A Field Guide to LONG ISLAND SOUND LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 1 9/7/16 10:03 PM Lloyd Point, at Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 2 9/7/16 10:03 PM A Field Guide to LONG ISLAND SOUND COASTAL HABITATS, PLANT LIFE, FISH, SEABIRDS, MARINE MAMMALS, & OTHER WILDLIFE PATRICK J. LYNCH All illustrations, maps, & photography by the author unless otherwise noted LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 3 9/7/16 10:03 PM To Susan, Alex, Devorah, and Tyler, and to the late Noble Proctor, teacher, mentor, and friend coastfieldguides.com Copyright © 2017 by Patrick J. Lynch. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the US Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Yale University Press books may be purchased in quantity for educational, business, or promotional use. For information, please e-mail sales.press@yale.edu (US office) or sales@yaleup.co.uk (UK office). Designed by Patrick J. Lynch. Printed in China. ISBN 978-0-300-22035-3 Library of Congress Control Number: 2016949697 This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 4 9/7/16 10:03 PM Saving the world requires saving democracy. That requires well-informed citizens. Conservation, environment, poverty, community, education, family, health, economy—these combine to make one quest: liberty and justice for all. Whether one’s special emphasis is global warming or child welfare, the cause is the same cause. And justice comes from the same place being human comes from: compassion. —Carl Safina LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 5 9/7/16 10:03 PM LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 6 9/7/16 10:03 PM CONTENTS ix Acknowledgments xi Preface xii–xiii Regional map 1 Introduction 25 Physical coast 53 Weather and water 69 Human history 99 Shallows 137 Depths 167 Beaches and dunes 239 Rocky shores 259 Salt marshes 305 Coastal forests 337 Connecticut locations 355 New York locations 377 Bibliography 385 Illustration Credits 389 Index LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 7 9/7/16 10:03 PM Snowy Egrets (Egretta thula) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 8 9/7/16 10:03 PM ix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS During various trips throughout the Long Island Sound region Tom Andersen, Patrick Comins, Frank Gallo, the late Sally and Fred Richards, Fred Sibley, Bren Smith, and Jeff Spendelow have shared their time, photography, and expertise with me. Patrick Comins was particularly generous with his thorough review of the birding and natural history content of this book and in allowing me to use several of his photographs. My sincere thanks to Jeff Spendelow and Kristina Vagos of the US Fish and Wildlife Service for providing me with current data on the Falkner Island tern colony. Margaret “Peg” Van Patten of the University of Connecticut’s Connecticut Sea Grant program was very generous with her advice on the manuscript. I thank my Yale colleague Michael Marsland for allowing me to use several of his aerial photos of the Connecticut coast. I particularly thank Ralph Lewis, professor of geology at the University of Connecticut Avery Point campus and former state geologist of Connecticut. Ralph went above and beyond in sharing his expertise on Connecticut’s complex geologic history and in ensuring that the dating of glacial events reflected the most recent geologic research. Professor of geology J. Bret Bennington of Hofstra University generously gave me permission to use his excellent digital elevation map of Long Island. I offer particular thanks to Jean Thomson Black, executive editor for life sciences at Yale University Press, for her faith in my work over the years and for being my constant advocate at the Press. I also thank the manuscript editor on this project, Laura Jones Dooley, for her wonderful combination of expertise, supportive advice, and good humor. Last, and most of all, I thank my teacher, mentor, and friend, the late Noble Proctor, for his 43 years of wise counsel and for countless days of great birding along many coasts. I know that I and Noble’s hundreds of friends throughout the world miss his good humor, sharp eyes, and awesome breadth of knowledge about the natural world. This book would not exist without Noble’s wisdom and support. PATRICK J. LYNCH North Haven, Connecticut coastfieldguides.com @patrlynch https://www.facebook.com/patrick.lynch1 patrlynch1@gmail.com LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 9 9/7/16 10:03 PM x LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 10 9/7/16 10:03 PM xi PREFACE This book is written as a general introduction to the natural history of Long Island Sound and its shorelines. Although my emphasis is on the plants, animals, and physical foundation of the Sound, you cannot write about the natural world these days without constant reference to the effects of humanity and anthropogenic climate change. We now live in the Anthropocene Age, where human activity has become the dominant force shaping our physical and biological environment. The geologic and human history of our region also reminds us that we live on shifting ground. Sea level rise and changing coastlines are nothing new, but the accelerating rate of climate change in the past 50 years has altered both our shorelines and the life around Long Island Sound. Our lobster fishery ended 20 years ago because the Sound is now too warm for the Northern Lobster. Many formerly abundant food fish like the Atlantic Cod have become scarce due to overfishing. Formerly southern birds like Turkey and Black Vultures are now year-round residents of the region, and the rising waters of the Sound not only shrink the habitats of beach-nesting birds like the Piping Plover but threaten the salt marsh meadows that are the breeding habitat for the Saltmarsh Sparrow and other endangered species. This guide cannot be an exhaustive catalog of everything that lives in or near the Sound— such a book would neither be practical as a field guide nor useful to the typical hiker, birder, kayaker, fisher, or boater. Here I have emphasized the most dominant and common plants and animals, plus a few interesting rarities like the Snowy Owl and locally threatened species like the Least Tern and the American Oystercatcher. My intent is to show you the major plants and animals that populate our shorelines and the waters of the Sound, so that you can walk into a salt marsh or onto a beach and be able to identify most of what you see, the first step in developing a deeper, more ecological understanding of the unique and beautiful aspects of the Sound’s major environments. Useful companions to this guide For readers interested in more information on the human history and environmental challenges facing the Sound, I highly recommend Tom Andersen’s This Fine Piece of Water as a companion to this guide. Experienced birders will also want to carry along Sibley’s Guide to Birds or the Peterson Field Guide to the Birds, since the present guide covers only the most common birds. Fishers might want to bring along Tom Migdalski’s excellent Fishing Long Island Sound. See the Bibliography for information on books that might broaden your understanding of Long Island Sound and its natural and human history. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 11 9/7/16 10:03 PM xii LONG ISLAND SOUND REGION LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 12 9/7/16 10:03 PM LONG ISLAND SOUND REGION LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 13 xiii 9/7/16 10:03 PM The historic New London Ledge Lighthouse. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 14 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION 1 Introduction Double-Crested Cormorants off Plum Island, at the edge of the Eastern Basin of Long Island Sound. Long Island Sound is an estuary, a coastal area where salt and freshwater mix. Estuaries are uniquely productive natural environments, where most of our major shellfish, food fish, and sport fish species live throughout their lives or spend their juvenile years before moving into deeper waters. Healthy estuaries teem with wildlife. The Sound is an unusual estuary in that it is open at both ends, in the west at the East River tidal inlet to New York Harbor and the Hudson River and in the east at the Race, a swift-flowing channel that opens to Block Island Sound and the Atlantic Ocean. Ocean water enters the Sound from the east and mixes with freshwater that enters the Sound primarily from four major Connecticut rivers, the Housatonic, Quinnipiac, Connecticut, and Thames. These four rivers contribute about 90 percent of the freshwater that enters Long Island Sound, and about 70 percent of that combined flow comes solely from the Connecticut River. Long Island Sound is bounded to the north by New York State’s New York City and Westchester County and by the state of Connecticut. New York’s Long Island forms the southern shore of the Sound; Fishers Island Sound marks its northeastern corner; and a series of peninsulas and islands defines its eastern and southeastern boundaries. The Sound is 110 miles long from its western border at New York City’s East River to the Race inlet between Fishers Island and Little Gull Island at the eastern border, and it is about 21 miles across at its widest point, between New Haven, Connecticut, and Shoreham, Long Island. The Sound encompasses about LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 1 9/7/16 10:03 PM 2 INTRODUCTION 1,320 square miles of open water and has a coastline of about 600 miles—including all the bays, island shorelines, and major river mouths within the Sound. As an almost enclosed body of water sheltered from exposure to ocean waves, Long Island Sound is a low-energy marine system, and this lack of strong wave action is reflected in the nature and size of the Sound’s coastal environments, particularly the beaches, tidal flats, and salt marshes along its shores. With its low wave energy and sediment-poor north shore, the Long Island Sound estuary is unique along the Atlantic coast. Although the Sound has all the familiar salt marsh, beach, rocky shore, and tidal flat environments, within the Sound each of these natural areas differs to some degree from its counterparts on open-ocean coastlines. The long, narrow shape of the Sound combines with the natural breakwaters of Long Island and the smaller eastern islands to limit what oceanographers call fetch, the distance over which wave-generating winds can blow. Within the Sound the fetch distances are rarely longer than 15–20 miles, and this limits the maximum size of waves within the Sound. However, powerful nor’easter and hurricane winds that come mostly from the east can generate large, destructive waves Short fetch distances limit wave size in Long Island Sound Predominant winds in: Summer Winter Hurricanes and nor’easters can produce large waves in the Sound Low pressure storm Long fetch from east winds LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 2 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION 3 that travel long distances along the center axis of the Sound and can do great damage when they finally make landfall. The geography of Long Island Sound The Sound is relatively shallow for such a large body of water, with an average depth of only 64 feet. However, a long, deep trench that runs roughly parallel to the coast just north of the North Shore of Long Island reaches depths of over 130 feet. The Sound’s greatest depth is near the Race inlet just inside the eastern border, where swift tidal currents have carved a trench 320 feet deep. Long Island Sound’s watershed—the land area from which all the rivers and tributaries drain into the Sound—covers an area of more than 16,000 square miles and includes parts of Connecticut, New York, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and even a tiny part of southern The watershed of Long Island Sound The watershed of the Sound includes all the major rivers and tributaries that empty into the Sound. This huge catchment area drains parts of six states and even a portion of southern Quebec Province in Canada. More than 8 million people live within the 16,000 square miles of the Long Island Sound watershed. Quebec Vermont New Hampshire Connecticut River New York Massachusetts Rhode Island Housatonic River Connecticut Thames River Long Island Watershed of Long Island Sound Sources: EPA Long Island Sound Study, and Andersen, This Fine Piece of Water, 2000. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 3 9/7/16 10:03 PM 4 INTRODUCTION Quebec in Canada. This huge regional watershed is inhabited by more than 8 million people, including the major metropolitan areas of New York City, Westchester County in New York, Stamford, Bridgeport, New Haven, New London, and Hartford in Connecticut, and Springfield, Massachusetts. The Sound is thus downstream of street runoff and pollutants draining from those urban areas, as well as the effluent from more than 100 water treatment plants in New York and Connecticut alone. These treatment plants daily produce about a billion gallons of treated effluent, all of which enters the roughly 18 trillion gallons of water within Long Island Sound. As we’ll see in later chapters, this huge flow of nitrogen-rich effluent, along with the runoff from developed urban and suburban areas, creates the most significant environmental challenges that face the Sound today. mandritoiu The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge crosses the East River near its eastern end. Finished in 1939, the Whitestone Bridge and the nearby Throgs Neck Bridge, completed in 1961, played a major role in opening up western and central Long Island to automobile traffic in the postwar boom years of 1945–65. The two spans mark the end of the tidal East River and the western end of the Narrows Basin of Long Island Sound. The Long Island Sound estuary, with its rivers, salt marshes, and shallow tidal areas, is home to about 120 species of marine and coastal finfish species, including 50 species that breed within the Sound. The estuary supports hundreds of bird species as breeders, as migratory birds in spring and fall, and as year-round residents. In recent years Long Island Sound has become a significant wintering territory for five species of northeastern seals, and dolphins and larger marine mammals regularly visit the Sound, albeit in small numbers. The basins of the Sound Long Island Sound is one continuous body of water, but in its 110-mile length the Sound has four major regions or basins with distinctive characteristics. The Narrows and the Western, Central, and Eastern Basins are general geographic terms without strict borders, but the terms help scientists, geographers, and government planners discuss the Sound’s various regions. The Narrows The westernmost area of the Sound is the Narrows, a region of swift tidal flows that extends east from the Hell Gate of the East River and expands through the Throgs Neck at the eastern end of the East River, where it gradually widens into the Western Basin north of the Sands Point area of Long Island. The East River is not a true river, however, but rather a set of narrow tidal channels connecting Long Island Sound with New York Harbor and the Hudson River. The most famous of the East River channels is Hell Gate, a treacherous area of swift currents, tidal swirls, heavy commercial river traffic, and water that can flow at speeds exceeding five knots at peak tide. Most geographers designate the Hell Gate as the western terminus of Long Island Sound. Currents are treacherous here, because a shallow bedrock river bottom and the narrow LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 4 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION 5 straight between Wards Island and Lawrence Point form a natural bottleneck barrier to larger exchanges of water between the Sound and the East River. In the photo below the current is moving so swiftly through the Hell Gate that it is blurred in this long-exposure photograph. Although the tidal currents flow swiftly through the narrow channels of the East River, the total water flows through the Narrows region are small compared to the much larger volumes of water entering and leaving the eastern outlets where the Sound meets the ocean and the large flow of freshwater from the Connecticut River. The Narrows is the most environmentally challenged area of Long Island Sound: the heavy burdens of street runoff pollutants, routine water treatment plant effluent, sewage system overflows from stormwater, and industrial pollutants combine to severely limit natural marine communities. As a result, the water quality in the Narrows region is seldom better than fair year-round. Western Basin The Western Basin of the Sound is bounded in the west by the Hempstead Sill, a low, underwater ridge that runs northsouth from the mouth of Hempstead Bay to the New York– Connecticut border. In the east the Western Basin extends to a line between Fairfield, Connecticut, and Sunken Meadow State Park on Long Island. The Hell Gate The commonly accepted western boundary of Long Island Sound is a small section of the East River lying between Wards Island and the Astoria neighborhood of Queens, in New York City. The Hell Gate was named by colonial era boatmen who feared its powerful five-knot tidal flow and hidden rock reefs. mandritoiu LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 5 9/7/16 10:03 PM 6 LONG ISLAND SOUND REGION Springfield Hartford Connecticut Connecticut River CENTRAL VALLEY WESTERN UPLANDS New York Connec Rive Quinnipiac River New Haven West Haven Housatonic River Norwalk River Norwalk Stamford Pelham Bay Park East Flushing 80 ft. 75 ft. Caumsett S.P. Shoreham Port Jefferson Patchogue Bellport Mineola Great Oyster Shinnecock B Moriches Bay 12 ft. Babylon South Great Peconic Bay Westhampton Beach Medford Great Neck Jamesport Riverhead Stony Brook Huntington JFK Airport Jamaica Bay 130 ft. Wildwood S.P. Sunken Meadow Smithtown S.P. Bay Northport Glen Cove Greenport CENTRAL BASIN Sherwood Island S.P. E O LONG ISLAND SOUND WESTERN BASIN 45 ft. THE NARROWS Milford Point Westbrook 75 ft. 140 ft. Scarsdale Yonkers Stratford Madison Chaffinch Island Hammonasset S.P. Sandy Point Lighthouse Point Milford Bridgeport Old Saybrook Guilford Branford South Bay Fire Island Bay 73˚ 80 ft. 180 f LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 6 9/7/16 10:03 PM h INTRODUCTION 7 Massachusetts Blackstone River Providence Fall River Warwick EASTERN UPLANDS Rhode Island Newport Connecticut River Thames River New London Old Saybrook Madison Westbrook Hammonasset S.P. mesport pton EASTERN BASIN Barn Island Bluff Point S.P. Rocky Neck S.P. 225 ft. Orient Point Napatree Pt. Point Judith Misquamicut Block Island BLOCK ISLAND SOUND 320 ft. New Shoreham 45 ft. Montauk Point Gardiners Island Gardiners Bay RHODE ISLAND SOUND Fishers Island The Race Plum Island Orient Beach S.P. Greenport Mystic Westerly Stonington Groton Niantic Old Lyme Sakonnet Point Pawcatuck River East Ground Bank 30 ft. Endeavor Shoals Cox Ledge Block Channel 41˚ 140 ft. Sag Harbor Great Peconic Bay Southampton 0 Shinnecock Bay y 0 25 Miles 10 Miles 10 KM 25 KM 50 Miles 50 KM Block Canyon 80 ft. 230 ft. ATLANTIC OCEAN 72˚ 180 ft. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 7 9/7/16 10:03 PM 8 The salt marsh at Hunter Island, Pelham Bay Park, on the Western Basin of Long Island Sound. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 8 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 9 9 9/7/16 10:03 PM 10 RK YO C U T I W NE EC T N N CO WESTERN LONG ISLAND SOUND Hudson River S 15 95 Cos Cob GREENWICH Rye Brook Cos Cob Harbor Port Chester Calf Islands Rye St H Greenwic Island Beach Great Captains Island Harrison N CO N NEW Glover Reef Mamaroneck Tuckahoe 95 Hen Is. YONKERS Rye Point 73°40’ Edgewater Point Rive r Mt. Vernon son Hu d Oak Neck P Fox Pt. Matinecock Pt. THE NARROWS 42 33 48 Horseshoe Harbor Pine Island 53 Hempstead Sill Larchmont NEW ROCHELLE 33 Porgie Shoal Parsonage Point Lattingtown Huckleberry Is. Davis Is. Pelham Bay Park Hunter Is. Prospect Pt. Twin Is. Orchard Beach Sands Pt. Hart Is. City Is. Wards Is. Lawrence Pt. Hewlett Pt. 30 Stepping Stones Throgs Neck North Brother Is. Hunts Point East River Rikers Is. Gu ard ia HELL GATE, East River. Traditionally the western boundary of Long Island Sound. Kings Point 23 678 Matinecock Sea Cliff Manorhaven Glen Head Plum Pt. Manhasset Port Washington Bay Greenvale Great Neck Throgs Neck Bridge Little Neck Bay Whitestone College Point La 20 Glen Cove Sands Point 12 East River Whitestone Bridge Execution Rocks Locust Valley 27 Hempstead Bay Barker Pt. 95 BRONX Saddle Rock Manhasset Roslyn 25A 495 295 QUEENS 495 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 10 Bayville 9/7/16 10:03 PM M N Fairfield 95 Westport New Canaan 11 NORWALK 15 7 Penfield Reef Sherwood Island State Park 95 8 Seymour Pt. 12 Peck Ledge Darien Cockenoe Is. Rowayton Shea Is. Chimon Is. STAMFORD Plains Is. Scott Cove 95 Wescott Cove Cos Cob Cove Harbor 65 47 Grass Is. THE NORWALK ISLANDS Sheffield Is. Long Neck Pt. 73 16 Green’s Ledge 73°20’ 55 Shippan Pt. Cos Cob Harbor nds THE WESTERN BASIN Shippan Pt. Shoals Stamford Harbor Greenwich Pt. 76 Island Beach 73°30’ eat Captains Island 41° 92 94 T IC U NEC K CO N YO R NEW Eatons Neck Pt. Eatons Neck Huntington Bay Caumsett State Park 38 Rocky Pt. Oak Neck Pt. Bayville Lattingtown Mill Neck Locust Valley Smithtown Bay Lloyd Harbor Sunken Meadow State Park Northport Bay Cold Spring Harbor Oyster Bay Lloyd Harbor Centerport Huntington Bay Centre Is. Cove Neck Northport 25A 25A Oyster Bay Laurel Hollow Matinecock 66 Eatons Neck Lloyd Pt. 53 Fox Pt. 105 T Cold Spring Harbor Western Basin East Norwich LONG ISLAND SOUND 25A Glen Head NL NH OS FI BP N OP LIS S NR PJ GC Q 495 North 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 miles kilometers Depth soundings in feet at mean low water Parks LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 11 9/7/16 10:03 PM 12 Central Basin WEST HAVEN Housatonic River LONG ISLAND SOUND Sandy Point Bird Sanctuary Bradley Pt. Orange 6 Oyster River Pt. MILFORD Breakwaters Merwin Pt. 95 Welches Pt. Silver Sands State Park New Haven Harbor Five Mile Light Lighthouse Pt. East Haven Lighthouse Point Park Keysey Is. Morgan Pt. Johnso Pt. Southwest Ledge Light 39 Pond Pt. Charles Is. Stratford BRIDGEPORT 95 Sandy Pt. 95 Housatonic River Quinnipiac River NEW HAVEN CENTRAL BASIN, LONG ISLAND Milford Point Sanctuary 95 Park Pt. Lordship Stratford Pt. Long Beach Pt. 7 73° Stratford Point Sanctuary Fayerweather Pt. Fayerweather Is. Light 64 73°10’ 58 T T IC U NEC K CO N YO R W NE Stratford Shoal 82 B r id Stratford Shoal Light gep or t r - Po ff e r t Je 90 130 son Fe r ry 41° BRONX 80 Crane Neck Pt. Old Field Pt. Old Field Pt. Light 37 Mt.Misery Pt. 29 Miller Place Port Jefferson Mt. Sinai Setauket Smithtown Bay Stony Brook North 0 0 Nissequogue 25A 97 1 H Shoreham Sound Beach 25A 2 3 4 5 miles kilometers 1 2 3 4 5 Depth soundings in feet at mean low water Parks 25 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 12 9/7/16 10:03 PM W W R Quinnipiac River INTRODUCTION 13 7 95 95 95 Madison Guilford Branford Stony Creek East Haven Lighthouse Point Park Morgan Pt. Chaffinch Island Park Chipman Pt. Chipman Pt. Indian Neck Hammonasset State Park Hammonasset Pt. Sachem Head THE THIMBLE ISLANDS Clinton Tuxis Is. Madison Reef Johnson Pt. Keysey Is. Clinton Harbor Kelsey Pt. Meigs Pt. Wheaton Reef Browns Reef Falkner Is. Falkner Island Light 73°20’ 23 Goose Is. Mattituck Sill 72 41°10’ 72°50’ 72°40’ 72°30’ THE CENTRAL BASIN 87 Mattituck Sill 78 82 Duck Pond Pt. Mattituck Inlet 114 41° 75 Herod Pt. Shoreham Roanoke Pt. Wildwood State Park 25A Baiting Hollow Wildwood Mattituck 25 Jacob Pt. Northville Laurel 25 Wading River 25A NH FI BP N LIS S NR Jamesport NL OS OP 25 Riverhead Great Peconic Bay Flanders Bay PJ GC Q 25 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 13 9/7/16 10:03 PM 14 CONNECTICUT RIVER EASTERN BASIN, LONG ISLAND SOUND 9 CONNECTICUT 95 Old Lyme 95 Westbrook 95 Old Saybrook Griswold Is. Clinton Madison Old Kelsey Point Gull Rock Tuxis Is. Rocky Neck State Park East Lyme Hammonasset State Park Griswold Point Chapman Point Cornfield Point Kelsey Point Meigs Point Hammonasset Point 47 B P Hatchett Point Saybrook Point Light 55 80 55 150 Falkner Island Light 27 80 71 IC U T NEC T CO N YO R K NEW 72°40’ 72°30’ 72°20’ Ori Po Lig LONG ISLAND SOUND Orient East Marion Orient Beach State Park 104 NL Greenport OS Long Beach Bar Light Gar B FI BP N 21 OP LIS S NR Plum Gut 132 Eastern Basin NH Orient Point PJ Shelter Island GC Southold Q Cedar Island Point Peconic Shelter Island Sound 54 25A Mattituck Inlet Mattituck Little Peconic Bay 25 33 North Haven 8 20 Noyack Bay Northwe Harbor Cutchogue 11 25A 35 Sag Harbor Noyack Laurel Northville NEW YORK STATE 25 Great Peconic Bay Aquebogue Jamesport 21 27 Sagaponack 23 Peconic River 36 Riverside 24 Hampton Bays 27 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 14 Southampton 9/7/16 10:03 PM 95 NEW LONDON Niantic River Niantic 95 Block ry New London Ledge Light er tF Watch Hill Light North Dumpling Light nt Po in D AN SL K R EI O D YO W NE Black Point Madison Reef on – Or ie Hatchett Point Latimer Reef Light I s l a n d Fe r r y Fishers Island Sound nd Fishers Island Ne w Lo 55 Race Rock Light 320 80 Little Gull Light The Sluice Way Plum Island Light Orient Point 300 Great Gull Island BLOCK ISLAND SOUND 279 (Largest tern breeding colony on the Atlantic coast) Plum Island Plum Gut Orient Point Light 52 41°10’ 72°10’ 72° 214 100 99 39 Orient Beach State Park 25 26 85 80 Gardiners Island Gardiners Bay 21 84 139 THE RACE 280 150 Napatree Point RH Griswold Is. 15 Bluff Point State Reserve Little Narragansett Bay Harkness Memorial 37 Fort Pond Bay 50 Cedar Island Point 20 Montauk Point Light 67 Tobaccolot Bay 34 Montauk 44 Napeague Bay 8 Montauk Point 27 20 Northwest Harbor r 12 69 4 41° 68 East Hampton ATLANTIC OCEAN 62 27 TE Barn Island Wildlife Management Area Stonington New London Harbor Light Niantic Bay Rocky Neck State Park GROTON Thames River Mystic Poquonnock River 86 90 58 North Sagaponack 0 0 36 2 3 4 5 miles kilometers 1 2 3 4 5 Depth soundings in feet at mean low water 78 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 15 1 Parks 9/7/16 10:03 PM 16 INTRODUCTION The Western Basin waters are shallow, with relatively weak circulation currents and a high load of fine, suspended sediment particles that trap and hold pollutants in the bottom sediments. The Hempstead Sill ridge acts as a barrier to circulation, reducing the amount of dissolved oxygen in the water in the hot summer months. Only a few small streams enter the basin from the north or south, adding to this stagnation. On the basin’s Long Island shore are a series of extended north-south bays that are actually drowned river valleys: Little Neck Bay, Manhasset Bay, Hempstead Bay, and Oyster Bay. The New York and Connecticut cities and towns surrounding the Western Basin are some of the most densely populated urban areas of North America, and the basin is stressed by a huge load of treated and untreated sewage, as well as the polluted runoff from the streets, buildings, parking lots, and other impervious surfaces that cover well over 25 percent of the surrounding land. The primary sources of the excess nitrogen in Long Island Sound are wastewater discharged from municipal sewage systems, leakage from defective sewer systems, effluent from home septic systems, stormwater runoff, and leaching fertilizers from suburban lawns. The Western Basin is the most polluted area of the Sound, but its coasts are also home to some of the most attractive and valuable shoreline real estate in the United States, as well as beautiful Soundside parks like New York City’s Pelham Bay Park (pictured above), Long Island’s Caumsett State Historical Park, and Connecticut’s Sherwood Island State Park. Because of the heavy load of pollutants, the Western Basin usually becomes hypoxic (lacking enough oxygen) during late summer and early fall, when the unnaturally high levels of nitrogen from wastewater and runoff sources cause excessive growth of marine algae, followed by their death and decomposition, which uses up most of the dissolved oxygen in the water, either killing aquatic animals outright or driving mobile animals like fish from the basin. Central Basin The Central Basin is a transitional area, more saline than the Western Basin (typically 25–30 parts per thousand, or ppt) and much less vulnerable to hypoxia and pollution due to its sheer size and depth, its greater tidal currents, and the contributions of the Housatonic and Quinnipiac Rivers. Compared to the West and East Basins the Central Basin has a relatively featureless bottom that slopes gradually southward to a deep east-west trench that runs about five miles north of the Long Island shoreline. New Haven is the Sound’s largest and busiest commercial harbor, but otherwise the central Connecticut coast has only a scattering of small harbors. East of Port Jefferson and Mount Sinai Harbor, the North Shore of Long Island has only the single, small Mattituck Inlet harbor. The eroded edge of the Roanoke Point Moraine forms high earthen bluffs overlooking narrow, stony beaches that run east for 45 miles between Port Jefferson and Orient Point. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 16 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION Eastern Basin The Eastern Basin is the smallest, deepest, and most oceanic of the basins, with salinities averaging about 32–33 ppt in spite of the considerable freshwater outflows from the Connecticut and Thames Rivers. The Eastern Basin is typically defined as the area of the Sound east of the Mattituck Sill, a low, north-south rise in the bottom of the Sound that runs roughly from the Hammonasset area of Madison, Connecticut, to Duck Pond Point on Long Island’s north shore. The eastern border of the Sound is formed by Fishers Island Sound and a chain of islands and peninsulas created by the remnants of the Orient Point–Fishers Island–Charlestown glacial moraine. Between Fishers Island and Little Gull Island, a deep trench called the Race is the Sound’s primary communication with the oceanic waters of Block Island Sound. The powerful tidal flows through the Race make the Eastern Basin the cleanest and most environmentally healthy area of the Sound, but even in the Eastern Basin small harbors and bays can become hypoxic at night during the later summer months because of excess nitrogen pollution. Types of coastline The most common natural coastline habitats in Long Island Sound are: 31% Salt marshes 31% Shallow intertidal flats 19% Cobble, gravel, or stony beaches 14% Exposed bedrock 5% Sand beaches 17 The Bridgeport–Port Jefferson Ferry crosses some of the widest and (on average) deepest areas of the Central Basin. A round-trip ride on the ferry is a great way to get a feel for the character of the basin without buying a boat. These shoreline types are not evenly distributed throughout the Sound. Salt marshes and bedrock outcrops are far more common along the Connecticut coast, and stony tidal flats and cobble or rocky beaches dominate on the Long Island coast. East of Port Jefferson the north coast of Long Island is almost entirely cobble or rock rubble beach composed of glacially derived stones and sand that have eroded out from the soft earthen cliffs that tower over most of the north shore beaches. Although both coasts of the Sound have significant rocky areas, on the Connecticut coast the rocky headlands are mostly exposed bedrock, and on the Long Island shoreline the large rocks are all glacial boulders deposited on Long Island during the most recent glacial period. On the Long Island coast of the Sound there is no exposed bedrock except for a small area in northwestern Queens in New York City: all the large rocks visible on Long Island are glacial boulders, not bedrock. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 17 9/7/16 10:03 PM 18 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 18 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION Sandy beaches on both sides of the Sound tend to be small and narrow from tidemark to the top of the beach. The north shore of Long Island has more beaches—thin and stony—because of the sand and cobblestones that continually erode from the moraine cliffs above. On the Connecticut coast the primary sources of beach sand are the small glacial river deltas of sediment that formed at the mouths of meltwater streams at the end of the most recent glacial period. Along the north shore of the Sound, the spotty availability of sand and insufficient wave energy limit the formation of the sandspits, barrier islands, dune fields, and natural beaches. These sandy coastal features are common on the nearby ocean-facing shores of Rhode Island and the south coast of Long Island but are absent or relatively small within Long Island Sound. Economic geography More than 23 million people live within 50 miles of Long Island Sound, making the region one of the most densely populated areas in the United States. The Sound has long played a major role in the development of the New York and southern New England region, first as a food source for native Americans and early European colonists and later as an important maritime highway before roads and railroads were built in the region. Long Island Sound is a major economic force: the estimated value of all economic activity around the Sound is $17–$36 billion annually (2015 dollars), with about $9.45 billion spent on tourism, fishing, commercial marine transportation, boating, and other recreation activities each year. Every summer there are more than 60 million day trips to the Sound’s beaches. More than 200,000 boats are regis- LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 19 19 Opposite: Race Rock Light, on the far eastern edge of Long Island Sound, at the northern edge of the Race, the main tidal inlet for oceanic waters from Block Island Sound. This view looks northwest, toward New London Harbor. Tidal currents here are the most powerful in the Sound. Note the tidal bulge in the foreground, where incoming tidal waters push up as they pass over the Orient Point–Fishers Island Moraine and wrap around the obstruction of Race Rock. Also notice the rougher wave area just beyond the light, where the swift tidal currents can produce fourfoot chop even on a calm day. Sandy Point in West Haven, Connecticut, is one of the few substantial sandspits along the sediment-starved Connecticut coastline. 9/7/16 10:03 PM 20 Glacial boulders on the beach at Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve, Lloyd Neck, Long Island. