percent completion mark, with more than one million cubic yards of material removed and the majority of mitigation construction completed. 

Operations began in November to dredge about 2.1 million cubic yards of material from the harbor entrance, relocate coral, create artificial reef and construct seagrass mitigation sites. This outer channel work is scheduled for completion by November. The project also includes deepening and widening the inner channel, with full project completion scheduled for July 2015.

The Corps’ contractor, Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company, continues construction of approximately ten acres of artificial reefs. Divers and scientists have already transplanted healthy corals greater than 25 centimeters and more than 700 healthy corals 10 centimeters or larger from the project area to adjacent natural reef tracts and onto a portion of the newly created artificial reefs.  Divers carefully harvested the corals from the channel’s edges, as collecting from the channel bottom was too dangerous in the busy port.

Thirty-eight staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) colonies, a branching coral species that’s listed as “threatened” and therefore protected under the Endangered Species Act, were relocated outside the project area, to avoid potential impacts.  A fragment from each coral was also collected and transported to a permitted Acropora nursery at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science.  The National Marine Fisheries Service’s 2011 Biological Opinion included these and additional measures to minimize impacts to the coral colonies and preserve genetic material to aid in the recovery of the species. 

As part of the Army Corps of Engineers’ two-year coral relocation monitoring program, scientists assessed the staghorn colonies about 40 days post-relocation to evaluate survivorship, health, security of the reattachment bond and any breakage of branches. 

“After 40 days, all of the 38 relocated staghorn colonies were alive and in good health, with only minor bleaching and partial mortality,” said scientist Anne McCarthy from CSA Ocean Sciences, Inc.  “Encouragingly, several colonies were also observed as having new tissue growth over the epoxy base, demonstrating the coral’s ability to rapidly adapt to its new environment.”

McCarthy and her team conducted a comprehensive survey of corals, using a diver-operated underwater navigation system that allowed for the precise location of candidate corals for relocation.  Scientific divers also conducted a visual health assessment of each coral colony to document any signs of disease, bleaching, or recent tissue mortality to provide a baseline for later comparison during monitoring. 

“I’m very pleased with the overall progress,” said Laurel Reichold, project manager. “The mitigation construction and relocations went exceptionally well, and we anticipate a very good survival and growth rate for the relocated corals.” 

Once the coral relocation work was completed, the Corps opened the project area to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for a limited time, so permit holders could also collect additional marine resources prior to dredging. 

Corps biologist Terri Jordan-Sellers, who works closely with environmental and wildlife agencies and similar parties, said she was pleased the Corps was able to provide an access window.  “Staying on schedule with construction work is extremely important, and I’m very glad we were able to provide an opportunity for recovery of some corals that would have otherwise been lost.”

Excavation – or stripping off loose materials – construction started June 7 and will last several weeks, followed by cutter-suction operations - or digging out the rock in the outer channel area.  After this occurs, the Corps will have a good idea of areas that might require underwater confined blasting.

“So far, Great Lakes [Dredge and Dock] has made significant progress dredging the outer channel without the need for blasting,” Reichold said.  “Confined underwater blasting may occur in the October timeframe if conventional dredging methodologies can’t excavate the material, but we won’t know where or how much may be required until then.”  

Used successfully in Miami Harbor in 2005, confined underwater blasting is a method that pre-treats or fractures the top of bedrock prior to dredging. The majority of blast energy is confined in the rock, and studies show that by using this technique there’s an up to 90 percent decrease in the strength of the pressure wave, which helps protect the ecosystem.  The Corps’ detailed plan includes extensive monitoring and protocols to ensure protection of wildlife. These protocols were shown effective during the 2005 job, as there were no reported injuries or deaths of mammals, sea turtles or any other sustained habitat impacts. 

Go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hrkttPANMM to watch a 35-minute video in which Jordan-Sellers explains underwater confined blasting, using examples from operations conducted in Miami Harbor and other projects. Jordan-Sellers also teaches environmental science at Jacksonville University, and requires her students to view this video. 

Dr. Mark Fonesca, CSA scientist and world-renowned expert on seagrass restoration, is the senior ecologist implementing the project’s ongoing seagrass mitigation plan.  Fonesca literally wrote the seagrass restoration book during his 30 years with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration as a research scientist and research branch chief.

“I feel like I’m working with the “A Team,” Jordan-Sellers said.  “I couldn’t have selected a better group of scientists - and they bring with them the latest and greatest equipment and technologies.  It’s wonderful to be a part of this and learn so much from others.”