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 20 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 21 21 9/7/16 10:03 PM 22 INTRODUCTION tered in ports around the Sound, and on a summer weekend day as many as 90,000 of those boats may be out on the water. The very different geographies of Long Island Sound’s coastlines had a significant effect on the development of towns and cities. Colonial era settlement of Long Island developed from west to east, expanding from the New York Harbor area across the relatively flat terrain of Long Island, with few natural landform barriers. The Long Island terrain is so flat that the original Long Island Rail Road did not require a single bridge from New York City east to Greenport. The more rugged landscape of Connecticut developed in north-south patterns that followed the major river valleys. Most colonial era development in Connecticut proceeded north from the Long Island Sound coast, but the Hartford and Springfield, Massachusetts, areas were settled early because of the rich, rock-free soil of the upper Connecticut River region, a legacy of a giant meltwater lake that formed in the area at the end of the Wisconsinan glaciation. Because of the major natural barriers of the Connecticut and Thames Rivers, Connecticut relied on sailing ships and steamboats for east-west transportation and regional shipping until the late nineteenth century, when iron bridges finally spanned the major tidal rivers east of New Haven. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 22 9/7/16 10:03 PM INTRODUCTION 23 Today we mostly take large river bridges for granted, but in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, wide tidal rivers like Connecticut’s Thames River were serious barriers to eastwest land transportation and commerce. It was not until the late 1800s that the New Haven Railroad spanned the entire Connecticut coast, and it was well into the twentieth century before all of Connecticut’s major rivers had road bridges. New London Harbor’s Gold Star (highway) and Thames River (railroad) Bridges. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 23 9/7/16 10:03 PM 24 An outcrop of granite gneiss forms a small headland at Guilford’s Chaffinch Island Park in Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 24 9/7/16 10:03 PM ticut. 25 Physical Coast Long Island Sound’s geologic history begins about 500–300 million years ago, when the process of plate tectonics brought together most of the world’s ancient landmasses into a supercontinent called Pangaea. As the continents crushed together to form Pangaea the bedrock that was much later to underlie southeastern New York, Connecticut, and Long Island Sound was heated, folded, and faulted into a complex series of northsouth-oriented valleys and hills. This north-south pattern of hills and valleys would later play an important part in the development of rivers in New England and in the human history of the region. The enormous heat and stress of the continental collisions created much of the bedrock we see today along the northern coastline of the Long Island Sound basin.* Pangaea existed for about 50 million years as a supercontinent and then began breaking up in a process that created North America, Africa, and the Atlantic Ocean. As tectonic forces pulled away the North American plate from what later became Africa, a narrow ocean strait formed between the landmasses bordering the early Atlantic Ocean. The rifting (pulling apart) of Pangaea caused great tension stresses in the bedrock, and giant cracks (rift basins) formed along the eastern edge of the North American plate. Today’s Hartford Basin, the great central valley of Connecticut and western Massachusetts, was one of those huge tension cracks in the bedrock of the eastern edge of the North American plate. As the continental pieces of Pangaea broke up about 250 million years ago, the Appalachian Mountains became the eastern coastline of the newly formed North American continent, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 25 A spectacular 10-foot-tall S-fold in metamorphic rocks along Route 9 in Higganum attests to Connecticut’s complex and dramatic geologic past. *See Margaret Coleman’s Geologic History of Connecticut’s Bedrock for a concise but excellent overview of the complex 1.1-billion-year history of the state’s bedrock geology. 9/7/16 10:03 PM 26 PHYSICAL COAST Before the Quaternary glacial periods, New England had a coastal plain and low, sandy shorelines that looked more like what we see along the midAtlantic Coast today. This view is from Currituck Sound, on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. along the developing Atlantic Ocean. At that time the Appalachians were a much taller, more rugged chain of mountains than we see today, but over the next 200 million years these once-mighty peaks were eroded by weather and water, and much of their former substance formed the broad coastal plains of today’s Atlantic coastline. Off the Atlantic Coast, layers of sand and silt eroded from the Appalachians also form much of the continental shelf. Until about 3 million years ago the major forces shaping the East Coast and coastal plain of North America were the usual weathering and stream erosion that gradually wore down the Appalachians. During part of the Tertiary Period, 48–23 million years ago, the sea level was often much lower than it is today, and during this time river and stream erosion created the ancestors of today’s great Atlantic coastal bays and inlets: the Chesapeake and Delaware Bays and an inland, streamcarved valley that would later become Long Island Sound. About the dates in this chapter: You may notice that the dates given here for geologic events in the past 25,000 years are different from those you might have seen in older texts. The dates here are derived from recent geologic studies that use surface exposure dating, in which the decay of radioactive compounds such as beryllium-10 is used to derive dates for glacial events that are much more accurate than such previous techniques as carbon-14 dating. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 26 The glacial episodes The past 2.6 million years have been marked by a series of glacial episodes collectively known as the Quaternary or Pleistocene glaciations. Long Island displays evidence of four distinct Pleistocene glacial episodes. Such episodes occur when a complex set of astronomical conditions (variations in the earth’s axial tilt and orbital distance from the sun) combine with other climatic and geologic factors to cause long-term climate cooling. As the earth grew colder, snows that fell in winter did not all melt away in summer, and as the snow accumulated over thousands of years, the ice cap of the northern hemisphere expanded southward. Today we are in a relatively warm interglacial period, and our Arctic glaciers are remnants of the last glacial episode. 9/7/16 10:03 PM PHYSICAL COAST ARCTIC ICE CAP 2 5 , 0 0 0 ye a r s a g o 27 Eu ro p e Peak of the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, 25,000 years ago NA At l a nt i c O ce a n Af r i c a Baffin Island South Am e r i c a Baffin Bay CO R D I L L E R A N ICE SHEET Hudson Bay PAC I F I C OCEAN L AU R E N T I D E ICE SHEET Nova Scotia ME MA NY Cape Cod Long Island NJ MD AT L A N T I C O C E A N VA The most recent glaciation in the Long Island Sound region, the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, began about 85,000 years ago and ended about 15,000 years ago.* The period is called the Wisconsinan because the first major studies of this glacial period were conducted in Wisconsin. The continent-sized glacier of the Wisconsinan Episode is called the Laurentide Ice Sheet, named for the Laurentide region of northeastern Canada, where the ice was thought to have originated. At the peak of the Wisconsinan Episode 25,000 years ago, the Laurentide Ice Sheet covered New England (see illustration, pp. 28–29) and reached as far south as the middle of presentday Long Island. In places the ice sheet was thousands of feet thick, and the landscape resembled that of central Greenland today. At the peak of the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode so much of the earth’s water was bound up in glacial ice that the sea level was 300 feet lower than it is today, and a large area of dry land extended south of the present-day coasts of Long Island and New England. This ice-free land resembled the spruce taiga forests and tundra of northern Canada today and provided a refuge area—a refugium—where many of the plant and animal species we see today could survive. These species began to repopulate the Long Island Sound region when the ice sheet began to retreat about 24,000 years ago. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 27 The Laurentide Ice Sheet. At its maximum extent during the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode 25,000 years ago, the Laurentide Ice Sheet, a single, massive glacier, covered most of northeastern, eastern, and north-central North America. Ice also covered much of northwestern North America, Europe, and Asia. It may be easiest to think of the Wisconsinan Glacia­ tion as a giant extension of the polar ice cap. * When people refer to the Ice Age in New England, they usually mean the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, 85,000–15,000 years ago, but the term “Ice Age” is ambiguous. There have been multiple ice ages in our region over the past 2.6 million years. 9/7/16 10:03 PM 28 LAURENTIDE ICE SHEET The Laurentide Ice Sheet over New England 25,000 years ago When you consider how radically different the New England landscape was at the height of the Wisconsinan Glaciation, 25,000 years doesn’t seem so long ago. This region has seen enormous changes in geography, sea level, and climate in a relatively short time. The ice sheet that covered New England, the Laurentide Ice Sheet, is one of the three ice sheets (Innuitian, Cordilleran, and Laurentide) that covered portions of North America during the Pleistocene Epoch. The illustration below shows the maximum southern extent of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Geologists call this most recent glacial time period the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode. It started about 85,000 years ago, reached its peak 25,000 years ago, and ended in the Long Island Sound region and Connecticut about 16,500 years ago. The red line shows the modern coastline. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 28 9/7/16 10:03 PM PHYSICAL COAST The terminal ice front of a modern glacier. ALCE Alex Yago Taiga evergreen forests in the refugium area south of the glaciers. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 29 29 Ice fields covered the landscape. NOAA YuliaB Much of the refugium area was tundra, much like the far north of Canada and Alaska today. 9/7/16 10:03 PM 30 PHYSICAL COAST The great glacial moraines The position of a glacier’s ice front is determined by the balance of the rates of ice supply and melting. At a higher rate of supply, the ice front advances across the landscape. At high melting rates, it retreats. Where supply and melting rates are in balance, the ice front is stationary, known as a “still stand.” If a glacier maintains a still stand position over time, the glacial conveyor will dump debris along the melting ice front, creating a pile of till known as an end moraine. The Long Island Sound region has two types of end moraine, terminal and recessional. A terminal moraine marks the farthest advance of the ice (see green line on illustration, pp. 32–33). In our region, the terminal moraine of the Wisconsinan ice sheet, the Ronkonkoma Moraine, formed the backbone of Long Island as well as Montauk Point, Block Island, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket. End moraines that mark melt-back positions north of the terminal moraine are called recessional moraines (see brown lines on illustration, pp. 32–33). About 21,300 years ago, a still stand created the recessional moraine that lies along the north shore of Long Island and extends eastward through Rhode Island: the Harbor Hill Moraine is in western Long Island, and the Roanoke Point Moraine lies along the north shore of Long Island, east of Port Jefferson, and continues eastward through Orient Point, Plum Island, Gull Island, the Race, and Fishers Island. A number of smaller, more recent recessional moraines also run east-west over what is now the bottom of Long Island Sound, occasionally emerging above sea level as the Captain Islands, off Greenwich, and the Norwalk Islands. One small segment of a recessional moraine makes a pleasant visit at most times of year: Meigs Point at Hammonasset Beach State Park is part of a recessional moraine formed about 20,200 years ago during the retreat of the ice sheet. Glacial ice is nothing like the clear, clean ice cubes in your freezer. Glaciers are full of rocks, giant boulders, sand, and fine silt. Here two modern glaciers (top and bottom of picture) on Washington State’s Mount Rainier are so full of rock debris that you can hardly tell where the rock ends and the ice begins. The debris in the ice acts like sand paper, smoothing the underlying bedrock as the ice moves. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 30 Glacial Lake Connecticut By 20,200 years ago, the ice sheet had melted back to the Connecticut coast, and as it retreated, torrents of glacial meltwater filled the valley that was to become Long Island Sound, gradually creating the freshwater Glacial Lake Connecticut (see illustrations, pp. 34–35 and p. 36, bottom). A similar meltwater lake formed just east of the Orient Point–Fishers Island Moraine, in the area that is now Block Island Sound. Note that the sea level was still hundreds of feet lower than it is today, so Glacial Lake Connecticut was a large, inland freshwater lake situated about 100 miles north of the ancient Atlantic Coast. 9/7/16 10:03 PM PHYSICAL COAST Hundreds of meltwater streams running south from the receding ice sheet sent large amounts of fine silt into Glacial Lake Connecticut, settling at the bottom and filling the basin with deep layers of mud. These extensive lake-bottom sediments account for the relatively shallow average depth of the Sound, about 64 feet (see illustration, pp. 38–39). For about 3,000 years Glacial Lake Connecticut occupied the Long Island Sound Basin, steadily draining through an exit stream where the Race is today. This stream gradually cut a channel into the soft sediments of the Harbor Hill–Fishers Island Moraine. Glacial Lake Block Island Sound had earlier drained away to the sea through what is now the Block Island Channel, and the drainage channel through the Race also flowed through the Block Island Channel south to the sea. 31 Sheffield Island in the Norwalk Islands is a remnant of the Norwalk–Old Saybrook Moraine and is typical of small islands formed from loose glacial debris, sand, silt, and glacial boulders. The soft banks of these earthen glacial islands erode quickly, leaving a ring of glacial boulders. Although Sheffield Island is large enough to contain a small forest and salt marsh, it has no permanent freshwater and supports few land mammals. By about 17,900 years ago, the glacial lakes had drained, leaving smaller lakes and river channels at the bottom of a largely dry basin that was probably transitioning from northern spruce-fir forest and tundra into woodlands that more closely resemble today’s central New England mixed hardwood forests. The formation of modern Long Island Sound By 17,600 years ago, the glacial ice sheet had retreated north of Connecticut and the climate was steadily warming. As the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode waned, two interrelated and competing forces affected the beginnings of today’s Long LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 31 9/7/16 10:03 PM 32 REGIONAL MORAINES Ic Meigs Point at Hammonasset Beach State Park in Madison, Connecticut, is a recessional moraine that you can hike over. e m a rg in ,1 8 ,3 00 y ea rs ago C ONNEC TIC UT N EW YOR K New Haven Bridgeport Norwalk m Ham Roanoke P Moraine LONG I SL A N D S OU N D Norwalk Islands Captain Islands New Rochelle Port Jefferson The Bronx H ar bo r H Great Neck e of the Th e f a r t h e s t a d v a n c ill M orai Roanoke Point M ne orai ne ne ma Morai Ronkonka ago 0 years 0 0 , 5 2 about Sheet, e c I e d i L aurent Queens Brooklyn LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 32 a on Meigs Point ne orai kM roo o b y a rs ag ld S yea No r ds–O ,300 0 2 w alk Islan ~ Stamford Harrison Madison Branford West Haven 9/7/16 10:04 PM BOSTON PHYSICAL COAST 33 MA Providence ag The eroded cliffs of the Harbor Hill recessional moraine at Wildwood State Park, Wading River, Long Island. r Ice m a , 19 gin , rs ea 0y 50 New Bedford R HODE I SL AND o Newport Madison m Ham d Le et– ass on e 20 rain Mo d r ya yea ,200 Ab ou F ishe rs Is . O r i e nt P t . to in tP ien Or Roanoke Point Moraine e rain n t Mo Mystic Fishers Island Moraine Orient Point Moraine go ars a Charlestown Moraine go rs a New London Meigs Point e rain e Poi B H R er’s s arle Ch ine ora nM tow BLO C K I SL A N D S OU N D Rec s ag o Bl o ck Isl and Te r m Ab o e s s i o n a l mor ai ne aine mor o l a in s ag 5,0 ut 2 ear 00 y ine ora am kom on onk h Fis nd Isla t 21,300 y ear The great regional moraines of New England and Long Island The green line marks the southernmost edge of the Laurentide Ice Sheet that covered New England 25,000 years ago. The terminal moraine is a huge pile of boulders, rocks, sand, and silt that today forms part of Montauk Point, as well as Block Island, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket. The Laurentide Ice Sheet did not melt at a steady rate. About 21,300 years ago, the climate cooled again, and for hundreds of years the ice sheet piled up a second massive recessional moraine system, the brown line on the map. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 33 9/7/16 10:04 PM 34 GLACIAL LAKE CONNECTICUT The exposed continental shelf south of modern Long Island acted as a refugium, an ice-free refuge south of the ice sheet, where many plants and animals were able to survive the maximum advance of the ice and then repopulate Long Island and Connecticut as the ice melted northward. nouskrabs LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 34 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST 35 Glacial Lake Connecticut About 20,300 years ago, Glacial Lake Connecticut occupied the same area and roughly the same shoreline as the current Long Island Sound. The glacial lake was entirely freshwater runoff from the melting Laurentian Ice Sheet covering most of Connecticut. The area that became Long Island was a broad, flat outwash plain between and south of two major moraines. The area was thinly covered with tundra and taiga vegetation, roughly the way northern Labrador is today. The Atlantic coastline was still about 75 miles south of Glacial Lake Connecticut: much of the world’s freshwater was bound up in glacial ice, and the sea level was about 300 feet lower than it is today. Glacial Lake Connecticut. This modern meltwater lake at the foot of a glacier in Iceland approximates how most of the Connecticut coast looked at the time of Glacial Lake Connecticut. Photo: bbsferrari LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 35 9/7/16 10:04 PM 36 EVOLUTION OF LONG ISLAND SOUND LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 36 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 37 37 9/7/16 10:04 PM 38 PHYSICAL COAST Island Sound. The earth’s crust, which had been depressed by the tremendous weight of the ice sheet over New England, began to rebound when the ice melted. At the same time, the melting ice sheet drained into the ocean and sea levels began to rise (see illustration, pp. 34–35). For some unknown period of time, these two forces—rising land and sea levels—competed at the east and west entrances of the valley that would become Long Island Sound. The land rose for a time, but finally the sea level rose faster, and by about 17,900 years ago, the sea had begun to flood the Long Island Sound and Fishers Island Sound basins, reaching a level about 130 feet lower than today’s sea level. Long Island Sound’s life as a brackish estuary had begun (see illustration, p. 37 bottom). Over the next 6,000 years, the sea levels gradually rose, filling the basin to near present levels and creating today’s Long Island Sound: a relatively shallow, brackish water estuary, open at both ends, with a rocky bedrock coast on its north shore and a series of peninsulas, islands, and cliffs composed of an unsorted mixture of glacially derived sediments along its southern coastline. Long Island and the southern coast Long Island is often described as the work of the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, but much of its underlying structure long Glacial outwash sediments of Long Island ATLANTIC OCEAN Ronkonkoma terminal moraine Glacial outwash sediments of Long Island Roanoke Point recessional moraine cliffs of Long Island Long Island Cretaceous coastal plain sediments form the foundation of Long Island Cretaceous coastal plain sediments South LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 38 Crystalline bedrock 9/7/16 10:04 PM The b is alm from PHYSICAL COAST 39 predates the Wisconsinan ice, and in many locations the layers of Wisconsinan glacial debris are a thin veneer over far older structures. The bedrock foundation of Long Island is similar to the schists and gneisses that underlie the southwestern coast of Connecticut and Westchester County, New York. Large examples of this bedrock are easy to see along the shoreline of the Hunter Island and Twin Island sections of Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx (see illustration, pp. 40–41). From the northern coast of Long Island Sound the bedrock formation slopes downward toward the south: it lies 100 feet or more below the North Shore of Long Island and 2,000 feet under Fire Island and the southern shores of Long Island. Except for a small outcrop (a nineteenth-century quarry) near Hallets Point along the East River in northwestern Queens, there is no exposed bedrock on Long Island. The core structure of Long Island consists largely of sediment layers dating from the Cretaceous Period, 145–66 million years ago. These sediments, eroded from the Appalachian Mountains, also make up much of the Atlantic coastal plain and continental shelf south of New York Harbor. During the Tertiary Period, 66–2.6 million years ago, multiple changes in sea level modified these Cretaceous strata in ways that are not thoroughly understood, but today the strata are well known The basin of the Sound is almost filled with layered sediments from Glacial Lake Connecticut e d LONG ISLAND SOUND Recent marine postglacial sediments form the current bottom surface of the Sound A simplified cross section of today’s Long Island Sound and Long Island. Note the steeply sloping plane of the underlying crystalline bedrock, the deep layers of glacial lake sediments that almost fill the Sound’s basin, and the extensive layers of Cretaceous Period coastal plain sediments that underlie the later glacial moraine sediments on Long Island. Ancient river delta sediments submerged in the Sound Connecticut River delta sediments Glacial lake sediments Crystalline bedrock l Vertical scale exaggerated Crystalline bedrock lline bedrock North After R. Lewis, in Latimer et al., 2014, and M. Bell 1985. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 39 9/7/16 10:04 PM 40 Exposed granite gneiss bedrock on the shore of Twin Island, Pelham Bay Park, in the Bronx, New York City. This bedrock formation and similar rock types also lie deep beneath Long Island. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 40 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 41 41 9/7/16 10:04 PM 42 PHYSICAL COAST to the general public as the primary source of Long Island’s drinking water. The Magothy, Raritan, and Lloyd aquifers are water-rich layers of Cretaceous Period sediments that form Long Island’s foundation (see illustration, pp. 38–39). An elevation map of Long Island (below), showing the two major moraines that formed the island, the Ronkonkoma and Harbor Hill–Roanoke Point Moraines. Note the large, smooth outwash plains that lie north and south of the Ronkonkoma Moraine. The Ronkonkoma is a terminal moraine, formed at the southernmost edge of the glacier 25,000 years ago. The smaller Harbor Hill–Roanoke Point–Orient Point moraine complex was formed about 21,300 years ago, when the ice sheet had melted back 8–10 miles to the north and formed a second recessional moraine. The steep shoreline cliffs of Caumsett State Historic Park on Lloyd’s Neck on the North Shore of Long Island are one of the few places where these Cretaceous Period sediment layers are exposed on the surface (see pp. 44–45), but the exposed Cretaceous layers in the Caumsett cliffs were probably elevated by actions of the Wisconsinan glacial ice. The Cretaceous sediments show as a red-orange band of gravel and clay about 50 feet up the Caumsett cliffs from the beach level. The glacial outwash plains of Long Island began to form when the major regional moraines were being created. Meltwater streams and thousands of years of weathering distributed the lighter sand, silt, and gravel of the moraines into broad, flat outwash plains to the north and south of the Ronkonkoma Moraine (see map below). The Harbor Hill–Roanoke Point recessional moraine also weathered into outwash plains south of the moraine, but north of the Roanoke Point Moraine, the waves of Long Island Sound have steadily cut into the moraine face, creating the almost continuous line of earthen cliffs that form the southern shore of the Sound east of Port Jefferson almost all the way to Orient Point. The relatively smooth and flat outwash plains of Long Island Digital elevation map created by Prof. J. Bret Bennington of Hofstra University and used with permission. Crane Neck Point Eatons Neck Point Lloyd Neck Oyster Bay Smithtown Bay Port Jefferson Mantinecock Point THE PINE BARRENS LAIN O U T WA S H P “The Necks” Huntington H Drowned river valleys HA R BO R L IL M OR AI N E Hempstead Lake Ronkonkoma Dix Hills West Hills RONKONK Interlobate moraine Kame delta O U T WA S Kame delta South Valley Stream AI H PL MOR AINE N Bellport Bay Babylon AIN O U T WA S H P L A OM O yste Great South Bay r B ay Fire Island Jones Beach Long Beach The Rockaways LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 42 9/7/16 10:04 PM THE PINE BARRENS PHYSICAL COAST 43 had a significant effect on the colonial era and later development of the island. Long Island developed from the west and New York Harbor toward the eastern end of the island. The flat land and rich, sandy soil of the outwash plains favored farming, dairy, and small livestock operations. Roads and later railroads were relatively easy to build: the original track of the Long Island Rail Road did not require a single bridge from New York City to Greenport on the North Fork, a distance of almost 90 miles. However, early waterpowered manufacturing and mill operations were limited by a lack of suitable streams for damming. Long Island has few streams longer than five miles, and even the largest, the Peconic River, flows so slowly that it was unsuitable for driving mills. The cliffs of the Roanoke Point Moraine also limited the development of fishing and shipping on the southern coastline of the Sound; there are only two small natural harbors in the almost 50 miles of coastline from Port Jefferson east to Orient Point. The northern coast T RA IN RO N LAI SH P O U T WA Riverhead INE ENS IN SH PLA NE POI ANOKE THE PINE BARRENS NT M O IN Great Peconic Bay THE PINE BARRENS O U T WA LA SH P E E Orient Point Shelter Island Gardiners Island Gardiners Bay Napeague Bay Montauk Point Little Peconic Bay N Roanoke Point A RI NT Plum Island E K OMA ON K MO RAI NE East Hampton RO R O PO I N MO Southampton IN ort Bay LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 43 9/7/16 10:04 PM 44 PHYSICAL COAST The wave-cut earthen cliffs of Lloyd Point in Caumsett State Historic Park, Long Island. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 44 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 45 45 9/7/16 10:04 PM 46 PHYSICAL COAST The northern coast of Long Island Sound has a distinctly rocky New England look, an abrupt change from the low, sandy coastlines just south of New York Harbor. Connecticut has no coastal plain. As in the rest of New England, multiple glaciations over the past 2.6 million years removed the sediments of the former coastal plain, leaving behind a bare, rocky shore that has moderated only slightly in the roughly 17,600 years since the glacier melted from the Connecticut region. A drowned coastline As the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode ended and the sea level rose to fill the basin of Long Island Sound, it drowned the rough, postglacial coastline of Connecticut, filling the many river mouths with salt water and creating the modern jagged coastline of natural harbors and bays between jutting rocky headlands. The rising sea isolated headlands such as Lighthouse Point in New Haven and Rocky Neck State Park in East Lyme. Off Branford, a set of low granite gneiss hilltops was flooded by the rising waters, and those hilltops became the Thimble Islands. The Quinnipiac River in New Haven is a typical tidal river. The brackish water near the river mouth rises and falls with the tides of Long Island Sound. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 46 The flooded river valleys explain the state’s many tidal rivers. In the Mohegan language of the region, “tuck” and its English corruption, “tic,” meant “tidal river.” Connecticut itself was named after the Connecticut River, derived from the Algonquian “quinnehtukqut,” meaning “upon the long tidal river.” From west to east the Bronx, Hutchinson, Mamaroneck, Mianus, Norwalk, Saugatuck, Pequonnock, Housatonic, Quinnipiac, Connecticut, Niantic, Thames, Mystic, and Pawcatuck Rivers are all tidal, as are many smaller rivers. Despite 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST 47 Granite gneiss bedrock and glacial boulders at Bluff Point Coastal Reserve, Groton, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 47 9/7/16 10:04 PM 48 PHYSICAL COAST the name, these tidal rivers usually contain salty or brackish water only at their mouths on the Sound. Salt water rarely moves farther than a mile inland in most smaller shallow rivers, making each river’s mouth an estuary. The tidal influence is transmitted by the flow of river water, moving against the tide as it comes in, backing up the river and producing a high tide in the river itself, or flowing easily with the ebbing tide, lowering the river level. On the Connecticut River the surface water is largely fresh at the I-95 bridge, and salt water rarely moves north of that point, at least at the surface. In a large, deep river like the Connecticut, relatively heavy salt water may intrude farther upstream, flowing underneath a layer of lighter freshwater near the surface. The extensive salt marshes of Stonington, Connecticut’s Barn Island Wildlife Management Area sit on river delta sediments, as do all the large salt marshes along the north coast of Long Island Sound. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 48 A sediment-poor coast The rocky northern coastline of the Sound is relatively poor in sand and other sediment. As a result, there are only a few small sandspits and no true barrier islands; other large, sandy coastal features are also largely absent. Connecticut’s most common coastal sediment areas are small river deltas formed of sand and gravel sediments carried by meltwater streams flowing off the glacier as it melted. These small, flat delta areas near the coast were ideal for early farming and later were perfect locations for small airports. Stratford’s Sikorsky Airport, Tweed–New Haven Airport, and the Groton Airport all sit on river delta sediments, as do all of Connecticut’s major salt marshes. Most of these north shore river deltas of fine sediment are now submerged in Long Island Sound, drowned when the sea level rose as the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST 49 ended (see illustration, pp. 38–39 bottom). When the ancient bedrock along the northern shore of the Sound was corrugated into north-south folds by continental collisions 500 million years ago, it had major effects on the river drainage patterns along the Westchester and Connecticut shorelines and on the human development of the northern coast of the Sound. The major New England rivers that drain into the Sound all run in roughly north-south valleys originally created by bedrock folding or fault lines. As you drive east or west along Route 6 or the Merritt Parkway in Connecticut you experience these giant north-south folds in the bedrock as a continuous series of rises over hills and descents into valleys, with few flat stretches of ground between Greenwich and Stonington. The combination of bedrock ridges interspersed with valleys, a complex coastline of bedrock promontories, and wide tidal river mouths made the development of east-west roads and bridges difficult or impossible for early European settlers on the northern coast of the Sound. However, the complex coastline offered many natural harbors, and cities like Bridgeport, New Haven, and New London became major shipping centers for both local coastal and international trade. In the absence of coastal roads and bridges, sail and later steamboat traffic on Long Island Sound were the only practical ways to move east and west along the northern coast of the Sound. As iron building technologies advanced in the mid- to late nineteenth century, railroad and later automobile bridges were finally LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 49 9/7/16 10:04 PM 50 PHYSICAL COAST built across the wide mouths of the Housatonic, Connecticut, and Thames Rivers. The thin, stony soils of Westchester County, New York, and coastal Connecticut did not favor large-scale farming, and most agriculture along the northern coast of the Sound faded as competition from more efficient farmlands in the Midwest combined with new canal and railroad networks to make grain and produce cheaper to import than to grow locally. However, the many small to medium-sized rivers running swiftly in narrow, rocky valleys favored the development of waterpowered manufacturing, and many small grain mills and early factories were constructed along the Connecticut coastal slope. The north-south pattern of Connecticut’s rivers also helped settlement and trade: goods were easily shipped downriver from the interior to the coast for transport on larger ships. Mystic Seaport, Connecticut. The rugged north coast offered early European settlers many fine natural harbors that were crucial for the early colonial development of the northern coast of the Sound. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 50 Glacial boulders and erratics Millions of glacial boulders dot the landscapes surrounding Long Island Sound, and the shallows of the Sound itself are notorious among boaters for the hundreds of hidden rock hazards. Not every glacial boulder, however, is a glacial erratic. Glacial erratics are boulders that have been moved by ice some distance from their original bedrock sources, so that the rock type of the glacial erratic does not match the bedrock underneath it. The Wisconsinan ice sheet rarely moved glacial 9/7/16 10:04 PM PHYSICAL COAST boulders more than a few miles from their bedrock sources. Far more commonly, the glacier loosened large chunks of rock and boulders without moving them far from their source. For instance, most of the many glacial boulders you see at Bluff Point in Connecticut (see illustration, p. 47) are made of the same bedrock that is exposed at the southern end of the point. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 51 51 Glacial boulders can range in size from softball-sized lumps to towers of rock as big as houses. In New Haven’s West Rock Ridge State Park the famous Judge’s Cave assemblage of large glacial boulders was served as a hideout for two of the three regicide judges who sentenced England’s King Charles I to death before fleeing to the New World and Connecticut. As punishment to Connecticut for harboring the regicides, Long Island was removed from Connecticut colony and given to New York colony in 1676. 9/7/16 10:04 PM 52 Fair-weather cumulus clouds over Gardiners Island. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 52 9/7/16 10:04 PM 53 Weather and Water Sailing off Norwalk, Connecticut. On a summer weekend day as many as 90,000 boats may be out on Long Island Sound. The southern New England and Long Island Sound coastal regions are affected by two major ocean currents: the cold Labrador Current that flows south from the Arctic Ocean along the Atlantic Coast and the warm Gulf Stream that flows northeastward several hundred miles south of Long Island. Although the Gulf Stream may seem far from Long Island Sound, the area benefits from its warmth and from regular warm-water gyre offshoots that come much closer to the Sound and the Block Island Sound region, particularly in summer and early fall. Long Island Sound’s coastal weather is fairly moderate by New England standards. Summer and fall are typically warm and relatively dry. In winter and spring the cold temperatures of Long Island Sound and the Atlantic Ocean beyond produce chilly weather, made more so in spring by the high average rainfall in March and April. The region’s skies are often cloudy or filled with fair-weather clouds, with unobstructed sunshine only 55–60 percent of the time. Long Island Sound’s weather can be fickle, and conditions can change abruptly. As the old regional saying goes, “If you don’t like the weather at the moment, just wait a few minutes.” Wind and water patterns In summer and fall the dominant wind patterns over the Sound are from the west and southwest. They bring warm, moist air up from the south, which helps heat the region after the chill of a long maritime winter and a slow warming in spring. These dominant winds from the southwest are the origin of the famous coastal New England phrase “down east.” LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 53 9/7/16 10:04 PM 54 WEATHER AND WATER New Brunswick Saint John Eastern Maine Coastal Current Halifax Nova Scotia ME Portland Western Maine Coastal Current GULF OF MA INE Wilkinson Basin N o va Scotia Georges Basin MA Providence New Haven CT RI NY The collision and interaction of the cold waters from the Labrador Current with the water from the Gulf Stream to the south are the major oceanic influences on local weather around the Sound. The contrast in water temperatures can generate thick fog banks at any time of year, particularly in the Eastern Basin and over eastern Long Island. Browns Bank Cu nt rre nt re La br ad or Cu r Boston Scotian Shelf Jordan Basin Georges Bank Nantucket Shoals ATLANTIC O CE AN Sailors followed the prevailing winds from the southwest to make an easy passage downwind along the coast toward Rhode Island and Massachusetts. In winter the dominant winds in New England blow from the northwest (see illustration, p. 2). The main exceptions to these dominant patterns are low-pressure storms such as hurricanes and nor’easters. Nor’easters Nor’easters are storms that typically originate in the Gulf of Mexico as warm, moist, low-pressure systems that are then steered northeast across the south-central United States by the prevailing jet stream winds, eventually tracking north-northeast paralleling the Atlantic Coast. Nor’easters are particularly likely when a large high-pressure system sits over the Bahamas area, as this forces the storms off their usual eastward track and toward the northeast. Although a nor’easter can appear at any time of year, these storms are more common in the cold months between October and March, when they can bring devastating winds, large coastal storm surges, and blizzard conditions to coastal regions of the United States and the Canadian Maritime Provinces. A large nor’easter can be as destructive as any hurricane and can cause major changes in the coastlines of Long Island and Connecticut. As a low-pressure system, a nor’easter circulates in a counterclockwise motion and can be pictured as a circular clock face LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 54 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER 55 Boston New York Warm water gyre Cold water gyre Washington, DC Warm water gyre Cape Hatteras Cold water gyre NASA Earth Observatory for points of reference (see illustration, p. 57). As the storm tracks along the coast, the winds circulating from about 5 o’clock to 10 o’clock blow freely across the ocean and pick up speed and moisture. Observers along the coast will experience high winds coming onto shore from the northeast direction— hence the name “nor’easter.” In a powerful nor’easter the winds off the ocean can pile up large waves and hurricanelike storm surges of up to 20 feet on ocean shores, flooding coastal communities and causing shoreline erosion. Winter nor’easters also bring snow. The largest recorded blizzards along the East Coast were nor’easters, such as the famous blizzards of 1978 and 1996, which both dumped two to three feet of snow along large sections of the East Coast in just a few hours. Winter storm Nemo (see illustration, p. 58) in February 2013 was a classic blizzard-generating nor’easter, where a huge, moist, low-pressure system traveled north along the eastern seaboard and met another low-pressure system coming east out of the central United States, triggering a large blizzard that dumped record amounts of snowfall over New England. Severe nor’easters don’t just bring snow. The winds and waves from nor’easters accelerate erosion along the coast and can make long-lasting changes, particularly in sandbars, sandspits, and areas of soft marine sediments along the coasts. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 55 This NOAA satellite image of the Gulf Stream codes water temperatures from blue (cold) to very warm (dark red). The rings are warm or cold gyres, huge circular areas that cycle off the main Gulf Stream, and often bring tropic fish and birds when they drift north into the waters off Montauk and Orient Point. Even the Eastern Basin of the Sound gets some tropic reef fish every year thanks to these offshoots of the Gulf Stream. 9/7/16 10:04 PM 56 WEATHER AND WATER The average temperature and rainfall profiles for New Haven, Connecticut, are typical of the region. Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun 96 97 °F 103 100 82 80 77 68 67 60 Average highs 20 66 79 63 48 44 42 42 38 37 31 28 26 25 Record lows 18 17 4 0 -7 4 3 2 1 76 58 48 41 Average lows Dec 53 51 31 24 Nov 99 74 66 47 40 Oct 81 62 58 38 100 Sep 90 84 69 Aug 91 Record highs 40 Jul -5 -4 Data for New Haven, Connecticut Average monthly rainfall, in inches Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Hurricanes Hurricanes are tropical cyclones born as low-pressure systems off the west coast of Africa that then track westward across the Atlantic, gaining heat energy and moisture from the tropical midocean and arriving on our side of the Atlantic with storm-force winds and heavy seas. As they approach the Atlantic Coast the north-tracking hurricanes gain additional energy from the hot Florida Current at the base of the Gulf Stream, and almost every year these tropical storms hit parts of the East Coast. In the Long Island Sound region these summer and fall storms are the warm-weather counterparts to winter nor’easters and are a major factor in changing and eroding local coastlines. A single major hurricane can cut more earth from the coast than a decade’s worth of slow and steady erosion from the usual weather and waves. In the worst hurricanes the wind pattern is very similar to a nor’easter: heavy winds arrive on the coast from the northeast due to the counterclockwise circulation in these low-pressure storms. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 56 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER 57 Although direct hits from major hurricanes are somewhat rare on the relatively cool coastlines of New England and Long Island, over the past 110 years, 69 tropical storms and hurricanes have tracked over southern New England (see illustration, p. 59). Rising sea levels Waves, winds, and storms have the most immediate visible effect on the shape and shorelines of southern New England, and the sea has risen steadily since the glaciers started melting 25,000 years ago. During the last glaciation the sea level was so low and the ancient shorelines were so far from the modern shorelines that only in the past 3,000 years have the sea and waves shaped the present shores of Long Island Sound and its offshore islands. Rising sea levels are no longer an ancient geologic curiosity. The recent publicity over global climate change—along with the acceleration of the long-term trend of rising seas—means that rising sea levels will have a significant and visible effect on shoreline residents and visitors over the coming decades. Experts on climate change predict that Long Island Sound’s waters will rise by at least a foot by the year 2100, and this rise will have profound impacts on salt marshes, beaches, coastal homes, and other coastal business and transportation infrastructure. The more pessimistic scientists who study climate change see an accelerating trend in rising ocean levels, and they predict that low-lying areas of the Sound’s coasts could ME A nor’easter moving up the Atlantic Coast, showing a typical storm track and counterclockwise wind circulation. NS The most powerful winds come from the northeast Nor’Easter MA Cold air pulled into the storm NY NJ Jet Stream steers the storm northeast The storm gains strength and moisture as it moves up the East Coast offshore Gulf of Mexico Low pressure LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 57 High pressure blocks the normal eastward track 9/7/16 10:04 PM 58 Image: NASA Earth Observatory LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 58 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER see a rise of three to six feet over the next century; in many low-lying areas, shorelines could be pushed back several hundred feet or more (see illustration, p. 60). The sea has been rising steadily since the end of the Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, but much of the recent alarm has centered not just on the higher water levels but also on the increasing rate of sea level rise. 59 Opposite: A nor’easter is a winter hurricane, and can cause even more damage than summer storms. Here Storm Nemo (February 2013) approaches the Gulf of Maine. Warmer global temperatures push up the sea level in two ways: land-based polar ice caps and glaciers are melting, and warm water occupies more volume than cold water. Wave action Ocean waves form as wind moves over the surface of the sea, and the friction drag on the water surface forms ripples that consolidate into larger waves. The process is largely a matter of energy transfer: the sun warms the atmosphere and the solar energy creates winds. The winds move over the ocean, transferring some of their energy into the surface waters. On average about 8,000 waves per day hit the exposed ocean Data from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) records of the tracks of 69 tropical storms and hurricanes that have passed over the region since 1900. H3 H2 H1 Tropical storm LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 59 9/7/16 10:04 PM 60 WEATHER AND WATER High estimate 6.6 feet SEA LEVEL RISE SCENARIOS for 2100 A.D. Intermediate high 4.0 feet Measurements of sea level with tide gauges became common after 1880. After 1992 much more accurate measures have been done by satellite, and show that the sea is now rising at an eighth of an inch per year, twice as fast as in 2003. 1500 1600 1700 1800 Low estimate 0.6 feet 1880 2013 –1 foot Reconstructed from sediment samples Intermediate low 1.7 feet 2100 A.D. Observed Projected beaches of New England and Long Island. As2013waves reach Source: National Geographic, September, land, the impact of their breaking creates enough energy over time to move large quantities of sediment from the coast into coastal currents. Although the glaciers contributed the earthy substance of southern New England and Long Island, most of what you see along the modern shoreline reflects the work of wave energy eroding and sculpting that raw glacial till into the regional coast that we see today. A large storm wave can break onto the beach with a force as great as two tons per square foot. Over the last few thousand years even the relatively small waves of Long Island Sound have removed large amounts of glacial sediments. The rocky headlands of the Sound’s north shoreline are fairly impervious to the modest waves of the Sound, but the soft sediments that form the south shore of the Sound erode much more quickly. Through a process called wave refraction, waves tend to smooth out an irregular soft earthen or sandy coastline, attacking softer glacial sediment headlands that jut out into the Sound along Long Island’s North Shore. Soft earthen or sand headlands are worn down by the waves, and the material the waves remove from headlands tends to be spread along the surrounding coast by local currents that run parallel to the shoreline. On the southern shore of Long Island Sound the smooth arc of eroded moraine cliffs that stretches from Port Jefferson all the way to Orient Point is a testimony to the power of even the relatively small waves of the Sound to smooth shorelines over time. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 60 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER 61 Tides and coastal zones Apart from the moment-by-moment action of waves on the shoreline, the tides most strongly define the movements of water on Long Island Sound. Tides are like the slow breathing actions of the Sound, attuned to the movements of the moon and the sun and critical for plant and animal life both within the Sound and along its edges. The tidal movements of ocean water convey life and nutrients to such shoreline environments as salt marshes, beaches, and mudflats. Ocean tides are caused primarily by the gravitational pull of the moon and to a lesser extent by that of the sun. The gravitational effects of the moon and sun on earth’s waters are complex, and the shape and depth of local landforms and the sea bottom further influence the depth and timing of tides. The moon’s gravity and position relative to the earth are the strongest influences on the height and timing of ocean tides. As the moon rotates around the earth once every 27.3 days, its gravitational pull creates a slight bulge in the ocean surface closest to the moon. The lunar day—the time it takes the moon to rotate once around the earth—is 50 minutes longer than the solar day, and so the tide cycle advances 50 minutes every day according to our clocks and calendars. These lunar or astronomical tides are also semidiurnal, rising and falling twice during each 24-hour-and-50-minute lunar day. The relative positions of the earth, moon, and sun also modify tidal height throughout the month. Twice a month, at the new and full moon cycles, when the earth, moon, and sun are all in alignment, the combined gravitational pull of the moon and sun causes higher-than-average tides called spring tides. These spring tides have nothing to do with the annual season of spring; rather, they spring up 20–30 percent higher than average high tides. Each spring tide lasts about four days. When the moon and sun are completely out of phase, during the first and last quarters of the moon, tidal ranges are 20–30 percent lower than average, and the resulting unusually moderate tides are called neap tides. Roughly 50-minute advance each day 2:00 AM 2:41 AM Tides don’t occur at the same times every day because tides are influenced by the lunar day, which is 50 minutes longer than the solar day. 3:25 AM 10 feet 8 6 4 2 Feb 26 12 2 4 6 8 AM 10 12 Feb 27 2 4 6 PM LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 61 8 10 12 2 4 6 8 AM 10 12 Feb 28 2 4 6 PM 8 10 12 2 4 6 8 AM 10 12 2 4 6 PM 8 10 12 9/7/16 10:04 PM 62 WEATHER AND WATER Tides are also influenced by how close the earth is to the moon. The moon does not rotate around the earth in a perfect circle: it rotates in a slightly oval path that puts the moon closer to the earth twice every 27.3 days. When the moon is closest to the earth in its oval orbit, it is said to be in perigee. Roughly twice a year the occurrence of spring tides in the new or full moon phases will coincide with the moon’s closest approach to earth in its orbit, and we get extremely high tides, called perigean spring tides or king tides. Winds can also affect tide cycles. In shallow waters a strong opposing wind can temporarily slow or even stop tidal flow. The nightmare scenario for weather effecting tides is when a hurricane or nor’easter arrives at the same time as a spring tide or—even worse—a perigean high tide. The combined high tides and storm surge can cause terrible coastal flooding. In April 1940 a nor’easter arrived during a perigean high tide and drove water 13 feet above the normal high tidemarks, flooding many New England and Long Island coastal towns and causing extensive damage. The shape and depth of bodies of water and the surrounding landforms also affect the range of tidal movements. The tidal ranges of ports around Long Island Sound vary greatly. Near the eastern exits of Long Island Sound they typically vary 2–3 feet. In the Western Basin the funnel effect of the landforms that narrow the Sound causes higher tides. At Greenwich Harbor tides typically range to 7.4 feet. It takes about 2.5 hours for a tide to move across the east-west length of the Sound and about the same time to move from the mouth of the Connecticut River up to Middletown. Long Island Sound is what oceanographers call a resonant tidal basin, and this tidal resonance largely accounts for the differences between tidal ranges from west to east in the Sound. In long, narrow bodies of water like the Sound the daily in-out movements of the tides set up a recurring wave of momentum or resonance (think of a swing moving back and forth), amplifying the size of the tidal movements in both high and low tide cycles. The effect of tidal resonance is most pronounced in the narrow Western Basin. Connecticut’s four largest rivers are all tidal rivers. The Housatonic, Quinnipiac, Connecticut, and Thames—as well as many smaller rivers along the coast—all rise and fall in unison with tides in Long Island Sound. The Connecticut River is tidal as far north as Hartford, where the tidal range averages just under two feet. In a tidal river the brackish water of the Sound does not penetrate far upriver. Tidal rivers rise LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 62 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER 63 Tide-generating force lines Lunar gravity Earth Moon Tides spring up when the pull of the moon and sun is aligned Spring tide Earth Sun Moon Moon Tides are lower when the moon is not aligned with the sun Earth Sun Neap tide Last quarter There are two neap tides and two spring tides each lunar month Sun New moon Earth Neap Spring Spring Neap Full moon First quarter LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 63 9/7/16 10:04 PM 64 WEATHER AND WATER New Haven Tidal ranges in Long Island Sound (average range in feet) 6 Bridgeport New Rochelle 5 6.9 7.4 2.6 3.5 2.3 2.5 6.4 Norwalk Stamford Old Saybrook Guilford 2.5 5 6.6 Port Jefferson 7.4 Glen Cove 2 The typical open-ocean tidal range is about 2 feet and fall because the high tide in the Sound backs up the flow of fresh river water, temporarily raising the water level of the river, and then lowers the river during low tide, when the river flows more easily into the lower Sound waters. Zonation All coastal marine environments are organized in vertical zones. Tide levels and the slope of the land as it meets the water determine the zones of marine life in salt marshes, along rocky shores, and on beaches, where the difference of a few inches of tide level or degrees of slope can completely alter the vegetation and animal life in a zone. Coastal environments also have horizontal zones. The most common factors in horizontal zoning are slope and the distance to freshwater. Salinity and freshwater flow also influence which plants and animals can survive in a particular habitat. Salt spray is another horizontal zoning factor. Only a few plant species can thrive in areas that regularly receive salt spray, so distinct zoning patterns form along coastline vegetation. These zones separate areas that receive a constant spray or dusting of salt from others that are more sheltered from wind-borne salt. Too much tidal soaking can drown some plants and animals or bring in too much salt. Too little exposure to tides starves many marsh creatures like fiddler crabs and mussels. For many species, no tide water means no food. The influence of tidal salt water is especially obvious in salt marshes. In the low marsh that is partly submerged twice a day, tall, salt-tolerant grasses like Saltwater Cordgrass predominate. Higher in the marsh, where plants are less exposed to salt water, shorter grasses like Saltmeadow Cordgrass form large salt meadows. Each section of the salt marsh supports a unique community of plants and animals with varying degrees of salt toler- LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 64 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER ance. Tidal water brings nutrients and prey animals into the marsh at flood tide and removes nutrients from the marsh at ebb tide, supporting marine environments in deeper water. Marshes and tidal flow provide important shelter to the young of many species of fish and marine invertebrates. 65 The vertical zonation of life on rocky shores is usually quite visible and is tightly related to the height of tides and typical local wave patterns. Along rocky shorelines, vertical zonation creates distinct horizontal bands of bacterial, plant, and animal life, controlled by tide levels and by competition among species for the best spaces on the rocks. Knowledge of average high and low tidemarks is usually sufficient for a quick understanding of most coastal environments, but in salt marshes the monthly variation of spring and neap tides ultimately controls zonation. Luckily, you don’t need exotic tide tables to see the zones; you just need to look at the pattern of plants to infer how high the highest high tides get (the Mean Spring High Water, or MSHW, level). In a typical Long Island Sound salt marsh, the MSHW level will be marked by Marsh Elder (also called high tide bush) and Groundsel Trees, which will grow right to the edge of a salt marsh but cannot tolerate much direct contact with salt water. Spot those two bushes, and you’ll know how high the highest tides get in that marsh. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 65 9/7/16 10:04 PM 66 WEATHER AND WATER The tide-based vertical zonation in salt marshes is no less critical for wildlife but more difficult to see unless you know the classic marsh grasses and plants that grow at certain tide heights. Marsh Elder (Iva frutescens), also known as high tide bush, is a good indicator of the Mean Spring High Water mark, the highest level of saltwater flooding in salt marshes, which happens twice each month. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 66 Salinities and temperatures Water temperatures in Long Island Sound range widely with the seasons, with near-surface temperatures averaging 33–45°F in winter and 70–75°F in summer. In January the average water temperature is about 34°F, and in especially cold winters (such as early 2015), many shallow, brackish inlets freeze over. Temperatures peak in mid-August at around 75°F, which contributes to relatively mild fall temperatures along the coast. For most of the year the Sound’s water temperatures are fairly well mixed from surface to bottom. In summer, however, a distinctly warmer layer develops near the surface, forming a relatively sharp temperature divide between the surface and the deeper waters. 9/7/16 10:04 PM WEATHER AND WATER 67 Salinities in the Sound range from an oceanic 32 parts per thousand (ppt) at the eastern end to a brackish 22 ppt in the Western Basin. For comparison, average ocean salinity is 35 ppt, and freshwater has a salinity of no more than 0.5 ppt. There is no strict definition of brackish water (mixed salt and freshwater). In large estuaries like Long Island Sound and the Chesapeake Bay, salinities can range from 1–5 ppt near river mouths to 30–33 ppt near outlets to the ocean. New Haven Salinity ranges in Long Island Sound Old Saybrook Guilford (parts per thousand) Bridgeport 20–22 ppt Nearly oceanic salinties 25–30 ppt Stamford New Rochelle 32–33 ppt Eastern Basin Central Basin Norwalk Western Basin Port Jefferson 33–35 ppt Glen Cove Open-ocean salinties Typical salinities for Long Island Sound Number of species Freshwater species Marine species Brackish water species 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Salinity in parts per thousand (ppt) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 67 9/7/16 10:04 PM 68 Mystic Seaport Museum and the whaler Charles W. Morgan. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 68 9/7/16 10:04 PM 69 Human History Library of Congress A train of the New Haven Railroad in the 1850s. Railroads opened the Connecticut coast to development and to commuters from the New York City region. With the retreat of the glaciers from the Long Island Sound area around 15,000 years ago, Paleo-Indian–Period huntergatherers probably moved into what was then a fairly harsh, tundralike landscape. The first radiocarbon-dated evidence of human activity in southern New England dates from around 10,000 years ago. People likely moved even earlier into the ice-free refugium areas south of what is now Long Island, but evidence of those early settlements has long since been submerged by the Atlantic Ocean. During this time the climate in the Sound region was rapidly warming, and the area was transitioning from tundra and spruce-fir boreal forests into the oak-maple-hickory eastern deciduous forests of today. When the first European explorers arrived in coastal New York and southern New England, the area had approximately 90,000 Native American residents, but population estimates are imprecise because so many Native Americans died of European diseases before any practical census could be conducted. Most Native Americans in the Long Island Sound area spoke closely related variants of the Algonquin language and had distinct territorial areas along the Connecticut shoreline and eastern Long Island. On the Connecticut coast, tribes migrated between shoreline settlements in warmer weather and more sheltered inland locations during winter. The Native American tribe and place-names that survive were assigned LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 69 9/7/16 10:04 PM 70 HUMAN HISTORY MASSACHUSETTS Pocumtuc Massachusett Nipmuck CONNECTICUT RHODE ISLAND Tunxis NEW YORK Pequot Mohegan Paugussett Mattabesic Quinnipiac West Niantic Mashpee Narragansett East Niantic Cape Cod Bay Wampanoag Nantucket Sound Narragansett Bay Martha’s Vineyard Block Island Long Island Sound Shinnecock Nauset Nantucket Montaukett Long Island The Native American tribes of the Long Island and southern New England region gave us some of the most familiar place-names in our landscape. *The long, rich history of the Native American peoples of southern New England is beyond the scope of this guide. For more information, I highly recommend these two books: Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England, by William Cronon, revised edition. New York: Hill and Wang, 2003. Connecticut’s Indigenous Peoples: What Archaeology, History, and Oral Traditions Teach Us About Their Communities and Cultures, by Lucianne Lavin. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 70 by European settlers who phonetically translated the original Algonquian names. Those ancient names are some of the most familiar in the region: Connecticut, Niantic, Quinnipiac, Narragansett, Metacomet, Montauk, Shinnecock, Hammonasset, and Housatonic are but a few of the Native American tribe and place-names now famous in the region. The population density of pre-Columbian Connecticut was very low by today’s standards, and the hunting, fishing, and small-scale agriculture the tribes practiced had modest ecological affects on the land or shoreline.* European explorers and early settlers Dutch explorer and merchant Adriaen Block was the first European to describe Long Island Sound in detail. In multiple voyages through the length of the Sound in 1611–14, Block surveyed the Connecticut Coast and Block Island (which bears his name) and traveled up the Connecticut River past the Hartford area. Maps of the Connecticut coast that Block helped prepare note a small island off the Guilford and Madison coast, Valken Eylandt, or Falcon Island. Block could have seen migrating Peregrine Falcons or Merlins (small falcons), or this could be a mistaken reference to the large Common and Roseate Tern colonies still seen on today’s Falkner Island. It might also be a reference to the numerous Ospreys that once nested on the island. Block also described New Haven Harbor, East and West Rocks, and the Quinnipiac River marshes. Dutch fur traders established a brief settlement near Hartford in 1623, but the English quickly came to dominate the New 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 71 York and Connecticut area in the mid-1600s. In 1638, John Davenport, Theophilus Eaton, and their followers established the Quinnipiack Colony at New Haven, the first major English settlement along the Connecticut coast, and about the same time a smaller settlement was founded at Saybrook, at the mouth of the Connecticut River. The arrival of Adriaen Block and the Dutch and English settlers who followed him were a disaster for the Native Americans of the Long Island Sound region. Contemporary histories of the time mention regional conflicts such as King Philip’s War of 1675–76 but rarely describe the devastation that European diseases caused to Native Americans, who had no immunity to the new infections. In many areas, up to 95 percent of the population died of smallpox, measles, plague, and other diseases within a decade of European arrival. Early Dutch settlers from New Amsterdam (later to become New York City) began to settle the western end of the area they named Lange Eylant. Although English from Connecticut established several small communities on eastern Long Island by the mid-1600s, they did not settle in western Long Island until after the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the English in 1674. The English settlers on eastern Long Island considered themselves part of the Connecticut Colony, but the Duke of York, who resented Connecticut for having harbored the regicide judges who sentenced his father, King James I, to death, forced Long Island to join New York in 1676, ending Connecticut’s claim to the island. During the Adriaen Block’s tiny ship Onrust (Restless), built by Block and his men on a beach on Manhattan Island during the harsh winter of 1614 after their original ship burned and sank in an accident. Wikipedia: Homan map of 1716 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 71 9/7/16 10:04 PM 72 HUMAN HISTORY Revolutionary War and well into the 1800s, Long Island remained largely rural and sparsely settled. Settlement gradually moved eastward from New York City, driven primarily by small farms that fed the growing city. Long Island Sound and the larger Connecticut tidal rivers provided a crucial transportation network at a time when roads between settlements were few and poor. The strong maritime tradition that persists in Long Island Sound ports like Stonington, Mystic, New London, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Port Jefferson was founded before canals, railroads, and highways made routine land transportation possible. The era of steamships in the early to mid-1800s only increased the importance of Long Island Sound as a transportation route between New York, eastern Long Island, Connecticut, Boston, and the rest of New England. For more than 50 years in the nineteenth-century steamships like this New Haven line vessel were the primary transportation on Long Island Sound. The Long Island Rail Road, which reached Greenport on the north fork of the Island in 1844, was planned as a faster, safer alternative to Long Island Sound steamship lines for passenger traffic and light freight shipping to Boston. Bostonbound New York passengers rode the Long Island Rail Road east to Greenport, where they took a steamship ferry across to Stonington Connecticut, and then boarded a train to Boston. As a financial venture the early reailroad nearly failed, but the new access route across the island spurred development in the middle and eastern reaches of Long Island, and ultimately those new towns proved to be the rail line’s savior. During the mid-nineteenth century the railroad opened more than 50 stations in (present-day) Nassau County and another 40 in NE N E W H AV E N L I N E LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 72 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 73 Suffolk County, creating the foundation for the later growth of suburbs and industry. With the opening of the New Haven Railroad between New York and Boston in 1848, travelers gained a fast, safe alternative to steamboat service, which could be dangerous during winter. Travel of all kinds increased along the Connecticut shore. The Connecticut coast became a popular vacation destination for New Yorkers, echoed today in popular tourist areas like Mystic and the lower Connecticut River towns. In the late 1800s the New Haven Railroad and the LIRR also created another regional staple: the daily commuter. For the first time, wealthy people could consider living far from their place of work, and western Long Island and southwestern Connecticut became distant suburbs of New York City. The shoreline was a major source of food for Connecticut and Long Island residents all through the 1700s and 1800s, and shellfish, finfish, and lobsters supported the growing population. The still relatively unpolluted Sound supported large populations of Eastern Oysters, Atlantic Bay Scallops, Northern Quahogs, and Northern Lobsters. Early human effects Late in the colonial period and into the early 1800s Connecticut’s growing industries began to have significant effects on the Connecticut rivers and shoreline and on the health of Long Island Sound. On Long Island the population gradually expanded eastward from New York City, but the lack of streams suitable for damming to support small industry and grain mills initially slowed settlement there. N E W HAV E N L I N E LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 73 9/7/16 10:04 PM 74 HUMAN HISTORY Connecticut’s major tidal rivers were once the largest habitat for anadromous fish, such as Atlantic Salmon, Striped Bass, Alewife, and American Shad, on the Atlantic Coast. These fish live mostly in salt water but enter freshwater rivers in spring to breed. Construction of the dam at Turner’s Falls, Massachusetts, in 1794 largely destroyed the Connecticut River salmon run. Smaller dams and heavy Industrial Era pollution finished off fish runs in Connecticut’s rivers until fish restoration efforts began in the 1970s. Early waterpowered factories along Connecticut’s smaller rivers like Norwich’s Ponemah Mills, though vital to the economic development of the state, largely destroyed the indigenous breeding populations of anadromous fish species, including Striped Bass, American Shad, and Atlantic Salmon. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 74 Whaling ports Whales were once abundant in local New England waters. Before they became widely hunted—and almost extinct in New England waters—Humpback Whales were commonly seen in Block Island Sound and the Eastern Basin of Long Island Sound. In 1799, 200 whales were counted off Stonington, Connecticut, although the account does not name the species. Early whalers ventured no farther than the Georges Bank, Newfoundland, and the Grand Banks, but by 1800, Connecticut whalers needed to travel to the Arctic, the South Atlantic, and to even round Cape Horn into the Pacific Ocean to fill their holds with whale oil. North Atlantic Right Whales and Humpback Whales were the primary targets in early New England whaling because they are coastal species that are slow swimmers and float when killed. Fin Whales and Northern Minke Whales were also abundant in New England waters but were too fast for 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 75 early whalers to capture easily and tended to sink when dead. Sperm Whales were valued for their high-quality oil, but they live in deep ocean waters and seldom approach the shallow waters of the continental shelf. Today Sperm Whales are sometimes seen in the very deep waters along the continental shelf and Hudson Canyon areas well south and east of Long Island but never approach the coast unless they are unhealthy. Whaling became more sophisticated by the 1820s, with large ships capable of long ocean voyages and with large welltrained crews to chase the fast and strong Sperm Whale, which yielded the most profitable oils and candle waxes. Mystic, Connecticut, is famous for its association with Yankee whaling, but Bridgeport, New Haven, East Haddam, New London, and Stonington also supported whaling fleets from the 1830s to the 1860s. New London was New England’s largest whaling port and supported more tonnage of whale ships than did the more famous Nantucket or New Bedford. More than 250 whaling ships sailed from New London at the height of the trade in the mid-1840s. During this time Port Jefferson developed as a major regional shipping center on the Sound but did not support a significant whaling fleet. The Industrial Age Connecticut’s geography lent itself to small-scale, waterpowered manufacturing, and industry developed there much more quickly than in the relatively rural, relatively isolated towns of Long Island. Before the steam engine and the electric motor, water mills with small dams were used to convert the power of flowing rivers into energy for factories. Large tidal rivers like the Connecticut and the Housatonic were too large to be dammed for waterpowered manufacturing. The many smaller rivers in Connecticut’s landscape, such as Norwich’s Shetucket River or the Naugatuck River in the Western Uplands, were ideal for small-scale manufacturing, Whaling in the Sound region declined sharply after the Civil War as the war disrupted the whaling trade, the world’s whale population fell sharply, and kerosene from petroleum became the dominant fuel for home lighting. Whaling in Connecticut died out by 1900. U.S. whale harvest, in thousands of tons 250 War of 1812 Civil War 200 150 100 50 0 1810 1810 1830 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 75 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 9/7/16 10:04 PM 76 HUMAN HISTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 76 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 77 77 9/7/16 10:04 PM 78 HUMAN HISTORY and by the 1830s, Connecticut was the center of the American brass trade. In an era before plastics, brass was the most widely used material for shaping all kinds of small, durable household items. Everything from buttons to lamps, cooking utensils, and candlesticks was made from Connecticut brass. Using a British process that fused zinc and copper, the factories dumped large amounts of copper residues into the rivers. By the mid-1800s, Connecticut rivers like the Naugatuck had serious copper and other metal pollution problems that persist today, long after the brass factories shut down. A boom in town and city populations accompanied the explosion of manufacturing in the Connecticut landscape. The state grew and prospered in the great manufacturing period from 1850 to 1950, but the population strained the environment’s ability to wash away factory wastes and sewage. By 1900, many communities along the coast had seen their rivers, salt marshes, and harbors become dead zones too polluted to support most aquatic life. Despite the damage to coastal water quality, most cities along the shore dumped untreated sewage into their harbors and the Sound well into the late twentieth century, and a number of towns still release raw sewage during periods of high storm-water drainage. After World War II, the suburban population of Nassau County exploded, with all the attendant problems of sewage disposal, automobile pollution, and impervious surfaces such as roads, building roofs, and parking lots. Only after passage of the Federal Clean Water Act of 1972 were significant gains made in cleaning up the region’s waterways, primarily by mandating sewage treatment and through new limits on dumping raw manufacturing wastes into rivers and Long Island Sound. Long Island Sound and the Connecticut coast face severe challenges today from human wastes, lawn fertilizers, and the polluted runoff of paved areas, but the situation is steadily if slowly improving. Overall nitrogen pollution rates are down in many areas due to improvements in sewage treatment systems. Oyster and lobster fisheries The Eastern Oyster has been a valuable human food resource in our area for at least 5,000 years. Native Americans harvested so many oysters that we can locate their ancient coastal villages by large mounds of discarded shells. Oysters were once superabundant along the Connecticut coast. In early colonial times the Quinnipiac River was paved for its last three miles with a solid bed of oysters, and the giant beds continued well into New Haven Harbor. This profusion of shellfish was not unusual—most river mouths and harbors along the Con- LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 78 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 79 necticut coast had large oyster beds, as well as rich shallows and mudflats full of clams and scallops. The water was much clearer than today’s murky green, and the abundant sunlight supported large beds of Eelgrass. After the Civil War, the Connecticut and Long Island oyster fisheries grew rapidly, fueled by the needs of a growing population and aided by the decline of the whaling industry. Many Connecticut whalers shifted into oystering and lobster fishing in the Sound. Demand soon outstripped the natural supplies in local oyster beds, but New Haven’s resourceful oystermen had discovered that oysters could be transplanted successfully from their natural riverbeds into the deeper waters of harbors or even farther offshore. At the peak of oystering in New Haven in 1850–80, the shallows of New Haven harbor were filled with oyster beds, as was the landward side of West Haven’s Sandy Point, guarded around the clock against theft. In Fair Haven, along the Quinnipiac River, oyster houses lined both riverbanks and employed thousands of workers by the early 1880s. Along the mouth of the Housatonic, seed oyster beds ran for several miles. Connecticut was the center of the nation’s oyster industry. Amid the prosperity of the 1880s were warning signs that the Sound’s fisheries were on a collision course with the rapidly growing population and rampant industrial pollution and sewage contamination of Connecticut’s rivers and harbors. Deteriorating water quality forced oyster growers to move their beds farther and farther out into the Sound. Oysters are filter feeders, and they were known to absorb contaminants from polluted water, but the public health dangers of eating raw oysters harvested in the increasingly murky coastal waters were poorly understood or willfully ignored. Lobster landings (Harvest in millions) Oyster harvest (Economic value, millions of dollars) 15 50 CT NY CT NY 40 10 30 20 5 No data 10 0 0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 After Sound Health 2012, www.longislandsoundstudy.net LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 79 9/7/16 10:04 PM 80 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 80 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 81 81 9/7/16 10:04 PM 82 HUMAN HISTORY Tom Andersen’s book This Fine Piece of Water is a useful resource on the human and biological history of Long Island Sound, as well as an examination of its many environmental challenges. In his excellent book This Fine Piece of Water, environmental writer Tom Andersen recounts an incident that shook the confidence of oyster buyers throughout the Northeast and was the beginning of the end for the Sound’s oystermen. In 1892, a group of Wesleyan University students became violently ill with typhoid fever, and it was learned that the students had all dined on raw New Haven oysters at a fraternity party. Investigation showed that the oysters had been bedded in the Quinnipiac River near a sewage outflow from a neighborhood with several recent typhoid cases. The link between polluted water and the oysters was clear. This case was the first of many incidents along the East Coast where polluted or contaminated oysters sickened or killed those who ate them. In 1924, 1,500 people along the East Coast and in Chicago developed typhoid fever after eating contaminated oysters from Norwalk and New Haven. The resulting 150 fatalities were a near-fatal blow for the shoreline oyster industry. The Long Island Sound oyster industry is much smaller today, but the cleaner waters of the Sound and a steady demand for the flavor of New England oysters have led to a renaissance in marine aquaculture in the Sound. Firms like Norwalk’s Norm Bloom and Son, Bridgeport’s Charles Island Oyster Farm, and others together do about $15 million in annual sales of excellent-quality oysters, harvesting more than 450,000 bushels per year. The end of commercial lobster fishing Connecticut’s lobster fishery was never as concentrated or visible as the more industrial oystering, but it persisted through the twentieth century largely because of the resilience and habits of the Northern Lobster itself. Lobsters are bottomdwelling, migratory scavengers that live in deeper waters and were thus insulated from some of the worst effects of water pollution during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In recent years, however, their population in Long Island Sound has plunged. The primary cause is the warmer temperatures of the Sound, perhaps exacerbated by chemical pollution that targets the lobster’s nervous and immune systems or disease or (quite likely) all of these stress factors combined into a perfect storm that has overwhelmed the population. Tom Andersen sees climate change as the key to the lobsters’ decline: “The warmer water is significant because the American lobster is a cold-water species, and Long Island Sound has always been at the extreme southern end of its inshore range. In other words, before the Sound’s water started warming, water temperatures in the Sound were about as warm as lobsters could tolerate anyway.” LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 82 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 83 About 800 lobster fishers once worked the waters of Long Island Sound, and under this intense fishing pressure in a limited geographic area, the Sound’s lobster population was more like a giant aquaculture farm than a wild fishery. In the 1980s and 1990s over 90 percent of lobsters in the Sound were caught within a year of reaching legal size. Many marine biologists think that the lobster population was maintained at an artificially high level by all the bait lobster fishers fed them in the traps. This overpopulation led to yet more stress on the species. The lobster population of Long Island Sound crashed in 1999 and has shown no signs of recovery since then. There are only about 20 commercial lobster fishers in Connecticut today, and that number is falling. In 2013, Connecticut passed a law banning two pesticides that are thought to play a role in the major die-off of lobsters in Long Island Sound. Methoprene and resmethrin have been used to help kill mosquitos carrying the West Nile Virus. Research has shown that lobsters carry a gene very similar to one in mosquitos, and this genetic similarity may make lobsters vulnerable to methoprene and resmethrin, but the link to the lobster die-off is tenuous. Branford commercial fisherman Bren Smith sees the local problem in more global terms: “The lobstermen go after things like pesticides because it’s traditional politics and regulation they understand. It’s hard to wrap your head around a problem like the Sound getting too warm. You can get local officials to ban pesticides, but fighting climate change means you have to do things like fight midwestern coal plants. It’s too abstract, so they fight what they can locally, but the core problem is that the Sound is too warm for lobsters.” Northern Lobster Homarus americanus Connecticut announced a three-month annual ban on lobstering in 2013 in response to a federal mandate to reduce the catch in Long Island Sound by at least 10 percent, due to the plunging population of lobsters in the Sound. There will always be a few Northern Lobsters in the deeper waters of the Sound, and the species is doing well in the Gulf of Maine and in Canada, but Long Island Sound is now a temperate water habitat more suitable for Blue Crabs than for Northern Photo: Giuseppe Lancia LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 83 9/7/16 10:04 PM 84 HUMAN HISTORY Lobsters, and Connecticut’s long tradition of commercial lobstering has ended. The twentieth century and the urban shoreline The rapid urbanization and suburbanization of cities and towns along the Connecticut coast and Long Island North Shore has had a major effect on the natural systems of Long Island Sound. The number of homes, stores, and various kinds of commercial buildings exploded in the century between 1850 and 1950, and this growth was intimately tied to the development of railroads along the Connecticut coast and across the length of Long Island. The newly opened Merritt Parkway in Connecticut, below, and Robert Moses’s Long Island Parkway System were two of the first US highway projects to take advantage of the more powerful cars of the 1930s. As late as the 1840s, steamboats were the only means of long-distance travel in the region for both commercial goods and people. Although the New Haven Railroad opened a line along the Sound from New Haven to New York in 1848, the challenges of crossing the Connecticut and Thames Rivers delayed continuous rail service along the shoreline until the 1880s. Railroads made daily commuting to and from New York City practical for residents of southwestern Connecticut and southeastern New York, and this accelerated growth along the Sound’s coasts. Railroads also spurred regional tourism, particularly along the shoreline, so even towns east of New Haven saw growth from the new lines. The Long Island Rail Road made commuting practical from Manhattan to the Gold Coast areas of Great Neck, Sands Point, and Glen Cove and drove summer tourism from New York City to the North Shore. The primacy of the automobile In 1914, Henry Ford revolutionized the young automobile industry by introducing the Model T Ford, the first car that Photo: Everett Historical LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 84 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 85 middle-class Americans could afford to own. By 1925, the Ford Motor Company was producing 9,000 Model Ts a day, and the increase in automobile ownership in the 1920s led to the building of improved roads. The first parkways in Long Island, Westchester, and Connecticut date from the late 1920s and early 1930s. Along with the roads came commercial development, leading to a dramatic rise in the percentage of land covered by impervious asphalt and cement pavements, parking lots, and building roofs. The new roads created a demand for faster and more powerful cars. Larger gasoline engines in turn drove an increase in automobile exhaust, another major source of excess nitrogen in the environment and in acid rains from the polluted atmosphere. New transportation options allowed the rapid growth of affordable suburban housing in the 1950s and 1960s. The sprawling new suburban communities required yet more cars, and all those new lawns required millions of tons of fertilizer and hundreds of thousands of new sewer connections and septic fields. In the early 1950s, the Eisenhower-era Interstate Highway System Committee (dominated by Detroit carmakers) recommended that America’s transportation needs be met almost entirely by cars and trucks. Construction of the US Interstate Highway System began with the passage of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956. We are still living with the consequences of this vast expansion of roads and highways at the expense of mass transit and railroads. Northeastern residents love to blame midwestern power plants for air pollution, acid rain, and excess nitrogen in the air, but in fact, our regional air-quality problems are at least as much the result of vehicle exhaust fumes that originate locally in the Connecticut, Long Island, and New York City metropolitan areas. As raindrops wash pollutants from our skies, the rain increasingly falls on impervious, man-made surfaces and quickly runs into local sewers and storm drains. The excess nitrogen, acids, metals, carbon particulates, and other pollutants course into rivers and streams that lead into the Sound. This runoff has severely contaminated our rivers, harbors, and Long Island Sound. Along the heavily populated coasts of western Long Island Sound the filtering and absorptive benefits of natural ground cover are so diminished that even seemingly small problems have significant consequences. Pet wastes might not appear to be a serious pollutant, but in such a densely populated area many millions of pets produce a large volume of feces that rarely makes it into the sewage treatment systems and tends to flow from lawns and streets into tributaries and street LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 85 9/7/16 10:04 PM 86 HUMAN HISTORY At street level people readily notice such impervious surfaces as roads and parking lots, but building rooftops are also a major cause of unfiltered runoff into the Sound. Photo: Courtesy of Michael Marsland drainage, which eventually ends up as yet more nitrogen in the Sound. Along with the burdens of airborne pollutants and nitrogen, oil and other pollutants washed from streets, and wastes from sewage treatment plants, the burden of runoff pollutants washed into western Long Island Sound has reached critical levels. Sewage and nitrogen Sewage is the primary continuing threat to the environmental health of Long Island Sound and Connecticut’s coast, particularly in the Western Basin. Over the twentieth century the amount of sewage flowing into Long Island Sound almost tripled. Every day the 82 sewage treatment plants in Connecticut and 23 plants in New York empty more than a billion gallons of partially treated effluent into the Sound and its tributaries. If combined, the sewage outflow from these plants would be the fourth largest tributary of the Sound, behind only the Connecticut, Thames, and Housatonic Rivers in outflow. Besides the dangers of fecal bacteria and other biological contamination, the sewage contains large amounts of nitrogen, which is the root of most of the Sound’s environmental challenges. The chief culprits in Long Island Sound are massive outflows into the Narrows and Western Basin from old and defective sewage systems in Westchester and Nassau Counties on Long Island and Fairfield County in Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 86 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 87 Although most sewage is now at least partially treated before it enters local waterways and Long Island Sound, sewage systems are often overwhelmed by heavy rains and emit untreated sewage after storms. In 2011, Connecticut alone had 2,505 incidents of raw sewage discharges, totaling almost 1.5 billion gallons. In summer these rain-related raw sewage discharges often lead to beach closures. Recent storms have also caused catastrophic flows of sewage into local waters. In October 2012, the heavy rains and storm surge of Hurricane Sandy caused the release of more than 11 billion gallons of untreated sewage into the coastal waters of Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. For comparison, that’s 50 times the volume of the BP Deepwater Horizon spill or enough sewage to fill the area of New York’s Central Park to a depth of 41 feet. In Bridgeport, a single incident during Hurricane Sandy caused the release of 17.1 million gallons of partially treated sewage into Long Island Sound. Nitrogen and hypoxia Nitrogen is a naturally occurring element and, along with carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, a fundamental building block of life. In natural environments nitrogen is in high demand and is usually in limited supply and carefully conserved, particularly in plant physiology. This growth-limiting role of .16 scarce nitrogen is especially .32 important in marine and estuary ecosystems. When a .56 .46 large artificial supply of ni.45 trogen—such as sewage—is .62 .55 introduced into an aquatic environment, the nitrogen .79 .93 Nitrogen trade equalization, pounds per day 1.0 .21 75K Connecticut New York 2014 goal 50K .15 .19 .20 .17 Long Island Sound .83 LIS Point Source Nitrogen Loads .13 .14 .17 .94 .11 .21 .55 Management zones contributing to hypoxia in Long Island Sound (fractal counts of nitrogen pollution) Things are getting better in recent years 25K 0 Baseline 2000 2002 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 87 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 From: LIS Point Source Nitrogen-Trade Equalized Loads, Long Island Sound Study, 2015 9/7/16 10:04 PM 88 Digging for bait, Sandy Point, West Haven, with New Haven Harbor in the background. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 88 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 89 89 9/7/16 10:04 PM 90 HUMAN HISTORY accelerates the growth of simple, fast-reproducing algae, cyanobacteria, and diatoms, collectively called phytoplankton. Like all green plants, phytoplankton release oxygen as they photosynthesize, but at night or in low-light conditions phytoplankton use more oxygen than they release, and in their overabundance the phytoplankton can rapidly deplete the dissolved oxygen in polluted waters. This condition of low dissolved oxygen is called hypoxia, and hypoxia usually follows large phytoplankton blooms. As the algae die from lack of oxygen, water conditions worsen because as the dead algae decompose, their tissues absorb what little oxygen is left in the water. Hypoxia is stressful for all marine creatures, and if it lasts too long or dissolved oxygen levels fall too low, hypoxia is lethal to both the phytoplankton and aquatic animals. Such overfertilized aquatic environments are said to be eutrophic—fertilized to the point where the system continually cycles through boom-andbust sequences of rapid algae growth, mass algae death, and lethal hypoxia. Over the long term eutrophic systems become aquatic dead zones, where only the simplest phytoplankton can survive. In the Narrows and Western Basin, hypoxia peaks in summer, primarily because warm water holds less dissolved oxygen than cold water. In summer the waters of the Sound also stratify based on temperature, exacerbating hypoxia. A warm surface layer forms over a cooler bottom layer, with little mixing of layers. Oceanographers call this stratifying of warm-cold layers capping, and although a warm-water cap is a natural occurrence in waters like the Sound, the nitrogenhypoxia crisis has made capping a problem. The warm surface waters remain richer in oxygen from the air-water interface, but the bottom waters gradually become hypoxic, sealing bottom life off from oxygen at the surface. Frequency of hypoxic areas 1994–2014 0.0 – 0.99 1.0 – 1.99 2.0 – 2.99 3.0 – 3.49 Severe Moderately severe Moderate Marginal Bridgeport Norwalk Stamford New Rochelle New Haven Guilford Old Saybrook LO NG I S L A ND S O U ND B LO C K I SL A ND SO UND Port Jefferson Glen Cove LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 90 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 91 Unfortunately, hypoxia isn’t just a problem in the heavily polluted Western Basin and Narrows. In summer, bays and river mouths along the eastern Connecticut coast can become hypoxic at night, when the algae are not photosynthesizing and producing oxygen, as they do during daylight hours. University of Connecticut researchers Jamie Vaudrey and Charles Yarish were surprised to find these hypoxic conditions—the Eastern Basin of the Sound is considered much cleaner and better flushed with ocean waters than the western end of the Sound. However, the small coastal bays receive a lot of nitrogen and phosphorus runoff from local suburbs, mostly from lawn fertilizers and septic system leakage. These excess nutrients cause the bays to develop unusually large summer algae blooms, and at night the algae consume most of the dissolved oxygen in the bays, which often lack strong currents to import more oxygenated water. By midmorning the bays generally return to normal dissolved oxygen levels, but the phenomenon shows just how at risk even the cleaner areas of the coastline are to long-term damage from hypoxia. Excess phytoplankton cause another important problem in aquatic ecosystems: the algae block sunlight from reaching down into the water column. Before Long Island Sound became eutrophic, the clearer water allowed large beds of Eelgrass to thrive in most shallow areas along the coasts, and the Eelgrass in turn supported a rich community of scallops, crabs, juvenile fish, seabirds, and other marine life. The murky green waters we see today in the Sound, particularly in the Western Basin, now limit the growth of Eelgrass, and a valuable aquatic community has been severely reduced. One study shows worrisome decreases in Eelgrass meadows. In 2002, there were approximately 1,980 acres of Eelgrass meadow in Long Island Sound; by 2009, Eelgrass meadows had declined to 1,559 acres, a 21 percent loss in just seven years. Excess nitrogen in the waters of the Sound produces unnaturally heavy growth of algae. Like all green plants, marine algae release oxygen during photosynthesis, but at night algae use up oxygen in the water as they respire. When algae die, their cells bind up yet more oxygen as they decay, creating a downward spiral of falling dissolved oxygen levels called hypoxia. Hypoxia is worst in late summer, particularly in the Western Basin and Narrows areas of the Sound. Salt marshes are a natural coastal buffer that filters and cleanses water entering the Sound, but the area of marshes around the Sound also continues to shrink. In 2012, one in six marshes studied along the Connecticut shore showed losses, where healthy marsh grasses convert to bare mudflats. Darien’s Scott Cove marshes lost 17 acres from 1974 to 2004, while mudflats in the same area added 17 acres. The marsh loss probably has several causes, but scientists strongly suspect that nitrogen pollution plays a role. Another major factor is the rising sea level. Even a slight rise in the mean spring low water level affects Saltwater Cordgrass, which tolerates saltwater immersion for long periods but cannot thrive when its rhizomes are always submerged. A large area of low salt marsh just north of the Connecticut Audubon Society’s LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 91 9/7/16 10:04 PM 92 HUMAN HISTORY Coastal Center at Milford Point has been lost in the past 20 years owing to this combination of higher water levels and pollution from excess nutrients in the Charles Wheeler salt marshes next to the Housatonic River. Toxic contaminants The Federal Clean Water Act of 1972 helped enormously in shutting down much of the blatant industrial pollution that occurred in Connecticut waters from 1850 to 1975. Unfortunately, many of those Industrial Age pollutants are long-lasting metals and hydrocarbons that still lurk beneath the bottom surface of Connecticut rivers, coastal harbors, and the Sound itself. The most serious of the Sound’s industrial pollutants are PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls). PCBs were widely used for hydraulic fluids, capacitors and transformers, and lubricating and cutting oils, as well as additives in pesticides, paints, adhesives, and plastics. Although PCBs were banned from industrial use in 1977, they still constitute a serious environmental problem because PCBs are so long-lasting and because they are potent biochemical endocrine system disrupters, which in high concentrations have been linked to cancers in animals and humans. Because they are organic compounds, PCBs move easily from the environment into plant and animals tissues, and they bioaccumulate as they move up the food chain. A tiny zooplankton animal might have only a few PCB molecules in its tissues, but a small fish that eats hundreds of the contaminated zooplankton will quickly accumulate a much higher concentration of PCBs, and each step in the food chain brings a manifold increase in PCB contamination. Through bioaccumulation as they move up the food chain, PCBs are often high in the flesh of Striped Bass, Bluefish, and American Eels and in the hepatopancreas (more commonly known as the tomalley) of lobsters and crabs. The states of Connecticut and New York advise restricted consumption of these species in the Western Basin. Oysters and other shellfish still show levels of heavy metals and other industrial contaminants in areas like Bridgeport Harbor and the lower Housatonic River, particularly near Devon. In general, toxic chemical pollutants in bottom sediments are localized to a few known areas of the Connecticut coastline and the Sound. Most of the older pollutants, including DDT, are still bound up in bottom sediments of the Sound, rivers, and harbors, particularly in the Western Basin. Burial in sediments does buffer the Sound from the long-term contaminants, but some areas are periodically dredged to maintain LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 92 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 93 Bioconcentration in marine food chains Apex predators Osprey, tuna, eagles 25 ppm Concentration of contaminants jumps enormously at each level of the food chain Larger predators Striped bass, bluefish 2 ppm Smaller predators co nc en tra tes con tam in ant s Killifish, mummichogs, crabs, lobsters .5 ppm Primary and secondary consumers Zooplankton, snails, squid, mussels .04 ppm th ef oo dc ha in Primary producers in Phytoplankton, algae, sea grasses .0003 ppm u p p te hs c Ea Contaminants like PCBs or mercury, in parts per million (ppm), example numbers LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 93 9/7/16 10:04 PM 94 HUMAN HISTORY shipping channels, and the dredged material is dumped at offshore locations within the Sound, rereleasing the old pollutants to cause new problems. In 2007, the Environmental Protection Agency ruled that sediments from Bridgeport Harbor are too contaminated for disposal in Long Island Sound, and Norwalk was forced to cap polluted dredge material from its harbor with a layer of clean soils to prevent heavy metals and organic pollutants from entering the Sound’s waters. In 2015, the controversy over dumping harbor dredge spoils in Long Island Sound returned when the US Army Corps of Engineers announced plans to renew dredge spoil dumping in designated areas of the Central Basin. Mercury continues to be a problem in Atlantic Coast fish populations, particularly in top predator species like Bluefish and Striped Bass that bioaccumulate toxins and metals from their prey. Although strict curbs on industrial mercury disposal have been in place for decades, mercury is a persistent pollutant that easily enters the food chain. Unhealthy levels of mercury (more than 0.2 parts per million) persist in most populations of fish consumed by humans. About 60 percent of mercury in the Long Island Sound environment comes from local sources such as industrial activity and the improper disposal of fluorescent and compact fluorescent lightbulbs. The other 40 percent comes from airborne sources, primarily from coal-burning power plant emissions in the Midwest. Mercury degrades the functioning of the human nervous system and can cause neurological damage in developing fetuses. Ironically, you hear less about mercury as a pollutant because the same species of food fish and game fish with high levels of mercury also have high levels of PCBs, and the state and federal warnings about fish consumption tend to center on the even more dangerous PCBs. The Connecticut and New York Departments of Public Health advise that pregnant women not eat fish more than once a month and that healthy adults eat fish no more than once a week. Chlordane and mirex, two long-lasting and biologically active pesticides, are also a continuing problem in Long Island Sound. Although mirex was banned in 1978 and chlordane in 1988, both compounds are so persistent that they still appear as contaminants in fish high on the food chain like Striped Bass and Bluefish. Connecticut has also banned the use of the pesticides methropene and resmethrin, which are potentially harmful to lobsters and crabs. Marine debris and ghost gear Trash in the Sound and along its beaches can have grave consequences, both for marine life and for the economic LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 94 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY health of towns and businesses that depend on beachgoers and tourism. Trash is a visible sign of environmental degradation. When people see floating trash or garbage in the wrack line of beaches, it makes them wonder how seriously the local community takes its environmental obligations and whether the trash they can see is just the most visible form of more dangerous contaminants. As many Long Island communities discovered in the summer of 1988, even small amounts of hospital trash or washed-up hypodermic needles can ruin a beach season. 95 Osprey populations across North America were devastated by DDT contamination in the 1960s and 1970s, but since DDT was banned the osprey populations (and many other birds of prey) have made significant recoveries. Floating marine trash can also be a boating hazard. Styrofoam, plastics, and paper trash can easily foul propellers or block cooling intakes, potentially causing serious engine damage. Much of the floatable trash comes from sewage outflows, particularly after heavy rains that overwhelm treatment plants and cause them to spill unfiltered effluent into the Sound. Marine trash is much more than a nuisance to shoreline communities—some common and durable forms of trash can maim or kill wildlife. Many marine creatures will eat floatable items like plastic foam bits, bags, or other colorful junk, mistaking them for their normal prey of marine plankton and jellyfish. The plastic debris can kill an animal by blocking its digestive tract, causing it to starve to death. One of the biggest hazards is discarded fishing gear, often called ghost gear. Each year torn nets, broken lines, old lures, and other lost or discarded fishing gear kill fish, birds, and other wildlife in the Sound through entanglement or crippling injuries that lead to death from exposure or starvation. The Anthropocene Age It is one of our deepest beliefs that nature is capable of healing itself and that even if we humans make mistakes, simply stopping the problem behavior will allow natural ecological processes to restore wild communities. This was once true enough, but it is no longer a rational assumption in the twenty-first century. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 95 9/7/16 10:04 PM 96 HUMAN HISTORY A Great Black-Backed Gull (Larus maritimus) with a foot and leg heavily entangled with monofilament fishing line and part of a lure. This bird later lost the entangled foot but survived the injury and can still be seen regularly at Sandy Point in West Haven. Most entangled birds are not so lucky. We now live in the Anthropocene Age, where the significance and extent of human effects on the environment are the most important factors in the ecology of Long Island Sound, as well as in the wider global ecosystem. The Anthropocene Age is a new term, coined in 2008 by atmospheric scientists who point particularly to the earth’s radically increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide as evidence that human activities are now the most important drivers of climate change. The warming of both the atmosphere and the ocean will profoundly affect all shoreline communities and habitats, bringing changes in the frequency and severity of storms, altering the species mix of local wildlife, and literally changing the shoreline itself as the rise in sea level accelerates. On a local, practical level, an acceptance of the Anthropocene Age means that we can no longer hope that nature alone can heal and rebalance the Sound ecosystems now under heavy stress from habitat loss and pollution. Our significant lobster and oyster fisheries are gone now and will not come back because we declare a brief annual moratorium on lobstering or don’t harvest oysters in summer. Twenty-five years after codfish stocks collapsed in New England waters, there is no sign of recovery despite severe restrictions on commercial cod fishing. Our shoreline communities are now more vulnerable than ever to severe storms, in large part because we have destroyed and built over the natural coastal dunes, wild beach habitats, and salt marshes that once buffered our communities from hurricanes and nor’easters. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 96 9/7/16 10:04 PM HUMAN HISTORY 97 Only active policy changes in sewage and pollution controls, coastal development restrictions, habitat restoration, and emergency preparedness will suffice in the Anthropocene Age. The three recent severe storms—Hurricanes Irene and Sandy and winter nor’easter Nemo—are collectively both a warning and a call to action. Not all bad news One danger of highlighting the many ecological and governmental challenges facing Long Island Sound is making the situation seem hopeless—and that is not true. The overall biological productivity of the Sound as a whole has remained constant over the past 20 years, in spite of many environmental challenges. For example, although individual species may flourish or diminish or face the rise of new ecological competitors due to climate change, yearly surveys of fish species show that the overall biomass of fish in the Sound has remained constant. Long Island Sound and its coastlines remain one of the most attractive regions on the East Coast, as shown by the number of annual visitors, bathers, bird watchers, hikers, and boaters of all sorts. A healthy Long Island Sound is vital to the local economies of Long Island and Connecticut. Property values on the Sound—particularly along the western shores of the Sound in Connecticut, Westchester, and Long Island—remain some of the highest in the United States. Daniel Webster liked to call Long Island Sound “our American Mediterranean,” and clearly many people agree with his appreciation of this unique body of water. Long Island Sound is a beautiful place, appreciated by millions of people every year, and is certainly worth the price of keeping it healthy and attractive. 400 Atmospheric CO2 Concentration (ppm) 350 Ice-core data before 1958. Mauna Loa Observatory data after 1958. 300 250 After Scripts CO2 Program, keelingcurve.ucsd.edu 1750 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 97 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 9/7/16 10:04 PM 98 Common Periwinkles (Littorina littorea) on granite gneiss glacial boulders. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 98 9/7/16 10:05 PM 99 Shallows Bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) Below the low tide lines of Long Island Sound there are four main aquatic habitats. The subtidal zone and deeper bottom areas of the Sound, as well as the unique and important habitat formed by Eelgrass beds, are considered here; the deep, open-water community is described in the next chapter. The subtidal zone Zero to 10 feet below the level of the lowest monthly low tides lies the subtidal zone. At this level life is truly aquatic (although many crabs visit lower intertidal zones in search of food, particularly at night). Because these permanently submerged shallows receive enough sunlight for plant growth, most seaweeds (macroalgae) live in this zone, as do Eelgrass and Widgeon Grass. Wave action shapes this environment both physically through the constantly churning waves and their resulting shore currents and chemically through supplying oxygen and nutrients. For sessile (fixed in place) filter feeders like barnacles and mussels, the constant water movement is critical to life, ensuring a steady supply of food. Beyond 10 feet of depth, the algae and sea grass populations drop sharply owing to the low light levels. Also at around 10 feet, the properties of wave action, superheating in summer, supercooling in winter, and intertidal species’ depth limits quickly make the environment more like deeper bottom conditions. Border zones between one environment and another, or ecotones, are the most productive environments. As a transition zone between tidal areas and deeper waters, the subtidal zone is the most productive area of the Sound. Many open-water LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 99 9/7/16 10:05 PM 100 SHALLOWS fish spend early life in the relative safety of shallows, particularly where Eelgrass beds and rocky bottoms with crevices offer hiding places. Larger predators like Bluefish and Striped Bass sweep through the shallows for prey, and many wading and diving birds specialize in picking off unwary crabs, fish, and shrimp that live in a few feet of water. Ospreys glide high above, looking for the slightest movements from such favored prey as small flounders and Menhaden. The subtidal zone bottom is rocky or pebbled in some areas, sandy or muddy in others. Although many subtidal creatures frequent both areas, most plants and animals specialize in either soft sediments or rocky bottoms. Plants Green plants need sunlight to perform photosynthesis, and light doesn’t penetrate far into water, especially when the water is naturally cloudy with phytoplankton and river silt.The subtidal zone is thus home to larger marine plants. Most Striped Bass (Morone saxatilis) of these are macroalgae (seaweeds) that attach to the bottom, in contrast to single-celled algae, which float freely in the Sound’s waters. Seaweeds come in three basic varieties, loosely grouped by their dominant color: green, red, or brown. The most common green species, Sea Lettuce, is the filmy, bright green algae that is ubiquitous on beaches, along rocky shores, and at salt marsh edges. Another common green seaweed is Green Fleece, seen on both rocky and sandy bottoms and in salt marshes. Green Fleece, which is not native to the United States, spread from the eastern shores of Asia to Europe by attaching to the hulls of sailing ships and reached North America in 1957. The bright green algae that commonly LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 100 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS covers rocks in both the lower intertidal and subtidal zones is called Gut Weed. Stone Hair is a finer-grained, shorterstranded algae that also forms bright green mats on intertidal and subtidal rocks, often in association with the more coarsegrained Gut Weed. Be wary of walking on exposed rocks covered in algae; even when the surface looks dry, it can be slippery underneath. 101 The Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) is one of the most visible birds that feed in the subtidal zone. Almost extirpated in the northeastern coastal region owing to DDT contamination, the Osprey has made a remarkable comeback in the past 30 years, and populations are nearing total recovery. Brown algae are often the most visible and familiar marine plants in rocky areas. Rockweed and Knotted Wrack are the two most common species, seen on seaside rocks, docks, seawalls, or any other fixed structures along the shore. Both species grow from the low intertidal zone of rocky shores well into the subtidal zone, down to a depth of about 3 feet. In the Eastern Basin kelps become more common. Sugar Kelp and Atlantic Kelp grow in the deeper areas of the subtidal zone, from 5 to 20 feet or more, using their long stems to keep their long, flat blades in the well-lit waters near the surface. Kelp beds are not often easily visible from shore, but kelp fronds commonly wash up on beaches along the Connecticut shore, particularly east of the Thames River. Irish Moss is a common red algae that normally sits right at and just below the lowest tide line. In some areas of the world Irish Moss is harvested to extract carrageenan, a jellylike colloid used to thicken and smooth ice cream and other foods. Subtidal invertebrates and fish In marine biology, the collection of plants and animals that live on, under, or near the bottom of a body of water is called LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 101 9/7/16 10:05 PM 102 ALGAE SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca GUT WEED Ulva intestinalis GUT WEED, detail Ulva intestinalis STONE HAIR Blidingia minima STONE HAIR, detail Blidingia minima LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 102 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS GREEN FLEECE Codium fragile 103 ROCKWEED Fucus distichus mochanchan SUGAR KELP Laminaria saccharina KNOTTED WRACK Ascophyllum nodosum IRISH MOSS Chondrus crispus IRISH MOSS, detail Chondrus crispus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 103 9/7/16 10:05 PM 104 SHALLOWS the benthic community. Subtidal areas with sandy or muddy bottoms have a rich infauna of animals that burrow into the bottom sediments for shelter. Most clams and marine worms, some crabs, and even some fish bury themselves at least partially as protection in flat bottom areas that often lack rock or plant shelter. Animals that live primarily on or just above the bottom surface are called epifauna. These include most of the familiar shoreline crabs, which welcome rock crevices or Eelgrass patches as shelter but don’t normally dig burrows in the warmer months. Atlantic Surf Clam Spisula solidissima Clams Soft sediment bottoms and tidal flats can look deceptively lifeless unless you look for the single or paired siphons of clams buried within them. Northern Quahogs have short, paired siphons, and the top edge of their shells is rarely buried more than an inch below the surface. In smooth sand or mud bottoms look for a figure eight of the twin open siphon holes. Quahogs prefer a salinity of around 20 ppt or greater, so they are less common in the soft bottoms of river mouths. Quahogs are called by a variety of names based on their size, but little necks, cherrystones, chowder clams, and quahogs are all the same species: the Northern Quahog. Soft-Shell Clams, or steamers, have an extremely long, tough pair of siphons en- Invertebrates in and near the bottom sediments of the subtidal zone. Amphipod Orchestia sp. Grass Shrimp Palaemonetes pugio Isopod Philoscia vittata Clam Worm Nereis sp. Soft-Shell Clam Mya arenaria .. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 104 Quahog Mercenaria mercenaria Acorn Worm Saccoglossus sp. Atlantic Jackknife Clam Ensis directis Blood Worm Glycera sp. 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 105 cased in a thick black membrane. The long siphons allow the Soft-Shell Clams to bury themselves far below other clams, sometimes 10 inches deep. The Atlantic Jackknife Clam, or razor clam, has a very short siphon that looks keyholeshaped at the surface. These clams bury themselves vertically with a short but strong foot on the lower end opposite the siphon. Atlantic Jackknife Clams sometimes pop up above the surface, often when disturbed by mud worms probing their burrows from below. If a Jackknife Clam senses movement, it disappears in a flash into its burrow. The largest bivalve in our area, the Atlantic Surf Clam, lives in sandy bottoms from the subtidal zone down to the deepest depths of the Sound. This clam is surprisingly long-lived, living for 31 or more years. Most Surf Clams are harvested at about 15–20 years, primarily for chowders and fried clams. Their chief predators are Moon Snails, Horseshoe Crabs, Cod, and, of course, humans. One of the most common shelled animals of the subtidal zone is a sea snail, the Common Slipper Shell, often called a boat shell. These snails are common in both soft sand and rocky shallow subtidal areas and on flats and beaches exposed at low tide. They are filter feeders and typically live in stacks, with older individuals at the bottom and successive layers of younger individuals attaching on top of the older shells. A strong, muscular foot holds each individual in place in the stack, and when submerged, the foot relaxes slightly to open a gap through which the snail draws water to filter for plankton. In places the Common Slipper Shell is abundant. The outer sandy banks of Milford Point in Connecticut are composed of millions of empty Slipper Shells, along with millions more of oyster and clam shells. Quahog Mercenaria mercenaria Soft-Shell Clam Mya arenaria Whelks Whelks are nocturnal sea snails that prey on clams, oysters, and other bivalves. Channeled Whelks prefer sandy, shallow subtidal areas, where they can be common. The similar but typically larger Knobbed Whelk favors deeper waters. In summer it avoids warm waters by moving to the center of the Sound, but in spring and early summer, some Knobbed Whelks migrate into the subtidal zone to feed. Eastern Oyster The most famous bivalve mollusk of Long Island Sound—and the most commercially important in historic times—is the Eastern Oyster. Oysters are unusual bivalves in a number of ways. Most obviously, they don’t bury themselves the way clams do: oysters are epifaunal creatures, and in normal circumstances they live in large crowds, or reefs, of shells LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 105 Atlantic Jackknife Clam Ensis directus 9/7/16 10:05 PM 106 SHALLOWS that once carpeted the bottom of every river mouth along the Connecticut coast. Each oyster shell is uniquely shaped, probably an adaptation to living in thick crowds of fellow oysters, where every inch of available space—no matter the shape—was valuable living room. Elongated, narrow oyster shells come from soft-bottomed areas, but oysters that attach to firm surfaces tend toward a more rounded shape. Young oyster larvae are free-floating plankton, but they are highly attracted to chemicals that oysters give off and so tend to settle on hard surfaces near other oysters or on the shells of living or dead oysters. Oysters are unique in that they cannot move after they settle. Once the young oyster sets on a surface, it stays there for life. Channeled Whelk Busycotypus canaliculatus Eastern Oyster Crassostrea virginica LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 106 As outlined in “Human History,” oysters were overharvested in the nineteenth century and became the victims of polluted water in the twentieth century. The almost unimaginably large natural beds of Connecticut oysters have vanished, and those that survive are often victims of continuing water pollution and siltation—too much silt in the water smothers an oyster. Oysters remain a common member of the subtidal community in Long Island Sound and are in no danger of extirpation, but the days when massive oyster beds dominated tidal river bottoms along the Connecticut shore are long gone. Crabs and shrimp Crabs are some of the most noticeable inhabitants of the subtidal zone, and they often range onto beaches and rocky shores, primarily at night. Three of our crab species are active swimmers, although the Green Crab lacks the specialized swimming paddles you see on the legs of Blue Crabs and Lady Crabs. Blue Crabs, although numerous enough to be frequently caught by sport fishers, are not yet a major commercial fishery in Long Island Sound as they are in the Chesapeake and Delaware Bays, but the recent warming of the Sound has resulted in an increase in Blue Crabs. With the crash of Northern Lobster populations in the Sound over the past 15 years, the Blue Crab may take over the ecological niche of bottom-dwelling predator-scavenger once held by lobsters. Both Blue Crabs and Lady Crabs are active, aggressive predators that will catch and eat just about any kind of animal prey in the shallow subtidal zone. Both species should be handled with care to avoid a painful pinch, but the Lady Crab is particularly well known for its fast reflexes and strong claws. The Green Crab is an exotic species, one of the first major instances of a European species that made the jump across the Atlantic, probably by riding on the mossy bottoms of 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 107 sailing ships or in wet ships’ ballast stones dumped overboard in a Massachusetts port. Since 1817, the Green Crab has spread along the East Coast from Nova Scotia down to Cape May, New Jersey. Green Crabs are also voracious predators, particularly of mussels and Soft-Shell Clams, but because they are a primarily cold-water species, their local populations may fade as the Sound continues to warm. The shells of these common subtidal crab species are often found along the wrack line of shores in Connecticut, but that does not mean that many crabs have died or been killed by predators. Hard-shelled animals like crabs must molt their old shells to grow, and most crab species molt several times during the warm months. The molted shells that wash up on the shoreline are clean, with no organic matter inside, and carapace and claw shells are generally whole and in good condition. Crabs killed by gulls or herons are smashed and thoroughly dismembered, often on a rock or other hard surface, and you usually don’t find the remains along the wrack line. In spite of its intimidating looks, the Spider Crab is a sluggish and inoffensive member of the deeper subtidal community, where it feeds on starfish and scavenges the remains of other bottom invertebrates. Spider Crabs prefer the deeper waters of the Sound but are also common in shallow Eelgrass communities. They are tolerant of polluted and hypoxic waters and so are are found in the marginal conditions of harbor bottoms where other crabs cannot survive. Knobbed Whelk Busycon carica Northern Lobsters, formerly seen in the subtidal zone, are now creatures of deeper bottom waters (see “Depths”). The Horseshoe Crab is an unmistakable member of the tidal and subtidal communities, with its distinct shape, hardleather shell, and menacing-looking (but harmless) long tail. Horseshoe Crabs are not true crabs at all but members of the ancient order Xiphosura, which also contains spiders and mites. They favor sandy or muddy bottoms and normally live at the deeper end of the subtidal zone, where they plow through the bottom, feeding on small invertebrates. In May and June, Horseshoe Crabs travel into the low tidal zone to lay eggs, often during a spring (unusually high) tide. These eggs are very attractive to shorebirds, and a good indication that the crabs are breeding is the sight of flocks of birds avidly picking at the eggs in the surf line. Commercial fishers harvest Horseshoe Crabs for bait, and the Atlantic Coast population has fallen sharply over the past 40 years owing to overharvesting and beach habitat destruction. Horseshoe Crab blood is the sole source of an important medical compound—limulus amebocyte lysate (LAL)—used LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 107 9/7/16 10:05 PM 108 CRABS BLUE CRAB Callinectes sapidus LADY CRAB Ovalipes ocellatus GREEN CRAB Carcinus maenas SPIDER CRAB Libinia emarginata ASIAN SHORE CRAB Hemigrapsus sanguineus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 108 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 109 to test for the presence of harmful bacterial toxins in human blood. Drug manufacturers use LAL to test the safety of pharmaceutical and medical devices that contain blood products. Horseshoe Crabs are not usually killed in harvesting LAL. The crabs are caught, blood is drawn, and they are returned to the wild, where most survive the experience. Environmental groups monitor the population of Horseshoe Crabs in Long Island Sound, and you may see a round white identification tag attached to a shell. Please follow the instructions on the tag and report the tag number to the US Fish and Wildlife Service (http://www.fws.gov/crabtag/). The information is extremely useful in protecting populations of this valuable and threatened member of the shoreline community. In addition to the Green Crab, two other invasive crab species now inhabit the Sound. The Asian Shore Crab was spotted in North America along the New Jersey coast in 1988 and has since spread rapidly both north and south along the Atlantic Seaboard. In Connecticut, Asian Shore Crabs are beginning to crowd out both Green and Blue Crabs on rocky shorelines in the intertidal and subtidal zones. An even newer invasive pecies, the Chinese Mitten Crab, is now spreading along the shores of Long Island Sound. This crab is not yet common in Connecticut but is moving up the shorelines from the New York area. Both Asian crab species probably arrived as larvae in the ballast water of cargo ships that was emptied into New York or New Jersey harbors. Horseshoe Crab Limulus polyphemus eggs (inset, lower left), baby Horseshoe Crabs in early summer, and a tagged Horseshoe Crab (inset, upper right). If you spot a tagged crab, please follow the instructions and report it, as this research will help protect this species from overharvesting. Photos courtesy of Frank Gallo. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 109 9/7/16 10:05 PM 110 HORSESHOE CRAB SANCTUARY Milford Point Horseshoe Crab Sanctuary A new sandspit that developed off the south coast of Milford Point in the past 20 years has created a sheltered lagoon between the sandspit and the south beach, just in front of the viewing platform at the Coastal Center at Milford Point. The new lagoon is a shallow tidal flat at low tide, ringed by a small salt marsh in the making. Over the past decade Saltwater Cordgrass stands have spread along the flats at the beach tide line, and other classic low marsh plants like Sea Lavender and Glassworts are joining the Cordgrass to form a true low salt marsh, complete with a new population of Marsh Fiddler Crabs and other low marsh invertebrates. BLUE CRAB Callinectes sapidus MARSH FIDDLER CRAB Uca pugnax HORSESHOE CRAB Limulus polyphemus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 110 9/7/16 10:05 PM CRAB SHALLOWS 111 The lagoon has also become an important breeding area for one of the Sound’s most familiar but threatened animals, the Horseshoe Crab. Along with many other shoreline animals, the once abundant Horseshoe Crab has come under increasing threat owing to habitat loss and overharvesting. The crabs are particularly vulnerable in breeding season, when they collect on shallow sandy beach areas in mid-May to mate and lay their eggs. Horseshoe Crabs are valued as bait by commercial fishers, who sometimes plunder whole beaches of breeding crabs, robbing the Sound of both the breeding adults and any new generation of crabs that might have matured from the eggs. As the overharvesting of crabs continued over much of the twentieth century, the Horseshoe Crab population in the Sound crashed in the 1990s, and efforts began to conserve the remaining populations before they became extirpated. WILLET Tringa semipalmata GREATER YELLOWLEGS Tringa melanoleuca LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 111 9/7/16 10:05 PM 112 SHALLOWS Long-Clawed Hermit Crab Pagurus longicarpus Flat-Clawed Hermit Crab Pagurus pollicaris Two other types of small crustaceans are commonly found in the subtidal zone: hermit crabs and Grass Shrimp (also called prawns). Colored a pale, translucent gray, Grass Shrimp are an important link in the estuary food chain. They feed on detritus, the remains of salt marsh grasses and other plants washed into the Sound. The nibbling of millions of Grass Shrimp breaks down plants into particles that become food for small zooplankton and bacteria, which complete the process of turning old marsh grasses into animal biomass. The shrimp are an important food source for larger predators such as crabs, the young of many fish species, and birds. Hermit crabs are important scavengers on the subtidal zone, feeding on detritus and animal remains. Hermit crabs do not grow their own shells; instead, they adopt the discarded shells of snails for protection and shelter. The small Long-Clawed Hermit Crab is common in both rocky and sandy or muddy bottoms in the subtidal zone and usually inhabits old snail shells. The larger Flat-Clawed Hermit Crab prefers deeper waters with rocky or shell bottoms and usually picks larger homes such as old Moon Snail shells or small whelk shells. Sea stars and sea cucumbers Sea stars (starfish) and sea cucumbers are echinoderms, a phylum of animals whose bodies are arranged into five segments around a central axis. Common Sea Stars live in the subtidal zone and venture into the lower tidal zone in search of their favorite prey, clams and oysters. Common Sea Stars are a problem for oyster farmers in Long Island Sound because of their voracious appetite for oysters; they can infest and even wipe out entire oyster beds. Sea Cucumbers in Long Island Sound usually bury themselves in the bottom mud or sand to avoid predators, leaving only a ring of branching tentacles visible on the bottom surface. Grass Shrimp Palaemonetes pugio Photo: Brian Gratwicke. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 112 Segmented worms and other bottom infauna Along with the familiar clams, soft sand and mud bottoms contain a complex community of segmented worms (polychaetes). Clam Worms and Blood Worms are two of the most common types of larger worms and are familiar as bait for sport fishers. Both species move freely through the bottom sediments in search of small animal prey, including clams and other worms. Other marine worms are sessile, building permanent or semipermanent tubes in the mud from which they project their feeding appendages. Cone Worms, Bamboo Worms, Amphitrites, and Feather Duster Worms are filter feeders, using their tentacles to grab plankton or small bits of organic material from the flowing water. Bottom worms are very sensitive to any vibration or unusual water movement near them and will quickly disappear into their tubes under 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 113 the surface. The best tactic to observe bottom life is to find a likely spot in shallow, clear water, approach the area with care, and wait patiently until the bottom dwellers cautiously return to normal feeding behavior. Fish Small fish such as Atlantic Silverside, Banded Killifish, Sand Lance, and the young of many larger fish such as Bluefish and Striped Bass frequent the subtidal zone, particularly where vegetation or rocks can shelter them from larger predatory fish. The subtidal zone and Eelgrass meadows are the great nursery areas of the Sound, providing a wealth of food and protection for virtually all the major fish species found in the Sound. Alewife, American Butterfish, American Shad, Atlantic Menhaden (Bunker), Black Sea Bass, Blueback Herring, Fluke, Scup (Northern Porgy), Smooth and Spiny Dogfish Sharks, Tautog (Blackfish), and Winter Flounder are just some of the species that depend on the subtidal zone for a portion of their lives. Birds Many birds feed in the subtidal zone, even ones that you might not normally think of as seabirds. Long-legged waders such as Great Blue Herons, Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets, Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, and Glossy Ibis all wade in the shallows of the subtidal zone, picking off crabs, small fish, and other animals. Feeding Brant geese are most often seen floating over the subtidal zone, occasionally dipping down to feed on Eelgrass or Sea Lettuce. Mute Swans are unfortunately abundant along the shoreline in winter. This introduced swan species is beautiful to see but has had a generally negative effect on Connecticut’s environment since it was introduced to North America about a century ago. Belted Kingfishers are another land species that commonly dive for small fish along the shore, particularly in subtidal waters that border salt marshes and more sheltered harbors and river mouths. Common Sea Star Asterias rubens Loons and grebes are diving birds that feed mainly on small fish in the subtidal zone but also take small clams and other bottom invertebrates. Common and Red-Throated Loons and the Horned Grebe are frequent Photo: Michael Marsland. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 113 9/7/16 10:05 PM 114 FISH Illustrations not to scale; lengths cited are typical ranges SCUP (NORTHERN PORGY) Stenotomus chrysops 13–17 in. TAUTOG (BLACKFISH) Tautoga onitis 12–15 in. BLACK SEA BASS Centropristis striata 18–24 in. CUNNER Tautogolabrus adspersus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 114 12–15 in. 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 115 BLUEFISH Pomatomus saltatrix 12–30 in. STRIPED BASS Morone saxatilis 1–6 ft. AMERICAN BUTTERFISH Peprilus triacanthus 6–9 in. WEAKFISH Cynoscion regalis 18–36 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 115 9/7/16 10:05 PM 116 FISH Illustrations not to scale; lengths cited are typical ranges SPINY DOGFISH Squalus acanthias 18–34 in. SUMMER FLOUNDER Paralichthys dentatus 15–20 in. WINDOWPANE Scophthalmus aquosus 9–10 in. WINTER FLOUNDER Pseudopleuronectes americanus 18–24 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 116 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 117 AMERICAN SHAD Alosa sapidissima 18–30 in. R ATLANTIC MENHADEN (BUNKER) Brevoortia tyrannus 12–18 in. HICKORY SHAD 15–24 in. Alosa mediocris ATLANTIC HERRING Clupea harengus 15–17 in. BLUEBACK HERRING Alosa aestivalis 9–14 in. ALEWIFE Alosa pseudoharengus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 117 10–15 in. 9/7/16 10:05 PM 118 FISH Illustrations not to scale; lengths cited are typical ranges SAND LANCE Ammodytes americanus 4–6 in. STRIPED KILLIFISH Fundulus diaphanus 6–7 in. 4–6 in. ATLANTIC SILVERSIDE Menidia menidia AMERICAN EEL 20–40 in. Anguilla rostrata LONGHORN SCULPIN Myoxocephalus octodecemspinosus 10–14 in. NORTHERN SEAROBIN Prionotus carolinus 8–11 in. SEA RAVEN Hemitripterus americanus 9–22 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 118 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS ATLANTIC BONITO Sarda sarda 119 15–20 in. LITTLE TUNNY Euthynnus alletteratus 20–30 in. ATLANTIC COD Gadus morhua 2.5–6 ft. DUSKY SHARK Carcharhinus obscurus 5–10 ft. 5–10 ft. SAND TIGER SHARK Carcharias taurus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 119 9/7/16 10:05 PM 120 SHALLOWS spring and fall migrants in Connecticut coastal waters. The tiny Pied-Billed Grebe is a common migrant along the shore and major rivers in fall. It is less common in spring migration and is rare in the region the rest of the year. One of the most abundant birds of the subtidal zone is the Double-Crested Cormorant, the angular black birds often seen sunning their outspread wings on docks, pilings, breakwaters, channel markers, and almost any other suitable perch along the shoreline. Cormorants are powerful underwater swimmers that feed on primarily on small fish but will also take crabs when they can find them. In winter the larger and less common Great Cormorant may be seen, particularly in the Eastern Basin. Pied-Billed Grebe Podilymbus podiceps Double-Crested Cormorant Phalacrocorax auritus Ospreys and Bald Eagles also feed in the subtidal zone. Ospreys will pick off fish in waters a few feet deep to deeper offshore waters if the fish is visible near the surface. Bald Eagles are more often seen hunting over river mouths and harbors during winter, particularly near the mouth of the Connecticut River. Diving and dabbling ducks In fall and winter the bird life of the Connecticut subtidal coast is largely defined by large rafts of duck species that all dive partially or fully underwater to feed. Dabbling ducks like the Mallard and the closely related American Black Duck feed by tilting themselves downward from the surface, rarely fully submerging their buoyant bodies. Blue-Winged and GreenWinged Teals and the American Wigeon are also common dabbling ducks along the coast in spring and fall and, to a lesser extent, in winter. As dabblers, these ducks are limited to feeding on the immediate shoreline and to shallow, sheltered subtidal areas like harbors and river mouths, but when they are not actively feeding, the dabblers often drift well away from the shore for safety. The true diving ducks, which fully submerge and swim well underwater, are the most numerous ducks along the Connecticut coast in fall, winter, and early spring. Greater and Lesser Scaups, White-Winged and Surf Scoters, Common Goldeneyes, and Buffleheads are the most common diving ducks. All these species eat small bottom invertebrates and aquatic plants like Sea Lettuce and Eelgrass. Mergansers are diving ducks whose long, thin bills are edged with toothlike serrations that help them seize their specialty: small fish and slippery aquatic invertebrates. Red-Breasted and Hooded Mergansers are common in the cold months but leave Connecticut to breed in freshwater lakes and ponds in more northern areas of the United States and Canada. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 120 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 121 Gulls, terns, and skimmers The larger gull species of the region are numerous and aggressive predators along the immediate shoreline. Gulls usually do not dive below the water surface for food and thus don’t feed directly in the subtidal zone, but they nevertheless benefit from the rich pickings of subtidal creatures like crabs, marine worms, and clams that are at or just below the low tide line. Gulls are discussed more fully in the chapter on beaches, but the most common gulls of Long Island Sound are the Herring Gull and Ring-Billed Gull. Terns are smaller relatives of gulls and are typically white with a black cap, long, black-tipped wings, and a long, forked tail. As its name suggests, the Common Tern is the tern most frequently seen over subtidal waters, where they dive for small fish captured at or near the water surface. A number of areas along the Connecticut coast are protected during nesting season to help rebuild the population of Least Terns, which Belted Kingfisher Megaceryle alcyon LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 121 9/7/16 10:05 PM 122 WATER BIRDS GREAT BLUE HERON Ardea herodias SNOWY EGRET Egretta thula kreefax GREATER YELLOWLEGS Tringa melanoleuca LESSER YELLOWLEGS Tringa flavipes PIED-BILLED GREBE Podilymbus podiceps MUTE SWAN Cygnus olor LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 122 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS MALLARD Anas platyrhynchos Jim Shane AMERICAN WIGEON Anas americana Steve Byland BLUE-WINGED TEAL Anas discors LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 123 123 AMERICAN BLACK DUCK Anas rubripes Erni BUFFLEHEAD Bucephala albeola Erni GREEN-WINGED TEAL Anas crecca 9/7/16 10:05 PM 124 WATER BIRDS Marco Barone BRANT Branta bernicla Karen Popovich GREATER SCAUP Aythya marila M. Carter SURF SCOTER Melanitta perspicillata LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 124 feathercollector COMMON GOLDENEYE Bucephala clangula Steve Byland LESSER SCAUP Aythya affinis Paul Reeves Photography WHITE-WINGED SCOTER Melanitta fusca 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 125 have been severely reduced over the past century by the loss or disturbance of their breeding habitat: sandy beaches. Least Terns also feed on small fish by making shallow dives for them. Looking for groups of feeding terns is a great way to spot schools of small fish being chased by larger predators like Bluefish. Terns will hover over the feeding frenzy, making quick dives that rarely take them below the surface. The tern’s quick snatch-and-grab diving method may be a matter of safety as much as efficient feeding. Hungry Bluefish do not discriminate between fish and birds, and a surprising number of terns have lost a lower leg or foot to a voracious Bluefish. About 35 pairs of the rare and endangered Roseate Tern nest on Falkner Island off Guilford, Connecticut, which is also home to one of the largest Common Tern nesting colonies on the Atlantic Coast. Roseate Terns are most visible along the coasts of Long Island Sound when they abandon their nesting sites in August and both young birds and adults wander the coasts before migrating south for the winter in September and October. In this late summer season of wandering terns we also see Forster’s Tern over the Sound and increasingly in recent years North America’s largest tern species, the showy but uncommon gull-sized Caspian Tern. Hooded Merganser Lophodytes cucullatus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 125 9/7/16 10:05 PM 126 SHALLOWS The Black Skimmer is a close relative of terns with a spectacular method of feeding—skimmers fly just above the surface of subtidal waters, skimming for small fish by dipping their oversized lower bills into the water and snapping them shut the instant that they hit a fish. A few decades ago Black Skimmers were an unusual August and September treat for birders along the Connecticut coast, as skimmers were a more southern species. As the climate has warmed, Black Skimmers have become regular late summer visitors, and a few pairs of skimmers have nested in Connecticut in the recent past, notably in the bird sanctuary on West Haven’s Sandy Point. Seals in Long Island Sound The Harbor Seal is now a familiar sight along the coasts of Long Island Sound for much of the year, mostly on offshore islands, exposed rocks, and breakwaters in the Eastern Basin. You can even occasionally spot seals on isolated mainland beaches, such as at the Clinton harbor beach just east of the Cedar Island viewing platform at Hammonasset State Park in Madison, Connecticut. In past decades, Harbor Seals were just winter visitors to the Sound, but now small numbers breed in Connecticut waters, so the seals are here year-round. Forster’s Tern Sterna forsteri 15 in. Common Tern Sterna hirundo 14 in. Least Tern Sternula antillarum 9 in. Black Tern Chlidonias niger (Nonbreeding plumage) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 126 10 in. Roseate Tern Sterna dougallii 15 in. 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 127 The larger Gray Seal is now a regular winter resident of the Sound, more common in the Eastern Basin, but Gray Seals are also seen regularly in the Norwalk Islands and other parts of the Western Basin during winter. Naturalists now speculate that it is simply a matter of time before Gray Seals also begin to live and breed in the Sound all year, but as of this writing, no confirmed Gray Seal pups have been spotted in the Sound. Both seal species are active hunters in the relatively shallow but food-rich waters of the subtidal zone, but they also hunt their prey in the deeper waters of the Sound. Seals tend to prefer fat-rich fish like Atlantic Menhaden, Atlantic Herring, and Atlantic Mackerel but will also take clams, crabs, and lobsters. Caspian Tern Hydroprogne caspia 21 in. Black Skimmer Rynchops niger 18 in. Royal Tern Thalasseus maximus 20 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 127 9/7/16 10:05 PM 128 SHALLOWS Harbor Seal Smaller, with a puppylike, rounded head profile Gray Seal Larger, with a thick, horselike snout Ice seals Eastern Long Island Sound, Fishers Island, Plum Island, and Orient Point are now regularly visited by three species of seals that normally live and winter north of the Saint Lawrence River off Newfoundland and Labrador. Sightings of these ice seal species are rare and usually happen only in the easternmost portion of the Sound, but every year now there are scattered reports of sightings and strandings of these rare seals. The Harp Seal and the Hooded Seal have been seen alive or stranded in the Eastern Basin. The more rare Ringed Seal is known from scattered observations and strandings. It is not clear why these northern seal species are more regularly wandering south of their normal ranges, but most of the individuals spotted or stranded are juveniles, not adults. Another oddity spotted a number of times in recent years is the West Indian Manatee, which normally is not seen in any numbers north of the Georgia coast. However, isolated individual manatees have been seen in various locations along the East Coast as far north as Cape Cod. In a 1994 sighting, a lone manatee (nicknamed “Chessie” by the media) was spotted a number of times in New York Harbor and along the Connecticut coast. In August 2010, another lone manatee was seen in Bridgeport, Clinton, and Mystic harbors before Photo: randimal. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 128 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 129 disappearing. Manatees are known to wander north with the warming waters in summer and early fall. These rare, isolated incidents are probably due to the energy and persistence of individual manatees and do not seem to be related to global warming or other climate changes. Manatees feed primarily on sea grass in shallow, subtidal waters, and unfortunately the remaining Eelgrass meadows of Long Island Sound offer little suitable food. Eelgrass communities Eelgrass beds develop in shallow-water areas with soft bottom sediments. Eelgrass is widespread all along the coasts of the North Atlantic Ocean and is the dominant sea grass species north of Cape Hatteras on the East Coast. Eelgrass is a flowering grass (family Zosteraceae) that has adapted to life in salt water. It spreads primarily through underground stems called rhizomes within the bottom sediments. The thick tangle of Eelgrass rhizomes stabilizes soft sediments and keeps the plants from washing away. Plants and animals of Eelgrass meadows Healthy Eelgrass beds offer both food and shelter to the young of many fish species, as well as adult fish. Atlantic Silverside, Spot, Tautog (Blackfish), and Summer Flounder all find shelter in Eelgrass meadows. The many small fish Harbor Seals Phoca vitulina LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 129 9/7/16 10:05 PM 130 SEALS AND MANATEE HARBOR SEAL Phoca vitulina Harbor Seal pup GRAY SEAL Halichoerus grypus The pelage colors and patterns of young Gray Seals can vary from almost pure white to yellow or gray. GRAY SEAL Mark Bridger LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 130 HARBOR SEAL Wim Claes 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 131 HARP SEAL Pagophilus groenlandicus Female HOODED SEAL Cystophora cristata Male RINGED SEAL Phoca hispida Manatees are rarely seen north of South Carolina, but every few years a single (usually young) Manatee wanders north into Long Island Sound. AL WEST INDIAN MANATEE Trichechus manatus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 131 9/7/16 10:05 PM 132 SHALLOWS also attract predators: Bluefish and Striped Bass cruise the meadows in search of prey, and many bird species find food in the Eelgrass. Dabbling ducks, geese, and swans eat the grass directly. Diving ducks like the Red-Breasted Merganser and the Bufflehead pick off young fish, shrimp, snails, and worms living within the Eelgrass. In shallower Eelgrass areas, longlegged waders like the Great Blue Heron and the Great Egret stab for fish and shrimp in the meadows. Historically Eelgrass was the primary food of Brant, a common small goose that winters in the Sound and along ocean coasts. Eelgrass is not the only marine flowering plant species in the Sound. Widgeon Grass also grows in Eelgrass beds and is an important food source for many diving and dabbling duck species (a wigeon—slightly different spelling—is a kind of dabbling duck). The leaves of Widgeon Grass are much more slender than those of Eelgrass, and they are eagerly sought by American Wigeons, American Black Ducks, scaup, teals, and other coastal ducks. Sea Lettuce is usually abundant in Eelgrass beds as well. Eelgrass beds are a crucial habitat for the Atlantic Bay Scallop. The young scallops attach themselves to Eelgrass stems well above the bottom, and this protects them from predatory crabs. Eelgrass beds slow the currents of water within and over them. This calming of currents, and the complex structure created by all the grass leaves, provides valuable shelter for many small invertebrates. Grass Shrimp are common in Eelgrass beds, where they form an important food resource for the many species of young fish that shelter in Eelgrass meadows. The beds also shelter bivalves like the Northern Quahog, which are present in large numbers in healthy Eelgrass communities. Brant Branta bernicla LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 132 People are often surprised to discover that Long Island Sound has seahorses, although they are uncommon and are found only in larger Eelgrass beds at the eastern end of the Sound. The seahorse uses its long, curled tail to hold fast to strands of Eelgrass. Our only species, the Lined Seahorse, was probably more common in the past, but this specialist resident of Eelgrass meadows was a casualty of the great Eelgrass die-off of the 1930s (described below) and is now listed as “threatened” by the World Conservation Union. The Lined Seahorse can reach a length of six inches, but most individuals are smaller. Seahorses can change color at will, from green to brown to gray. In this way they can both camouflage themselves from predators and disguise themselves from the small copepods and other invertebrates that they eat. 9/7/16 10:05 PM EELGRASS COMMUNITIES 133 NORTHERN PIPEFISH Syngnathus fuscus ATLANTIC SILVERSIDE Menidia menidia TAUTOG Tautoga onitis ATLANTIC BAY SCALLOP Argopecten irradians BLUE CRAB Callinectes sapidus NORTHERN QUAHOG Mercenaria mercenaria COMMON SEA STAR Asterias rubens LINED SEAHORSE Hippocampus erectus ATLANTIC BAY SCALLOP Argopecten irradians Blue Crab: Kim Nguyen; Horseshoe Crab: Ethan Daniels. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 133 ATLANTIC HORSESHOE CRAB Limulus polyphemus 9/7/16 10:05 PM 134 SHALLOWS The great Eelgrass die-off In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Eelgrass beds in the Sound came under heavy environmental pressure from sewage and other excess sources of nitrogen, as well as direct damage from scallop fishing dredges. The excess nitrogen caused an explosion of phytoplankton and single-celled algae and blue-green bacteria, which made the Sound’s water much more opaque, cutting the penetration of sunlight to Eelgrass beds. In high nitrogen conditions, algae will also heavily coat the leaves of Eelgrass, further reducing the amount of sunlight they receive. In addition, evidence suggests that water high in nitrogen directly damages the Eelgrass itself. The Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) is a European bird introduced to the northeastern United States about a century ago. Although beautiful, Mute Swans drive native ducks and geese out of the best nesting areas, and in the fall and winter Mute Swans destroy many Eelgrass beds with their aggressive feeding. Unlike native birds like Brant geese that just clip the Eelgrass leaves, the large, powerful swans can rip out whole Eelgrass plants, as the swan pictured here has just done off the coast of Old Saybrook, Connecticut. All of these pressures weakened the Eelgrass beds, and in the early 1930s, Eelgrass communities throughout the North Atlantic were devastated by an outbreak of Eelgrass wasting disease, thought to have been caused by a combination of unusually warm winters and summers in the North Atlantic and an opportunistic infection by a common slime mold species (Labyrinthula macrocystis). The disease proved fatal to Eelgrass beds up and down the East Coast, and the massive die-off changed the ecology of many subtidal areas. As the grass died, the soft sediments under the grass beds were swept away, in many places leaving bare rocky bottoms. With the loss of the Eelgrass, an entire community of marine wildlife began to vanish. Atlantic Bay Scallops were integral members of Eelgrass communities, and their numbers plummeted. The population of Brant geese, which fed primarily on Eelgrass, was decimated by starvation. Luckily, the slime mold that causes the wasting disease does not survive in water with low salinity levels, so Eelgrass beds near rivers were able to survive, and today’s expanded Eelgrass beds are the result of sprouted seeds from the surviving beds. Over the past 80 years, both Atlantic Bay Scallops and Brant adapted to new living conditions, and both species are now more common again, although their populations have never fully recovered. In more recent times, the introduced Mute Swan has become a new threat to Eelgrass recovery, because the swans now winter along the Connecticut coast in large numbers and are voracious consumers of Eelgrass. With their long necks and strong beaks, the swans don’t just clip the grass leaves but tend to rip the plants out whole, destroying large patches of Eelgrass beds. Eelgrass beds continue to be an important environment along the Connecticut coast and in Long Island Sound, and conservation efforts have focused on helping the Eelgrass communities recover from the threats of disease and excess nitrogen LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 134 9/7/16 10:05 PM SHALLOWS 135 in the Sound. In the long term, only a significant reduction in nitrogen released from water treatment plants around the Sound will ensure the survival of Eelgrass communities. If this occurs, excess algae populations will dissipate and the water will become clearer, thus sustaining more plant and animal life throughout Long Island Sound. The shallows off Fishers Island contain some of the largest and healthiest Eelgrass beds in the region. Red-Breasted Merganser Mergus serrator LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 135 9/7/16 10:05 PM 136 Bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 136 9/7/16 10:05 PM 137 Depths Longfin Inshore Squid (Doryteuthis pealeii) The deep bottom environments of Long Island Sound are diverse, ranging from pure sand to a mix of silt and sand, shells, and small stones to hard, rocky bottoms scattered with boulders. Each environment supports a different mix of animals. The softer bottoms, for example, support a rich infauna of worms and other marine invertebrates that are largely absent on hard bottoms. The depths lack enough light for large, attached algae to grow, so there are no plants. Wave action is also not a factor in the depths, although strong currents can sweep through, particularly near the east exits of the Sound during tide changes. Throughout most of Long Island Sound there is good vertical mixing of surface and deeper waters, particularly in the colder months, so bottom nutrients are distributed and oxygenated water from the top layers reaches the bottom community. In the hottest summer months, however, the relatively shallow and polluted Western Basin forms a hot but well-oxygenated surface layer of water over a colder and less-oxygenated bottom layer. This seasonal layering increases hypoxia in the Western Basin and becomes a major stress factor for deep bottom animals. Soft bottom sediments of clay and silt mixed with fine sand are more common in the Central and Western Basins. The bottom types shift abruptly to sand, gravely sand, and rock bottoms east of the Thimble Islands in Branford, Connecticut, and Wildwood State Park on Long Island. Gravel sand, rocks, and exposed bedrock make up the bottom near the Race at the eastern exit of the Sound. The strong currents there have long since flushed away any lighter sand and silt particles, leaving behind heavy stone and the largest sand grains. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 137 Squid photo: NOAA Photo Library. 9/7/16 10:05 PM 138 DEPTHS Bottom types Gravel or bedrock Gravelly sand Sand Silty sand Sand-silt-clay Sandy silt Norwalk New Haven Guilford Old Saybrook Bridgeport Stamford New Rochelle Port Jefferson Glen Cove Source: U.S. Geological Survey, Center for Coastal and Marine Geology Deep bottom communities Many of the invertebrates that live in sand or muddy areas of the subtidal community also inhabit the depths. In particular, Cone Worms, Bamboo Worms, Blood Worms, and Clam Worms live in deeper soft bottom areas, as do many clam species familiar from shallower waters. One rapacious predator of marine worms, shrimp, and small crabs is the Burrowing Mantis Shrimp. This aggressive shrimp species burrows into the sand during the day and hunts at night with a pair of large, jackknife-like claws that fold up much like those of a terrestrial praying mantis. Several species of crabs are common in the deep bottom community, including the Spider Crab and the similar-looking Rock and Jonah Crabs. The Rock Crab is widely distributed across all bottom types, but the Jonah Crab is more common on rocky bottoms. Among the elasmobranchs (boneless sharks, skates, rays), the common Smooth and Spiny Dogfish are joined by Little Jonah Crab Cancer borealis LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 138 9/7/16 10:05 PM 139 DEPTHS Rock Crab Cancer irroratus Skates, Barndoor Skates, and Winter Skates, all of which hunt clams, crabs, and other bottom invertebrates and small fish over soft sediment bottoms. The largest shark that regularly occurs in the Central and Western Basins is the generally docile Sand Tiger Shark (Sand Shark). Sand Tigers hunt a wide range of bottom fish across a variety of bottom types. The depths of Long Island Sound support a surprisingly varied community of bottom fish species. Winter Flounder and Windowpanes are common flatfish in the depths. The deep bottom community also supports a range of oddly shaped searobin and sculpin relatives, such as the Northern Searobin, Sea Raven, and Longhorn Sculpin. Barndoor Skate Raja laevis The American Eel is an important and common member of the deep bottom community. Often thought of as restricted to soft sediment bottoms, eels are common across all types of bottoms in the Sound. American Eels are nocturnal. They hide in crevices or burrow into sand during the day and hunt at night. The American Eel is our best-known catadromous fish species (living in freshwater but spawning in salt water). The eels live in river habitats and the Sound but migrate south to breed in the deep Sargasso Sea south of Bermuda. After spawning, adult eels die, but remarkably, their young return to the same areas that their parents left. Rocky bottom communities Scattered rock, bedrock, and coarse gravel bottoms are more common in the eastern Sound but also occur locally all along Connecticut’s generally rocky drowned coastline. On the North Shore of Long Island, much of the bottom is dominated by large and small glacial boulders and stones that LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 139 Winter Skate Raja ocellatus 9/7/16 10:05 PM 140 DEPTHS have eroded out of the Roanoke Point–Orient Point moraine, producing a rough, cobbled bottom in many areas. Over rock bottoms the water is generally clearer and freer of the silt that can smother many types of marine filter feeders. Jonah Crabs favor rocky bottoms, but the closely related Rock Crab is also common. Fish that specialize in rocky bottom areas include Cunner, Tautog (Blackfish), and Scup (Northern Porgy). The Northern Lobster is the most famous and economically valuable resident of the Sound’s rocky bottom communities. Northern Lobster Thanks to its delicious meat, the Northern Lobster is known far and wide as a symbol of coastal New England. A decapod (10-legged) crustacean in the same family as shrimps and crabs, the lobster shares the same basic body plan, but with massively enlarged claws and a stretched abdomen with a powerful muscular tail. The lobster’s large claws are asymmetric: the larger crusher claw is used for cracking the shells of sea urchins and mollusks, and the finer cutter claw is used for extracting meat and more delicate maneuvering of prey. Before they became relentlessly hunted, Northern Lobsters could live 30 years or more. Today in Long Island Sound a lobster rarely reaches six years of age before it is caught by the few remaining lobster fishers. In addition, the population of Northern Lobsters in the Sound is in a sharp and likely permanent decline owing to climate change and warmer waters. Northern Lobster Homarus americanus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 140 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 141 Lobsters can live almost anywhere in the rocky areas of the subtidal and deep bottoms of the Sound. Because they are nocturnal and dislike strong light, they are rarely seen in shallow water. During the day they hide in deep crevices or burrows dug under rocks. For much of the year, the shallows of the Sound are too warm for Northern Lobsters, which hyperventilate at 68°F. Lobsters also avoid wave action, so the bulk of the Long Island Sound population lives in waters more than 10 feet deep. Lobsters roam the rocky bottom areas in the dark, foraging for and feeding on clams, scallops, sea urchins, and other living or dead animal material they can find. Lobsters are powerfully attracted to the scent of fish flesh, which is why lobster traps baited with chunks of fish work so well, but lobsters prefer live, healthy food over decaying animals. Lobsters are very mobile and make long migrations across the bottom of the Sound as well as in and out of the Sound. Migrating lobsters can travel along the ocean bottom more than a mile every day, and an estimated 20 percent of Long Island Sound’s former lobster population once migrated through the Race each autumn to winter in deeper waters. Lobster populations in New England The Northern Lobster is a cold-water crustacean. Although lobsters live along the East Coast from Labrador to Virginia, the major populations are in the Gulf of Maine and around the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. Long Island Sound has always been the southern limit of inshore lobster populations; farther south, the lobster is strictly a deep-water animal never found near shore. Lobster populations in Long Island Sound have undergone a spectacular crash since 1999, even as Massachusetts and Maine catches have broken records for abundance. The 2012 lobster harvest in the Sound was the lowest ever recorded, and lobsters are no longer a viable commercial fishery in the Sound. Most experts think that the warmer waters of the Sound have caused a permanent commercial extinction of the Northern Lobster in Long Island Sound and that disease and pollution effects are just the most visible manifestations of a simple fact: the Sound is now too warm to support a significant population of lobsters. Whatever the cause of the Northern Lobster population crash, the slow death of one of the Sound’s most iconic animals warns us of the fundamental environmental changes happening around us. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 141 9/7/16 10:05 PM 142 SURPRISING ANIMALS SURPRISING ANIMALS FOUND IN LONG ISLAND SOUND ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN Tursiops truncatus LONGFIN INSHORE SQUID Loligo pealeii ATLANTIC MOONFISH Selene setapinnis SERGEANT MAJOR Abudefduf saxatilis Smaller animals; images not to scale SPOTFIN BUTTERFLYFISH Chaetodon ocellatus Dolphins: kaiwren; Squid: lilithlita; Moonfish: NOAA Photo Library; Sergeant Major: kuzeayo; Spotfin Butterflyfish: DJ; Sandbar Shark: Brian Gratwicke; Sky: Radu Razvan; water surface: adimas. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 142 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 143 Images not to scale COWNOSE RAY Rhinoptera bonasus GREEN SEA TURTLE Chelonia mydas BELUGA Delphinapterus leuca SANDBAR SHARK Carcharhinus plumbeus SAND TIGER SHARK Carcharias taurus Cownose Ray: Juan Aguere; Green Turtle: pipehorse; Sand Tiger Shark: Ralf Hirsch; Beluga: Luna Vandoorne. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 143 9/7/16 10:05 PM 144 DEPTHS Open water The pelagic or open water of Long Island Sound extends from areas about 10 feet deep to the deepest waters of the central Sound. It is in these deeper waters that the Sound is most like the open ocean, and indeed many oceanic fish visit the central Sound during the year, especially in late summer. Wind and wave action are at their most intense here, and although the Sound is sheltered by Long Island and Fisher’s Island, large storms with easterly winds can build up substantial waves. There is a marked east-west salinity gradient, with brackish waters of about 20 ppt in the central waters of the Western Basin to a near oceanic 30 ppt in the Eastern Basin. Along with the resident fish populations in the Sound, there are large annual migrations into and out of the Sound of marine and anadromous fish species. As every fisher knows, open-water wildlife have a patchy distribution across the marine environment. One moment the sea seems to be boiling with predators and prey fish, and a few minutes later all the fish seem to have disappeared without a trace. In this zone the most important food sources are plankton and small- to medium-sized schooling fish such as Atlantic Menhaden, Sand Lance, Atlantic Herring, and American Butterfish. The Longfin Inshore Squid is an important food species for both predatory fish and seals. In warm months Long Island Sound is one of the most important nursery areas for coastal commercial and sport fishing species. In winter the Sound is a major East Coast refuge and larder for a large population of wintering waterfowl and coastal birds. The open water of the Central Basin. In the open waters of the Sound there are two major aquatic components: plankton and nekton. Plankton are tiny plants and animals that swim weakly or passively drift with the tides and currents. Nekton are larger, stronger swimming animals such as open-water fish species but also include other powerful swimmers like squid and marine mammals. Plankton are divided into two major groups: phytoplankton and zooplankton. Phytoplankton are single-celled plants that create biomass through photosynthesis, and zooplankton are tiny animals, including the larvae of many fish and invertebrates. The life cycle of most pelagic animals includes both a planktonic and a nektonic phase: they hatch as tiny planktonic larvae and later mature as freely swimming nekton. Plankton Phytoplankton and zooplankton collectively make up the critical food resource for the whole open-water population of the Sound. The population densities of plankton are almost LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 144 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 145 beyond imagining. At their most dense, in late winter, phytoplankton may be as much as 40 green cells per quart of water. Zooplankton density is about 200 copepods, or immature stages, of fish, shrimp, crabs, and mollusks per quart of water in late summer. Even though phytoplankton are critical to life in Long Island Sound, in the past few decades the Sound has often suffered from too much of a good thing. Algae and other phytoplankton populations are ordinarily held in check by the natural scarcity of nitrogen, a vital nutrient for plant growth. Today, however, excessive nitrogen enters the water supply, chiefly from the 105 water treatment plants that surround and drain into the Sound. The excess nitrogen encourages abnormal amounts of algal growth, which in turn depletes dissolved oxygen. Although algae, like all green plants, emit oxygen as part of photosynthesis, they also consume oxygen at night when they are not photosynthesizing. As the algae population explodes in the warm waters of summer, oxygen levels in the Western Basin routinely fall and occasionally drop to levels too low to sustain marine life. Phytoplankton Phytoplankton are the most numerous organisms in Long Island Sound. More than 200 species of single-celled diatoms, dinoflagellates, green algae, and blue-green algae are the primary nutrient producers of the Sound’s food chain. Most phytoplankton are diatoms, which have silica shells in complex geometric shapes that are often linked together to make clumps or chains of individuals. Diatoms are true plankton that drift with currents and tides. Dinoflagellates have whiplike cilia that allow them to move through the water for short distances and are most abundant in the early summer months. Zooplankton Zooplankton in the Sound consist largely of minute animals of various kinds, such as copepods and tiny shrimp, that spend their whole lives drifting in surface waters with the currents. Other zooplankton, however, consist of the larvae of various invertebrates and fish that spend just a portion of their lives drifting as plankton. Most zooplankton are too tiny to be strong swimmers, but the zooplankton layer itself ascends and descends daily in the water column. In the night hours it rises to near the surface, and during the day it descends into the relative gloom of deeper waters, probably to lessen the threat of predators. Most people don’t normally think of Blue Crabs, starfish, Eastern Oysters, Northern Lobsters, or barnacles as residents LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 145 9/7/16 10:05 PM 146 PHYTOPLANKTON DIATOMS Asterionellopsis glacialis DIATOMS DIATOMS DIATOMS Chaetoceros sp. Thalassionema frauenfeldii Odontella sinensis Not to scale and highly magnified over life size LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 146 All plankton images: NOAA Photo Library. 9/7/16 10:05 PM ZOOPLANKTON 147 Amphipod Copepod Crab larva Zoea stage Larval shrimp Larval squid Not to scale and highly magnified over life size LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 147 9/7/16 10:05 PM 148 DEPTHS of the surface waters of the central Sound, but during their larval stages, these and many other bottom invertebrates are zooplankton. Many fish species also hatch as larvae before they reach a size where they can swim effectively. Normally sessile or slow-moving creatures spread their offspring far and wide as free-floating larvae that later settle in suitable territories for the benthic, or attached, phase of their lives. The tiny organisms feed on the rich local supply of plankton. Most of the trillions of larvae hatched each year don’t live more than a few days or weeks, instead becoming food for larger plankton and small fish. In this way, the larvae are a vital link in the Sound’s pelagic food chain. Atlantic Sea Nettle Chrysaora quinquecirrha Pelagic invertebrates Larger pelagic invertebrates like sea jellies, comb jellies, and squid consume large amounts of zooplankton. Comb jellies (Ctenophores) are simple sea jelly–like animals that are sufficiently different from true sea jellies to be placed in their own phylum. Their common name comes from the rows of beating cilia arranged in long lines, or combs, across their surface, which allow these animals to swim and maneuver. Comb jellies predate on zooplankton and can consume up to 10 times their weight in prey each day. Masses of comb jellies can temporarily deplete the zooplankton of harbors and bays. Comb jellies are harmless to humans and can be safely handled because they do not have stinging cells. At night, comb jellies give off a faint green bioluminescence when disturbed by sudden water movement. The Sea Walnut (Leidy’s Comb Jelly) is the most common comb jelly in Long Island Sound. The Sea Walnut is present in the Sound year-round but is most common in late summer and early fall. A less common relative, Beroe Comb Jelly, is occasionally seen in the Eastern Basin. True sea jellies (Cnidarians) have a swimming form called a medusa with a pulsing bell and dangling tentacles equipped with stinging cells called nematocyts. All sea jellies go through a complex multistage life cycle, in which free-floating planktonic larvae settle on fixed bottom surfaces and grow into a polyp stage that releases small, free-floating medusae (tiny sea jellies) that then grow into the forms we see swimming in the Sound. All sea jellies should be approached with caution, particularly until you have confidently identified the species. Moon Jellies become common in Long Island Sound in late spring and become less widespread after mid-July. Their milky, translucent bells typically reach five to eight inches in diameter and often wash up on beaches. Moon Jellies have LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 148 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 149 stinging cells on their short tentacles, but they are not numerous or strong, and most people have either a mild rash from contacting the tentacles or no reaction at all. Some people have strong allergic reactions to any sea jelly venom, however, so it’s best to avoid handling sea jellies. The Lion’s Mane Jelly is the large, red-violet, sometimes dinner-plate-sized sea jelly most often encountered in the shallow waters off beaches in late summer and early fall. The Lion’s Mane is widely distributed in the North Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and in Arctic waters it can grow to a diameter of seven feet or more, making it the world’s largest sea jelly. In our area, however, these jellies rarely reach bell diameters beyond 12 inches. The Lion’s Mane Jelly has very long tentacles with strong stinging cells, so do not approach one closely in the water, and avoid stepping near any beached bells with bare feet. Beroe Comb Jelly Beroe sp. The smaller Sea Nettle is less common than other sea jellies but worth watching out for because its sting is so painful. Sea Nettles tolerate very low salinities and may be present in river mouths and harbors in late summer, primarily in the Central and Eastern Basins. The Sea Nettle’s bell is about the size of a Moon Jelly’s bell, but the Sea Nettle has much longer, dark red stinging tentacles trailing the bell, so always give it a wide berth. Squid Although most bathers, sport fishers, and boaters rarely notice it, the Longfin Inshore Squid is quite common in Long Island Sound from late spring through early fall. The Sound is an important nursery area for this widespread Atlantic Coast species, and these strong open-water swimmers are a major food resource for Bluefish and Striped Bass, as well as Harbor and Gray Seals. Like most squid species, the Longfin Inshore Squid can rapidly alter its skin color and pattern by changing the size and shape of special pigment cells in its skin. Most adult Longfin Inshore Squid in the Sound are about 12–16 inches in length. Squid have a relatively short life cycle for an animal their size; adults live for only about a year. In the Sound, squid breed primarily from May through September. Each female lays a large bundle of egg capsules, called a mop, in shallow areas, often attaching the mop to rocks or the fronds of brown algae for protection. Most eggs hatch in September, and small, one-to-two-inch squid are abundant during the fall months. Fish Through the year there are major shifts in species diversity and abundance in the depths of the Sound. More than 120 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 149 Longfin Inshore Squid Doryteuthis pealeii 9/7/16 10:05 PM 150 SEA JELLIES AND CTENOPHORES CANNONBALL JELLY Stomolophus meleagris LION’S MANE JELLY Cyanea capillata Seen from above, as in shallows or on a beach Credits– Cannonball Jellies: ymgerman, Sky2015; Lion’s Mane: Greg Amptman, Konstantin Novikov; PMOW: MSNN, sciencepics; Sea Nettle: Gino Santa Maria; Comb Jelly: John Wollwerth; Moon Jellies: Hans Hillewaert. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 150 9/7/16 10:05 PM 151 DEPTHS Portuguese Man o’ Wars are sea jelly–like animals that appear sporadically in the Eastern Basin, usually in late summer. These jellies have a powerful sting and very long tentacles, so stay well away from them. The tentacles can sting long after the animal has died or has washed up on the beach. PORTUGUESE MAN O’ WAR Physalia physalis MOON JELLY ATLANTIC SEA NETTLE Aurelia aurita Chrysaora quinquecirrha NORTHERN COMB JELLY Bolinopsis infundibulum (A ctenophore, not a true jelly) Not to scale LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 151 9/7/16 10:05 PM 152 DEPTHS species of fish spend at least part of their lives in Long Island Sound, and 50 species breed in the Sound. Overall fish abundance is highest in the late summer and early fall, but groundfish (fish that live on or near the bottom) are more numerous in the spring and decline through the summer, whereas pelagic fish increase through the summer and are most abundant in autumn (see illustrations, pp. 114–119). In spring the most abundant groundfish species in the Sound are Winter Flounder, Windowpane Flounder, Fourspot Flounder, Tautog (Blackfish), Little Skate, Red Hake, Scup, and Smooth and Spiny Dogfish. The most abundant spring pelagic fish species are schools of Atlantic Herring. Schools of Atlantic Menhaden enter the Sound in late spring, as do groups of such anadromous fish as American Shad, Blueback Herring, Alewives, and Atlantic Salmon, heading for the major Connecticut rivers in their sadly reduced spawning runs. As spring progresses into summer the numbers of Bluefish, Striped Bass, and other midwater game fish steadily build. Weakfish move into the Sound in midspring, though in diminished numbers in recent years. By late summer Scup and Pelagic Butterfish are the most numerous fish species in the Sound. Large schools of Atlantic Menhaden and their predators, Bluefish, roam the Sound. In the Eastern Basin warm-water and pelagic fish wander into the Sound through the Race, including filefish, Crevalle Jacks, Yellow Jacks, Atlantic Bonitos, Little Tunny, Atlantic Spanish Mackerels, and, lately, Red Lionfish, a troublesome exotic species that is spreading up the East Coast. Schools of large Cownose Rays and Bullnose Rays may appear in late summer. Large populations of smaller fish species build through the summer. Atlantic Silverside, Sand Lance, and other small fish species are a crucial link in the estuary food chain and are the main food species for small gulls, terns, cormorants, skimmers, and many other water birds. The Sound has only two larger shark species that are seen regularly. Both are fairly docile unless hooked by fishers. The Sand Tiger Shark (Sand Shark) is mostly a bottom-dwelling species and is the most common large (typically 5–7 foot) shark. The smaller Sandbar Shark (Brown Shark) typically enters the eastern Sound in small groups in late summer. The only recorded shark attack in Long Island Sound occurred in 1961, when a Bridgeport-area fisherman was injured while handling a hooked shark. In autumn most of the large schools of midwater and deepwater fish leave the Sound as the water cools. By late fall most Bluefish and other game fish have moved out to deeper waters LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 152 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 153 farther south along the East Coast. Some Striped Bass linger in harbors and river mouths until early winter. Sea turtles Although they are seldom seen except when injured or dead, Long Island Sound is regularly visited by four sea turtle species, usually in late summer or early fall. The Green Sea Turtle, Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle, the Loggerhead Sea Turtle, and the huge Leatherback Sea Turtle sometimes enter the Sound, albeit in small numbers. Sea turtles likely ride the Gulf Stream north into New England waters. The closest major nesting areas for Green and Loggerhead Turtles are found on Florida’s beaches. The severely endangered Kemp’s Ridley nests primarily on one small Gulf of Mexico beach in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, just south of the US-Mexican border, and on other scattered locations in Tamaulipas. The Red Lionfish (Pterois volitans) is an Indo-Pacific tropical fish first observed along the East Coast by divers in Florida in 1994, probably fish that were released from home aquariums. Although tropical in origin, the Red Lionfish is remarkably hardy and has quickly spread up the East Coast. It now lives at least seasonally from Florida to Block Island and Long Island Sounds. Present in late summer in the Eastern Basin in small but growing numbers, lionfish probably arrive in our region by riding warm-water offshoots of the Gulf Stream, as do many other Atlantic tropical fish. Although there seems to be little danger of the lionfish becoming a year-round resident of the Sound, their presence worries marine biologists because lionfish have a voracious appetite for small fish. Red Lionfish fins have sharp, poisonous spines that can deliver a painful wound, so do not handle them. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 153 9/7/16 10:05 PM 154 DEPTHS Healthy sea turtles are creatures of the deep ocean and offshore coastal waters, and they normally come close to shore only to breed. No sea turtles breed in the Sound’s relatively cool waters and limited sandy beach areas, and a healthy sea turtle rarely comes to the water’s surface or shows much of its body out of the water when at the surface. As a result, even though sea turtles are present every year in the Eastern and Central Basins, healthy individuals are seldom noticed, even by experienced naturalists. Green and Ridley Sea Turtles Small numbers of mostly juvenile Green and Ridley Sea Turtles appear in Long Island Sound and in the surrounding New York and southern New England ocean waters. These smaller sea turtles feed on bottom crustaceans like crabs and lobsters, and although the two species are primarily warm-water animals, the mid-Atlantic Coast appears to be an important feeding area for the young of both species. Loggerhead Sea Turtle The Loggerhead is the most common and robust of the smaller sea turtle species and appears in small numbers mostly in the Eastern Basin. Loggerheads feed on a wide variety of bottom crustaceans, lobsters, and crabs. These sea turtles nest in small numbers as far north as the New Jersey coast, but most East Coast Loggerhead nesting takes place on Florida’s Atlantic Coast and the Gulf of Mexico coast. Like all sea turtles, the Loggerhead is endangered, primarily by the loss of nesting habitat and by nest and egg disturbance. In Mexico, Loggerhead eggs are collected for food. Sea turtles also die in large numbers in commercial fishing operations and, even more tragically, when they are entangled in drifting abandoned fishing gear and drown because they can’t reach the surface to breathe. Leatherback Sea Turtle Probably because of their large size and distinctive ridged back Leatherback Sea Turtles are the sea turtle species most often spotted in local waters. Leatherbacks can reach 8 feet in length, and a large individual can weigh 2,000 pounds. Off the ocean coasts of Cape Cod and Long Island deep-sea fishers and whalewatchers often spot Leatherbacks at the surface. These powerful swimmers can range over oceans and dive more than 1,000 feet underwater in search of their main prey, sea jellies. Leatherbacks are unusual for turtles in that they are at least partially endothermic (warm-blooded) and can remain active even in very cold waters. Leatherbacks and other sea turtles are often killed when they mistake discarded plastic bags or party balloons for sea jellies. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 154 9/7/16 10:05 PM SEA TURTLES 155 KEMP’S RIDLEY SEA TURTLE Lepidochelys kempii 25–30 in. Typically olive green and very small for a sea turtle GREEN SEA TURTLE Chelonia mydas 4–5 ft. Serrated edge of lower jaw LOGGERHEAD SEA TURTLE 5–7 ft. Caretta caretta Proportionately large head Distinctive back ridges and long, pointed flippers 7–9 ft. LEATHERBACK SEA TURTLE Dermochelys coriacea LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 155 9/7/16 10:05 PM 156 DEPTHS The plastic clogs the digestive system, and the turtle starves to death or dies of abdominal infections. Never throw away plastic bags on a beach or from a boat and never deliberately release a party balloon because these long-lasting items can be lethal to many kinds of marine animals, not just sea turtles. All sea turtle species are on the New York, Connecticut, and federal endangered or threatened lists and should neither be approached closely by boat or on the beach nor handled in any way except by qualified experts. Birds The second largest estuary on the East Coast, Long Island Sound is an important habitat for all kinds of shorebirds and water birds and even some true seabirds. In summer the Sound offers birds bountiful food and habitat that is relatively protected from the stronger winds and higher seas of the true ocean coasts to the east and south. In other seasons the Sound remains a rich and varied source of food not just for overwintering regional birds but also for East Coast migrants in spring and fall. Most seabirds that frequent the Sound are really more shoreline birds—that is, they specialize in feeding along the immediate shore or the subtidal waters just offshore (see “Shallows”). The birds considered here regularly feed well offshore in the deeper waters, although some species such as cormorants feed in both the shallows and the depths. Double-Crested Cormorant Phalacrocorax auritus A typical stance while out of the water, drying its wings. Cormorants Over the past 30 years the Double-Crested Cormorant has expanded its year-round presence along the Connecticut shore, and this diving bird now breeds in many places along the shores of Long Island Sound, as well as in inland lakes. The larger Great Cormorant breeds along the coasts north of Cape Cod but is a regular if uncommon sight on breakwaters and other structures on the Sound in winter. Both cormorant species are expert fish catchers and will go well offshore to feed on schooling fish or squid in the central waters of the Sound. Gulls Most gulls are shoreline birds and do not typically wander far offshore. However, the Sound is a body of water that is small enough for strong fliers such as gulls to fly just about anywhere over the Sound, from the low tide line out to the central Sound. Of the common gulls, the Herring Gull is most likely to be spotted far from shore, where flocks eagerly crowd the air over fishing boats, particularly when fishers clean their catch or discard bycatch. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 156 9/7/16 10:05 PM CORMORANTS Dark throat, light belly GREAT CORMORANT 157 First year immature Light throat, dark belly Phalacrocorax carbo First year immature DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT Phalacrocorax auritus Adult Adult Imm. Imm. Double-crested in flight Uphill angle of flight Great Cormorant in flight DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT GREAT CORMORANT LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 157 Double-crested and Great adults in breeding plumage 9/7/16 10:05 PM 158 DEPTHS Common Tern Sterna hirundo Herring Gull Larus argentatus Terns Terns (see illustrations, pp. 126–127) feed by making shallow dives on small schooling fish such as Sand Lances and Atlantic Silversides, as well as the young of many species that frequent surface waters. Terns follow schools of fish and often join in the feeding frenzies of Bluefish, snapping up injured fish at the surface. Many of these school feeding events happen well offshore in deeper waters, particularly in summer and early fall, when the fish population of the Sound is at its peak. The most common tern seen in offshore waters is, as its name suggests, the Common Tern. Summer boaters near Falkner Island or Great Gull Island may also spot the much rarer Roseate Tern, which nests there in small numbers. The other tern species frequently seen along the Connecticut coast in summer is the Least Tern, but the Least Tern feeds mostly in the subtidal zone and does not typically wander far offshore except in migration. Sea ducks Long Island Sound hosts large numbers of diving bay ducks like scaups that primarily feed in the subtidal waters and typically flock within a half-mile of the shoreline (see “Shallows”), but a few species of wintering ducks routinely venture well offshore to deeper, rougher waters. These are the most marine species of ducks. The Long-Tailed Duck (formerly called Oldsquaw) is known for the deepest, most sustained dives of any diving duck and has been known to descend as deep as 200 feet to forage for the clams and other marine invertebrates it favors, certainly deep enough to feed anywhere in the open waters of Long LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 158 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 159 Island Sound. Although sadly these hardy ducks are now threatened worldwide, Long Island Sound still has a significant population of Long-Tailed Ducks. Scoters are large, sturdy, and mostly black sea ducks. They are powerful underwater swimmers and feed mostly on mollusks. Three species of scoter overwinter in the Sound and are often seen well offshore. Our most common wintering scoter is the White-Winged Scoter, and some Surf Scoters are present throughout winter. In the Eastern Basin the Common Eider is seen regularly in winter, but these very large, Arctic sea ducks are best adapted to feed on shoals in ocean waters and are the most truly marine of all sea ducks. Common Eiders occur in small numbers throughout the offshore waters of Long Island Sound in winter, but to see large flocks of eiders you’ll have to venture past the eastern edge of the Sound to at least Napatree Point in Rhode Island or farther east onto the ocean coasts of Block Island Sound. Gannets In the past couple of decades, the Northern Gannet has gone from a rare sight after late fall storms to a regular winter bird throughout Long Island Sound. Gannets make spectacular dives from 50 to 100 feet in the air, folding in their wings before plunging headlong deep below the surface and raising Common Eider, male Somateria mollissima LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 159 9/7/16 10:05 PM 160 DEPTHS a large splash column that can be seen from a mile or more away. Feeding gannets are unmistakable; no other large, white seabird makes that kind of headfirst dive into schools of fish. True seabirds Deep-ocean bird species like dovekies, murres, razorbills, shearwaters, and jaegers have all been spotted at the eastern edges of Long Island Sound, but these truly marine species rarely come within sight of land, and Long Island Sound is simply too landbound and shallow to attract such oceanic birds. Still, expert birders occasionally spot these ocean species within the boundaries of the Sound, mostly while riding the New London–Orient Point Ferry. Northern Gannet Morus bassanus Marine mammals There is evidence from historical accounts in the colonial era of large coastal whales seen in the Eastern Basin. In 1799, 200 whales were counted off Stonington, Connecticut, although no species was identified. Whaling began in New England in the late colonial period and expanded rapidly after the Wars of Independence and 1812. Those first whalers were small vessels that hunted the two coastal New England whale species that did not sink when harpooned and killed: the Humpback Whale and the Northern Right Whale. Within a few decades both species were nearly extinct in New England waters, and whalers began to use larger ships on extended voyages around the world. It is likely that in pre-Columbian times there were sometimes Humpback and Northern Right Whales in at least the Eastern Basin, but we have little direct evidence. Today an occasional stranding of a large whale occurs on the Connecticut coast, the most recent being a small Humpback that washed up in Stonington in 2012. Carbonbrain LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 160 9/7/16 10:05 PM SEA DUCKS Steve Byland LONG-TAILED DUCK Clangula hyemalis Paul Reeves Photography WHITE-WINGED SCOTER Melanitta fusca Karen Popovich GREATER SCAUP Aythya marila LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 161 161 Natures Moments UK LONG-TAILED DUCK Clangula hyemalis M. Carter SURF SCOTER Melanitta perspicillata Ian Maton RED-BREASTED MERGANSER Mergus serrator 9/7/16 10:05 PM 162 WHALES AND DOLPHINS LONG-FINNED PILOT WHALE Globicephala melas Distinctly hooked dorsal fin Light saddle mark on older individuals 10–20 ft. White callosities on head Smooth back with no dorsal fin NORTHERN RIGHT WHALE 35–50 ft. Eubalaena glacialis NOTE: The chance of seeing any of these marine mammals in the Sound is slight. Whales are rare in Long Island Sound. Distinctive knobbed head HUMPBACK WHALE Megaptera novaeangliae Adults are large and fast-moving, with little curiosity about boats. Right lower jaw is usually bright white. Back may show chevron patterns. FIN WHALE Balaenoptera physalus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 162 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS Fast, almost dolphinlike surface movements; note the chevron patterns on the back 163 MINKE WHALE Balaenoptera acutorostrata 12–30 ft. White band on the pectoral fins Smooth, trailing edge to the tail, with fine points at the end of the flukes ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN Tursiops truncatus 7.5–9 ft. HARBOR PORPOISE Phocoena phocoena 4–5 ft. Sometimes rolls out its tail before deeper dives Small, lumpy dorsal fin Often rolls out its tail before deeper dives Typically 35–45 ft. Long, mostly white pectoral fins are unique Rarely shows its tail above the surface, and then only briefly 30–70 ft. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 163 9/7/16 10:05 PM 164 DEPTHS In the summer of 2015 at least three young Humpback Whales entered Long Island Sound and were spotted at various locations in the Central and Western Basins. Unfortunately, in October 2015, one of these individuals was found dead from a probable ship strike in Lloyd Harbor. Bottlenose Dolphins are seen with some regularity in the Eastern Basin. In June 2015, a pod of about 25 Bottlenose Dolphins was seen well into the Western Basin. In 2009, a group of more than 200 Bottlenose were seen off Hempstead Harbor and at other locations in the Western Basin. Before World War II, groups of Bottlenose Dolphin were a regular sight for commercial fishermen off the North Shore of Long Island, but in the past 50 years, sightings have become rare. Although Bottlenose Dolphins sometimes enter shallow water, most groups stay well offshore, where they are not easily spotted by observers on land. The seals of Long Island Sound (see “Shallows”) primarily rest on isolated shore or island locations and feed in the subtidal shallows. Climate change in the Sound Long Island Sound is getting warmer. Most climate scientists think that the man-made rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide is responsible for global climate change and the warmer temperatures now recorded worldwide over the past half-century. The Sound has gained an average of two degrees Fahrenheit in the past century. Although two degrees might sound like a relatively slight change, consider how much additional heat energy it takes to warm every one of the 18 trillion gallons of water in the Sound, and you get a sense for how significant a change this is for the Sound’s ecology. The diseases and other troubles that currently plague Long Island Sound’s Northern Lobster and Eastern Oyster fisheries are caused in large part by warmer waters, particularly in the summer months, when hypoxia is a recurring problem in large areas of the Sound. Connecticut and New York marine scientists have run regular research trawls in Long Island Sound for decades, and recent shifts in the populations of warm-tolerant and cold-tolerant fish species suggest that climate change is shifting the species balance in the Sound. The shift in fish populations is not necessarily bad, but we don’t know what it portends for the future of the Sound ecosystem as a whole. Over the past 20 years warm-tolerant species like the Scup have seen population rises, while cold-tolerant species like the Winter Flounder have declined. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 164 9/7/16 10:05 PM DEPTHS 70° Bottom water temperature readings for spring and fall seasons 68° 45° 66° 42° 64° Spring Fall 39° 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Fall (degrees F) Spring (degrees F) 48° 165 62° Source: Howell and Auster, 2012. Winter Flounder Abundance A cold-tolerant species Scup Abundance A warm-tolerant species (Count per research tow) (Count per research tow) 600 200 150 400 100 200 0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 0 No data 50 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: Sound Health 2012, www.longislandsoundstudy.net LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 165 9/7/16 10:05 PM 166 Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge–Milford Point Unit, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 166 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 167 Beaches and Dunes The wild beach and dunes above Sunken Meadow Creek at Sunken Meadow State Park, Long Island. Beaches and dunes are a dynamic equilibrium among sand, wind, and waves. Everything on a beach is in constant motion, whether under blazing sun in summer or grinding ice and tearing waves in winter. Beaches and dunes are rough, turbulent places, dry as deserts, sprayed with blasts of sand and salt. If, as Heraclitus said, “No man ever steps in the same river twice,” the same is true of any beach. The beach you walk today is not the beach of last year—or even last week. Even if the place seems the same, every grain of sand you see was somewhere else just days ago. Long Island Sound beaches and dune fields are generally small and thin, particularly when compared to the large ocean beaches on the south shore of Long Island. There are two reasons for this: the Sound area has a comparatively poor supply of sand and sediments with which to build beaches, and the Sound has low-energy coasts sheltered from large ocean waves. Long Island, Fishers Island, and Napatree Point in Rhode Island act as giant breakwaters, shielding the waters of Long Island Sound from large waves except in the most violent hurricanes and nor’easters. Connecticut has a very rocky shoreline, with few headlands made of the soft glacial till that supplies the vast amounts of sand seen along the southern coast of Long Island and the eastern rim of Cape Cod. By comparison, there is no exposed bedrock anywhere on the North Shore of Long Island. Long Island’s North Shore sand-and-cobble beaches all originate from the erosion of soft glacial sediments of the Harbor Hill, Roanoke Point, and Orient Point Moraines that form the high LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 167 9/7/16 10:05 PM 168 BEACHES AND DUNES earthen banks of the North Shore of Long Island. For thousands of years the waters of Long Island Sound have carved away at the soft moraine sediment cliffs. As a result, the classic North Shore beach is a mix of sand and glacial stones and boulders that have eroded from the moraine cliffs. Much of the lighter sand and clay from the cliffs has washed into the deeper waters of the Sound, where they are not available to build larger beaches and sandspits. The value of beaches The recent hurricanes Irene (2011) and Sandy (2012) and the giant blizzard nor’easter Storm Nemo (2013) have reminded us that the supposed stability and permanence of our beaches is a dangerous illusion. Even on a relatively sheltered body of water like the Sound, the combined powers of hurricaneforce winds, storm surges, and a rising sea level have caused many millions of dollars in damage to the Connecticut and northern Long Island coastlines in just the past five years. Inevitably, the storm damage created calls to stabilize or even harden our shorelines against future storms. Time and again these futile and expensive efforts to hold back the sea have failed all along the Atlantic Coast, and time and again the political and human costs of abandoning neighborhoods built too close to the tide lines has overwhelmed common sense. Ultimately we will live in a wiser and more dynamic balance with our changing shorelines, if only because rising waters will force us to. Opposite: Before and after pictures of Sandy Point, Superstorm Sandy. On October 29, 2012, Superstorm Sandy struck the Northeast coast with hurricane-force winds and an extraordinary storm surge and high waves, even within Long Island Sound. At the height of the storm the winds were from the east-southeast, and high waves pushed thousands of tons of New Haven Harbor sand onto the sandspit at Sandy Point, West Haven, Connecticut. The natural sandspit and salt marsh acted as a buffer and breakwater, largely sparing the West Haven neighborhoods bordering the harbor from wave and surge damage. It was a similar story in Groton, Connecticut, where the Bushy Point sandspit saved the Groton airport and Avery Point areas from major storm damage. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 168 As the sea level rises and intense storms become more frequent due to our warming atmosphere, natural shoreline habitats will play a crucial role in protecting the built environment near the coast. Beaches, dune areas, sandspits, and the salt marshes behind them act both as mechanical buffers against storm waves and as giant sponges capable of absorbing and slowing the movement of storm-driven water and runoff from built areas. Marine scarps A marine scarp is a steep earthen slope, formed where waves and heavy rainstorms have eroded the soft gravel, sand, and clay deposits left by the glaciers of the last Ice Age about 17,000–20,000 years ago. These steep cliffs of eroded glacial till are commonly seen above beaches on glacial coastlines throughout the Northeast, and particularly on the North Shore of Long Island. The north coast of Long Island is composed almost entirely of soft, unconsolidated glacial till that is easily eroded by storm waves. East of Port Jefferson wave action has eroded any former headlands that once projected northward into the Sound, 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 169 October 5, 2012 November 3, 2012 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 169 9/7/16 10:05 PM 170 BEACHES AND DUNES resulting in an unusually straight coastline of narrow beaches at the foot of steep marine scarps. The nearly continuous line of high bluffs and steep scarp faces that line the North Shore of Long Island are the eroded edges of the Roanoke Point– Orient Point Moraine, which runs from Port Jefferson east to Orient Point and Plum Island and then continues across the eastern end of the Sound to form Plum, Great Gull, Little Gull, and Fishers Islands (see map, pp. 32–33). Wave action focuses energy on headlands that project from the coast, eroding them much faster than the relatively sheltered bays in between. As the wave action removes projecting headlands, the coastline becomes smoother. Longshore currents and beach drifting Sand particles don’t just move straight up the beach as waves wash in and straight down the beach as the backwash slides away. Because of the effects of wind and currents, wave sets rarely meet the beach in perfectly parallel lines. Instead, they usually come in at some angle to the line of the beach. The constant angle of waves to the beach has two major effects. First, the angled waves create a current just offshore of the beach called a longshore current. Second, the angled waves in the foreshore and swash zones of the beach move sand particles along the beach in the direction of the longshore current, and the longshore current picks up sand particles carried into waters just off the beach and moves them even farther down the beach. Typical longshore currents flow at Wave energy concentrated Wave energy disbursed Coastal headland Wave energy concentrated Coastal headland Bay beach Erosion of headlands by waves Wave action tends to focus energy on headlands that project from the coast, eroding them much faster than the relatively sheltered bays in between headlands. As the wave action removes projecting headlands, the coastline becomes smoother. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 170 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES two to three miles per hour along ocean shores but are slower in the Sound. Although the amount of sand moved by one wave is modest, the accumulated action of thousands of waves a day is enough to move many tons of sand down the beach over the course of a year. BR EA KING WAVES Scarp face above a beach. The north coast of Long Island is composed largely of eroded glacial sediments. East of Port Jefferson the high bluffs and steep scarp faces are the eroded edges of the Harbor Hill Moraine, deposited by retreating glaciers about 21,000 years ago. Beach sand movement and longshore current. Individual sand grains pushed down the beach by each sucessive wave swash SWASH ZONE BEACH Sandbars and sandspits Where the coastline bends sharply and the water deepens, such as at the mouth of a bay or end of a peninsula, the longshore current slows suddenly and the sand particles it carries settle out, gradually forming a sandbar that points in the 171 Net movement of sand down the beach Wa ve s ets an gle dt ot he sho rel in e Longshore current driven by angled waves Predominant seasonal wind direction LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 171 9/7/16 10:05 PM 172 BEACHES AND DUNES Waves move sand “around the corner” at the end. As water movement slows, sand deposits in a curl. Original headland at the base of the spit Longshore movement of beach sand by wave swash Longshore current Predominant seasonal wind direction direction of the longshore drift. Over time this sandbar accumulates more sand and becomes a sandspit above the high tide level. Each year more sand accumulates at the free end of the sandspit, further lengthening the spit. Once the sand is permanently above the high tide level, vegetation moves in and helps accumulate yet more wind-driven sand grains that are trapped and held by the leaves and stems, forming sand dunes on the spit. On both the Connecticut and Long Island coasts of the Sound the predominant movement of sand is toward the west, forming westward-pointing sandspits such as Milford Point in Connecticut and the Cedar Town Beach sandspit near Port Jefferson. This westward movement of sediment is driven in part by nor’easters and hurricanes that bring heavy wind and waves moving from east to west along the Sound. Wind and sand On the upper beach, just out of range of the splash of waves, sand grains begin to move under the influence of winds. At low tide the sand dries, and when winds reach a speed of about 12–15 miles per hour, they are capable of moving average-sized sand grains across the beach. Several wind processes transport sand grains. Strong winds pick up surface grains and transport them in short leaps across the surface in an action called saltation (from the Latin for “jumping”). Wind also can shove the grains of sand directly along the beach surface in a process called surface creep. As any beachcomber can tell you, wind is quite capable of moving sand grains well above the surface—to eye level at least. Windy days move great quantities of sand, but most beachgoers never see the strong, steady winter winds and blustery storms that move the majority of sand over the year. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 172 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 173 Types of beaches Although the beaches of Long Island Sound are modest compared to their eastern and southern neighbors, Sound beaches have all the classic beach characteristics. The Sound has four basic kinds of beach, each with particular origins and features, even if they all share similar marine and shoreline plants and wildlife. Most of our beaches are mainland beaches, created by longshore currents that carry sand along the coast and deposit it at the tide line. Over centuries of deposition sand beaches build up on shores that are not too steep to hold the sand. The beaches at Hammonasset State Park in Connecticut and Wildwood State Park on Long Island are mainland beaches, with sand and pebbles derived from both river deposition (in Connecticut) and the erosion of soft, glacial till shorelines (on the northern coast of Long Island). Cove or pocket beaches lie between rocky headlands, where a sheltered area accumulates sand that is eroded from the surrounding areas or washed by currents into the cove. The curving beach at Rocky Neck State Park, Connecticut, is a cove beach, and the Connecticut coast has dozens of other small cove beaches tucked between the many rocky headlands. Sandspits and baymouth bars are similar structures, created when longshore drift deposits sand along a point on the coast where the current slows suddenly, such as near a harbor entrance, bay, or river mouth. Sandy Point in New Haven Harbor, Milford Point at the mouth of the Housatonic River, and the points surrounding the entrance to Port Jefferson Harbor are all sandspit beaches. A tombolo is a sand or gravel bar that develops between the mainland and an island just offshore, usually through erosion of a former headland. Charles Island just off Milford, Connecticut, has a tombolo that connects the island to the mainland and is a passable rocky beach at low tide. The thin causeway that connects Lloyd Point on Long Island to Lloyd Harbor is also a tombolo. One common type of Atlantic Coast 2 inches 1 Paths of sand Wind Surface creep: Wind can simply push or roll sand grains along the surface grains Each grain makes many rebound leaps across the sand surface Saltation: Wind picks up sand grains and transports them short distances LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 173 Vegetation is crucial to help build up dunes and barrier islands by trapping sand grains carried by the wind 9/7/16 10:05 PM 174 BEACHES AND DUNES A mainland beach, at Hammonasset Beach State Park, Connecticut. A cove or pocket beach, at Rocky Neck State Park, Connecticut. A sandspit beach, at Sandy Point Bird Sanctuary, West Haven, Connecticut. A tombolo beach, at Silver Sands State Park, Milford, Connecticut (Charles Island in background). LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 174 9/7/16 10:05 PM rk, BEACHES AND DUNES 175 beach that is missing in Long Island Sound is the barrier island beach, which forms on high-energy ocean coasts with large amounts of sand, strong currents, and large waves. Beach sand Only the hardest grains of minerals survive the grinding and buffeting processes that produce sand. Most beach sand is made of quartz and feldspar, two of the most common minerals on earth, both hard enough to cut glass. The sand on Long Island Sound beaches today is mostly the product of the Wisconsinan Period glaciers that covered the Sound region from about 35,000 to about 16,000 years ago. The Sound’s beaches are mostly made up of sand and finer gravels from eroded glacial till that is not very old in geological terms, and this sand has not been exposed to the long polishing and grinding that create the fine, white quartz sugar sand of the prettiest beaches to the south. Our young, rough sands are mostly quartz, but they also contain fragments and sand-sized grains of other relatively soft and mostly darker rocks and minerals. Over time the softer minerals will be ground into silt and washed away, but since this sand was created so recently, the darker minerals are still mixed into the beaches, giving them a darker look than the older ocean beaches of the unglaciated Atlantic Coast south of New York Harbor, where much of the sand is far older. Also, Long Island Sound’s low-energy beaches sometimes have muddy areas or silt-sand mixtures because the currents and waves aren’t strong enough to wash away the silt particles as they would on an ocean beach. Onshore and offshore winds Beaches are windy for the same reason open waters are windy: there are no landforms or tall vegetation to break the force of the wind. Beaches are also windy because of the The sand of Lighthouse Point in New Haven isn’t brown because it is dirty. The sand is brown because it’s a relatively young blend of many minerals. Viewed close up (see the inset), the sand is a mix of brightly colored grains. When you blend all those colors in your mind’s eye, you see brown. lford, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 175 9/7/16 10:05 PM 176 BEACHES AND DUNES very different ways that land and sea heat and cool over the seasons. This differential heating and cooling along the coast generates onshore winds and their opposite offshore winds, particularly in summer, when the contrast between land and sea temperatures is the greatest. Onshore winds are generated when the land heats up during the day, creating columns of rising warm air. As the warm air mass rises, it draws in air from the lower, cooler air over the water, creating winds that blow in from the sea, usually in the afternoon and early evening. Although these cool sea breezes may feel great on land, the onshore winds can be strong enough to kick up three-to-four-foot seas offshore, creating a rough ride for small boats on the Sound. Onshore winds happen almost daily along the Long Island Sound coasts in summer and early fall. Offshore winds result when the Sound is warmer than the land and rising air over the Sound pulls air from the land. Offshore breezes are most common in late fall, when the Sound is still warm but the land is cooling quickly as winter approaches. Groins, jetties, and breakwaters In the past, various kinds of hard structures have been built to stabilize sand beaches and protect them from storm damage. Breakwaters are long rock structures built offshore and roughly parallel to the shoreline to reflect storm waves and protect the waters of harbors like Connecticut’s New Haven Harbor, Bridgeport Harbor, and Stamford Harbor, which are all shielded by multiple breakwaters. Jetties are walls built on either side of a harbor entrance to prevent the navigation channel from filling with sediment carried by longshore currents, as well as the development of a baymouth sandbar across the harbor entrance. Milford Harbor, Port Jefferson, Mattituck Creek, and Mystic Harbor all employ jetties to protect their harbor entrances. A Dunlin (Calidris alpina) walking on the beach at Milford Point, Connecticut. Note that the beach surface here is composed almost entirely of slipper, oyster, and clam shells. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 176 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 177 Groins are stone walls built perpendicular to sandy shores to help stabilize and widen beaches that are losing sand to erosion from longshore currents. Groins are no longer considered effective for shoreline engineering, because although they trap some sand locally along the upstream face of the wall, they rob downstream areas of their sand supply. Over time, groins worsen beach erosion. Beach sediments The constant action of waves and currents sorts sediments by size, forming large areas of consistent sediments. Water sorts sediments into course pebble areas, finer sand areas, and, finest of all, silty clay sediments. The fine particles of silt move the farthest and can drift in the water column for years before settling either deep offshore in the ocean bottom or as muddy sediments in bays and other protected areas with slower, more gentle wave action. Sand accumulates along shores because it is composed of durable minerals like quartz and feldspar derived from granites, in particles small enough to be easily moved by ocean waves, but also heavy and longlasting enough to persist along the coastline rather than be immediately washed into deep water. Beach profiles The actions of waves on sandy beaches over the seasons produce a consistent and predictable beach structure. The foredune is a raised portion at the back of a beach that is a transition point from true beach into a vegetated dune. The foredune is raised because the beach plants there are dense enough to trap and hold sand, and over time the foredune rises over the height of the upper beach. The upper beach is created largely by wind action and is a repository for sand grains blown up from lower areas of the beach. The upper beach is typically bare, although it may have a few hardy beach plants, such as American Beach Grass, Seaside Goldenrod, Beach Clotbur, and Common Saltwort. On ocean beaches the upper beach is often marked by a distinct step in the beach called the winter berm, created when large (usually winter) storm waves reach high up the beach and pull sand away from areas that are normally well above the high tide line. On Long Island Sound beaches you may see a winter berm on the widest beaches after a severe storm, but normally the waves on the Sound are not large enough to carve a distinct winter berm. Wrack lines The wrack line (wet-dry line) marks the average high tide line. Incoming waves are more forceful than the backwash off the beach, and as they come in, waves sweep material from LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 177 Northern Moon Snail Lunatia heros Atlantic Slipper Shell Crepidula fornicata Oyster Drill Urosalpinx cinerea 9/7/16 10:05 PM 178 BEACHES AND DUNES Long Island Sound beaches commonly transition quickly to upper beach or dune areas that are next to salt marshes on the sheltered or landward side. Here at Lloyd Point on Long Island, the sandspit beach transitions to salt marsh in less than 200 feet from the high tide line on the Sound side. the tidal zone and onto the beach up to the high tide line. This leaves a collection of plant and animal debris in a line called the wrack line. On Long Island Sound coasts, wrack lines usually consist of broken stalks of Phragmites (Common Reed) or Saltwater Cord Grass, crab shells, Sea Lettuce and other algae, and bits of other floatable debris. Near rocky coasts or Eelgrass beds you may see fragments of Eelgrass, Rockweed, Knotted Wrack, and other less common red and brown algae. East of New London Harbor in Connecticut the wrack line may contain large strands of Sugar Kelp. Also in the mix may be clam and scallop shells, egg cases from whelks and skates, FOREDUNE BEACH Seaside Goldenrod Switchgrass Am. Beach Grass DUNE VEGETATION Am. Beach Grass Switchgrass Seaside Goldenrod Wrinkled Rose Marsh Elder Northern Bayberry Eastern Redcedar Juniper Black Cherry Poison Ivy Virginia Creeper Blackgrass Phragmites WINTER BERM OR WINTER BENCH Beach forbs & grass BEACH VEGETATION Am. Beach Grass Red Goosefoot Beach Clotbur Searocket Common Saltwort Seaside Spurge Dusty Miller Beach Pea SUPRALITTORAL ZONE LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 178 BERM C UPPER BEACH Wrack line, or “wet–dry line” Berm trough or runnel. May hold a running stream of water as the tide moves in or out. LITTORAL ZO 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 179 and the carcasses of various small fish and invertebrates. Most crab shells you see in the wrack line are not from dead individuals but are the molted shells that crabs shed as they grow. Wrack lines are inhabited by beach flies, wolf and other spiders, beach fleas (amphipods), and beetles, all important food sources for shorebirds. Most wrack line animals are nocturnal, feeding when the beach is cooler and moister. Wrack line shells and plants are a good indication of what vegetation and animals are locally abundant just offshore in the subtidal environment. Dead and partially dismembered Northern Searobins are common in the wrack line because they are easily caught by fishers and make good bait for Bluefish and Striped Bass. The seeds of many annual beach plants are also mixed into the wrack line, and the dispersal of those seeds by tides, wind, and wave action is an important way that these plants spread along the beach. Seaside Spurge, Common Saltwort, Red (Coastblite) Goosefoot, and Searocket are annuals that spread seeds this way. Wrack debris aids a beach by trapping and holding windblown sand, helping dune formation. Many foredunes begin as sand trapped in a high storm wrack line that gradually accumulates enough to support plants. SUBTIDAL ZONE BERM CREST LOWER BEACH TROUGH OFFSHORE BAR “High tide line” MHW “Low tide line” MLW Berm face nel. ream in or out. “Swash Zone” Trough LITTORAL ZONE Offshore bar SUBLITTORAL ZONE MHW=Mean High Water Line, MLW=Mean Low Water Line LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 179 9/7/16 10:05 PM 180 BEACHES AND DUNES Many bathing beaches sweep away the wrack line to leave clean sand. Unfortunately, beach grooming for sunbathers tends to sterilize the beach, removing the food sources, shelter, and seeds for most plants and animals that use the beach. Ironically, grooming also makes the beach sand more mobile and thus more prone to blowing away or being swept away by tides. Beach grooming is particularly detrimental to two of Connecticut’s most endangered birds, the Piping Plover and the Least Tern, both of which nest on the high end of beaches. The Piping Plover also feeds frequently in the wrack line where it nests, and beach grooming often destroys Piping Plover nests. Storms and spring high tides push water well beyond the normal wrack line, and you may notice an additional storm She ltere d bay Salt mar sh Back dun es She ltere & pit d thicke ch p t ines s Prim a seco ry & nda dun ry es E SID BAY Fine silt sedim & clay ents Low mar sh High mar sh Fore & sw shore ash zo Sand Thin soils Sand Fore (prim dun ary) e Swa sh erm rb rm nte be Wi er mm u S zone Trou g h Generalized structure of a sandspit, typical of sandspits on the Long Island Sound coasts. Areas of salt marsh form on the more protected inland side of the sandspit, and if the spit is big enough, small areas of dune habitat may develop behind the foredune and beach. Nea rsho re b a r Offs ho LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 180 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 181 wrack line pushed well up the beach, into the foredune area or even beyond. If you are curious about how high the water gets on a beach in storms or perigean spring tides, look for that extra wrack line far up the beach. The lower beach The lower beach or swash zone is the transition area where waves meet the beach, swashing up the sand and sliding back with each new wave set. Farther up the beach a summer berm typically forms where the relatively gentle summer waves pile up an accumulation of sand, building the width and height of the beach. Often the beach becomes steeper on the seaward side of the summer berm. Prim a seco ry & nda dun ry es Just below the foreshore area of beaches, below the low tide line, there is typically a trough in the beach profile where heavier gravel and shells accumulate, and just beyond that dip area is a shallow bar area composed of a mix of the coarse materials and sand brought in from deeper waters. It seems that every child at the beach makes the surprise discovery that if you head out into the water and brave the first line of breakers and the deep trough under them, you’ll suddenly be in much shallower water when you reach the sandbar Fore & sw shore ash zone Nea rsho re & b Wrack lines provide food and shelter to many small organisms on the beach. Beach fleas (amphipods), small crabs, wolf spiders, many other kinds of spiders, beetles, and even foxes and raccoons scavenge in wrack lines. Wrack lines also trap and hold windblown sand on beaches. reak e rs Offs hore Wolf Spider Pardosa sp. D UN E SID SO Offs hore bar LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 181 9/7/16 10:05 PM 182 Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge-Milford Point Unit, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 182 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 183 183 9/7/16 10:05 PM 184 BEACHES AND DUNES Red (Coastblite) Goosefoot (Chenopodium rubrum) is one of the few beach plants that grows right up to the wrack line. beyond the breaking waves. Offshore sandbars are formed when sand pulled off the lower beach by wave swash is pulled into deeper water just offshore, where wave action below the surface is less intense. The sand milling in the backwash drops out of the water column, forming a sandbar just seaward of the beach trough. On Long Island Sound beaches the normal wave energy is much less powerful than on an ocean beach, so both the trough and the offshore sandbar may be small or even absent. Plants Few plants and animals are well adapted to the dry conditions, sandy substrate, and salt spray of beach environments. No plants can survive below the wrack line except Saltwater Cordgrass on sheltered beaches, and there is limited vegetation on the first stretch of upper beach behind the wrack line, primarily because only a few plants can tolerate having their roots immersed in salt water. Most true beach plants live in the upper beach area just before the rise of the foredunes behind the beach, where American Beach Grass begins to dominate. American Beach Grass American Beach Grass is the most common plant found on the upper beach, and it becomes even more dominant in the foredune and back dunes areas beyond the upper beach. This grass has a number of features that allow it to thrive in sandy, dry conditions, including its leaves’ ability to curl into vertical tubes and conserve moisture under hot, windy conditions. Although American Beach Grass can propagate by seed, the primary way it spreads over a beach is through underground LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 184 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 185 stems, or rhizomes, that lie beneath the sand, and roots that extend deep down—six feet or more deep is not unusual. Because its rhizomes and roots are safely anchored under the sand, American Beach Grass can survive storm damage, sand blowouts, and winter exposure. American Beach Grass is often the first plant to colonize an empty stretch of beach or dune. Once its seeds take root, the grass can extend itself rapidly through its rhizomes, and as the grass spreads, it begins to build sand dunes or sandspits by accumulating windblown sand particles. As the leaves trap the sand grains, the sand builds a small mound around each grass cluster. One of American Beach Grass’s most important adaptations is the ability to grow upward quickly, which keeps the grass clusters from being overwhelmed by the growing pile of sand around them. Many other beach plants have the same vertical growth adaptations for this reason. As American Beach Grass moves into a beach or sandbar, the grass literally builds its environment by accumulating and stabilizing the sand with its roots and rhizomes. The grass does not just grow on sandspits and dunes—American Beach Grass creates sandspits and dunes. Other common plants Saltwater Cordgrass is one of the few land grasses that can tolerate having its roots soaked in salt water, and on protected beaches without much wave action you’ll often see small stands of Saltwater Cordgrass running right down the beach to at least the low tide line and sometimes a little beyond. Two of Long Island Sound’s most endangered bird species nest in the upper beach zone: the Piping Plover and the Least Tern. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 185 9/7/16 10:05 PM 186 BEACHES AND DUNES Red (Coastblite) Goosefoot is one of the few beach annuals that grow right in the wrack line. In late summer and fall, Seabeach Orach lines upper beaches, turning red gradually as the weather cools. Seashore Orach seeds are highly salttolerant, and they overwinter in the wrack line to start a new generation the following spring. Beach Clotbur or Cockleburr (Xanthium strumarium) seeds are a common sight on the Sound’s beaches in summer and fall. Dusty Miller, Beach Clotbur (Cockleburr), Searocket, Common Saltwort, and Seaside Spurge are all species adapted to living on beaches and dune faces. They have tough, leathery leaves that are sometimes also waxy or hairy, all strategies to prevent moisture loss. Seaside Spurge grows in a flat disc just above the level of the sand to conserve water by staying out of the wind. If you look closely at Seaside Spurge plants in late summer or fall, they seem to grow on top of little mounds. As with American Beach Grass, the spurge creates the mound by trapping sand between its leaves and stems and thus must constantly grow upward or be buried under the pile of sand captured by its own leaves. Seaside Goldenrod is one of the most common beach specialists and seems to dominate the upper beaches of the Sound in the late summer and fall with its showy yellow sprays of flowers. This hardy perennial goldenrod has tough, waxy evergreen leaves over a deep set of roots that often stretch two feet or more underground. Seaside Goldenrod seems particularly resistant to salt spray damage and often grows right up to the edges of upper beaches. Wrinkled Rose or Salt-Spray Rose (Rosa rugosa) often marks the inner edge of the upper beach and the transition into a dune environment. Farther back on the upper beach, in the transition to dune habitats, Wrinkled (Salt-Spray) Rose and Beach Pea become common. Wrinkled Rose is an exotic Asian rose introduced to the Atlantic Coast in the 1800s for its ability to grow in and stabilize sand dunes. Wrinkled Rose is the most salt spray– tolerant shrub and is often the first shrub to appear in the upper beach area. Animals Most beach animals are not visible to the casual observer because they live within the sand and rarely surface before nightfall. Much of the subsurface beach life is also too small to be viewed without magnifiers or microscopes. These tiny animals, collectively called the meiofauna, live between the grains of sand in the lower beach area that stays moist between tides. Mites, ostracods, tardigrades, copepods, nematodes, and various worms all swarm out of sight within an inch or so of the sand surface, and they are a valuable food supply for the larger copepods, shrimp, and beach fleas that in turn feed the shorebirds. The beach meiofauna have only LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 186 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 187 recently been discovered and studied, and we still don’t know much about the role they play in beach ecology. Sponges are common subtidal animals that most of us see only when they wash up on beaches. The Red Beard Sponge is an invasive species often seen washed up on Sound beaches. Fresh specimens are bright red, and even when dead and dried on the beach, the branching fingers of Red Beard Sponge retain a faded but distinctly red color. The Atlantic Slipper Shell is a highly specialized snail that lives in the low tidal and subtidal areas of beaches. Slipper shells, although they are true snails, do not have a coiled shell like most snails. Their curved, oval shell has a small shelf or seat on the inside, leading to their other common name, Boat Shell. Atlantic Slipper Shells are one of the most common mollusks in Long Island Sound, particularly in the Central and Western Basins. Slipper shells live in stacks of adults and young snails, with the larger adults on the bottom of the stack and smaller, younger individuals attached to their backs. They feed by relaxing their attachment muscles while underwater and filter-feeding through the gap between their own shell edge and their neighbor’s back just below. The Horseshoe Crab is a large but harmless creature often spotted on beaches, unfortunately not always alive, because these crabs have been overharvested as fishing bait. Only recently, as their numbers have dwindled, have they attracted conservation support and research interest. In May and June in Long Island Sound, often during a spring (unusually high) tide, Horseshoe Crabs travel up into the low tidal zone to lay their eggs. These eggs are very attractive to shorebirds, and often the best indication that the crabs are breeding is the sight of flocks of birds avidly picking at the eggs in the surf line. Saltwater Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) is a common salt marsh grass that will also grow right at the water line on more sheltered beaches. Seaside Goldenrod (Solidago sempervirens) is one of the most common and noticeable beach plants all along the northern and central Atlantic Coast. Northern Moon Snails and Oyster Drills are predators on bivalves in the intertidal region of beaches. Both species drill neat, round holes in shells, usually near the umbo, or hinge point, of a clam or oyster. Once the snail finds a suitable live clam, it uses its sharp, toothy radula to scrape a hole in the clam’s shell as it secretes a strong acid to help dissolve the shell. When the radula breaks through to the interior of the clam shell, the snail injects powerful enzymes that digest the clam’s interior organs and muscle. The snail then sucks up the dissolved clam through the hole in the shell. Clam or oyster shells that you find on Long Island Sound beaches are often riddled with holes from snails but may also be eaten away into a honeycomb of holes through the action of Boring Sponges. Boring Sponges don’t prey on clams and LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 187 9/7/16 10:05 PM 188 BEACH PLANTS AMERICAN BEACH GRASS Ammophila breviligulata SEASIDE GOLDENROD Solidago sempervirens BEACH CLOTBUR Xanthium strumarium SALTWATER CORDGRASS Spartina alterniflora COMMON SALTWORT Salsola kali COMMON SALTWORT, detail Salsola kali LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 188 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 189 ens SEASIDE SPURGE Chamaesyce polygonifolia SEASIDE SPURGE, detail Chamaesyce polygonifolia flora RED GOOSEFOOT Chenopodium rubrum RED GOOSEFOOT, detail Chenopodium rubrum SEAROCKET Cakile edentula SEAROCKET, detail Cakile edentula LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 189 9/7/16 10:05 PM 190 UPPER BEACH PLANTS SANDBUR Cenchrus longispinus YARROW Achillea millefolium EASTERN PRICKLY PEAR CACTUS Opuntia humifusa DUSTY MILLER Artemisia stelleriana BEACH PEA Lathyrus japonicus SEABEACH ORACH Atriplex pentandra LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 190 9/7/16 10:05 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 191 POISON IVY Toxicodendron radicans VIRGINIA CREEPER Parthenocissus quinquefolia CATBRIER Smilax glauca BLACK SWALLOWWORT Cynanchum louiseae Hilda Weges WINEBERRY Rubrus phoenicolasius LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 191 JAPANESE HONEYSUCKLE Lonicera japonica 9/7/16 10:06 PM 192 BEACHES AND DUNES oysters directly, but the slow dissolving of their shells is usually fatal to clams if the sponge attacks an occupied shell. Dead or dying sea jellies often appear in the swash zone just below the wrack line. Moon Jellies are usually seen as pale greenish or blueish puddles of gel about six inches in diameter. The larger Lion’s Mane Jelly is red-brown in color with patches of lighter colors. Sea Nettles are usually smaller than Moon Jellies but have long, trailing tentacles. Beware of approaching a stranded jelly if you are barefoot on the beach. The stinging tentacles remain viable long after the animal has died, and the tentacles can spread several feet from the remains. Birds The dominant birds of Long Island Sound beaches are gulls, particularly the Herring Gull, Ring-Billed Gull, Laughing Gull, and Great Black-Backed Gull, joined in winter by the more unusual white-winged Iceland and Glaucous Gulls. Gulls are intelligent and watchful predators of all small beach animals (including nestling birds of many species), taking their prey from the immediate shoreline or from the shallows near the beach. Their usual prey includes clams, crabs, snails, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 192 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 193 small fish, and any other animals they can capture or scavenge. Gulls generally do not dive for their prey, which limits their feeding to the shallowest water and areas of the beach exposed at low tide. Surprisingly, given that they are now almost synonymous with shoreline life on the Sound, gulls began nesting in the region only recently. The first recorded Herring Gull nest in Connecticut was in 1943; the first Connecticut nest of a Great Black-Backed Gull was found in 1961. The gull population of the Sound region expanded rapidly in the mid-twentieth century with the rise of suburban towns using open-air dumps and the growth of large-scale, offshore commercial fishing. However, gull populations have contracted substantially as open-air dumping has become much less common, factory fishing has declined, and coastal development has reduced suitable nesting areas. Gulls nest on offshore islands along the coast or on the rare isolated sandspits that still exist. In summer, terns may be seen off most beaches along the Sound’s coasts, particularly when the adults and newly fledged young wander the shorelines and coastal waters in late summer in flocks before they migrate south. Terns look like small, delicate gulls with long, swallowlike tails. They hunt tiny fish such as Atlantic Silversides, Blueback and Atlantic Herring, and Sand Lance by diving into schools of Least Sandpipers Calidris minutilla LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 193 9/7/16 10:06 PM 194 BEACHES AND DUNES Sanderling (winter plumage) Calidris alba LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 194 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 195 fish near the water surface. Historically terns nested both on offshore islands and along beaches and sandspits on the Connecticut and New York coasts of the Sound. As beaches were developed or became summer playgrounds, terns (except for Least Terns) were largely driven off mainland nesting sites, and now the only large colonies of Common and Roseate Terns in our region are on Falkner Island off Guilford, Connecticut, and on Great Gull Island at the far eastern end of the Sound. About 2,900 Common Tern pairs and 25–30 Roseate Tern pairs nest on Falkner Island each year. The much larger Great Gull Island tern colony hosts about 9,000–10,000 nesting pairs of Common Terns and about 1,400–1,800 pairs of the endangered Roseate Tern. Bird migration through the Sound The Long Island Sound coastlines are an important migration way station for most of the common shorebird species on the East Coast, particularly in fall. The extensive tidal flats of New Haven Harbor attract tens of thousands of Semipalmated Sandpipers, Black-Bellied Plovers, and Dunlin that feed on the invertebrate life there at low tide. On the West Haven side of the harbor, Sandy Point is particularly good for watching such wading birds as the Great Egret, Snowy Egret, and Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, which are drawn to the small salt marsh pools sheltered by the point. Hammonasset Beach State Park’s extensive grassy parking fields and shallow pools are the best places in Connecticut to appreciate the sheer range of fall migrants, particularly shorebirds on the beach and fields and hawks overhead. On Long Island, the outer harbor areas of Port Jefferson and Stony Brook Harbor are excellent locations to study both fall and spring shorebird migrants. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 195 Falkner Island, three miles south of Guilford, Connecticut, is one of the most important seabird breeding areas on the US Atlantic Coast. In addition to about 2,900 pairs of Common Terns, the island hosts 25–30 pairs of the endangered Roseate Tern. The island is a glacial drumlin made up of mixed glacial till deposited about 19,000 years ago as part of the Hammonasset-Ledyard Moraine. 9/7/16 10:06 PM 196 BEACHES AND DUNES Sanderlings (Calidris alba) feed in the swash zones on most Long Island Sound beaches during both spring and fall migration. Brant (Branta bernicla) are smaller cousins of Canada Geese that migrate into the Sound in the colder months. Small flocks of Brant appear in most harbors along the coasts of the Sound in the midautumn, and many overwinter in the shallows and beaches. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 196 The Sound’s coastlines lie within the Atlantic Flyway, a major spring and fall migratory route. In spring, warm fronts with winds from the south and west sweep migrating birds northward and toward the coastline. Most birds are reluctant to fly over large bodies of water, where the warm thermal updrafts that help keep them aloft are scarce. This reluctance to cross the central Sound funnels large flocks of northbound birds along the Connecticut and Long Island North Shore coastlines. Most songbird migration occurs at night, and in the morning coastal forests will be loaded with thousands of traveling songbirds needing to rest and feed. Wooded promontories along the coast like Bluff Point in Connecticut and Caumsett State Park on Long Island draw large numbers of spring migrants. The bulk of spring migrants continue north and eastward along the New England coast, but many birds move from the Sound area up the major north-south river valleys in Connecticut. The Housatonic, Quinnipiac, Connecticut, and Thames Rivers are all significant routes for both spring and fall migrants. In autumn large numbers of southbound songbirds, shorebirds, and hawks migrate along the coasts of Long Island Sound. The Atlantic coastline and the major river valleys along the Connecticut coast all contribute to the southbound flow. As the birds move along the Sound shorelines, they tend to collect at coastal promontories like Bluff Point, Lighthouse 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 197 Point, and Milford Point in Connecticut and Port Jefferson and Stony Brook Harbors on Long Island. The coastal forests of Caumsett, Sunken Meadow, and Wildwood State Parks also draw large numbers of migrating songbirds in both spring and fall. Our endangered beach-nesting birds Two beach-nesting birds are among North America’s most endangered species owing to the almost total loss of their former nesting grounds. The Least Tern and the Piping Plover both nest in lightly vegetated upper beach and dune areas— precisely the areas that today are largely buried beneath coastal houses or have been converted to recreational beaches. In recent years both species have received more attention and protection of their nesting grounds in Connecticut locations such as Sandy Point in West Haven, Milford Point, and the eastern margins of Hammonasset Beach State Park. On the North Shore of Long Island there are protected beach-nesting areas at Sunken Meadow, Wildwood, and Orient Beach State Parks. If you visit Long Island Sound beaches with reserved nesting areas, please obey the posted signs and stay away from the fenced-off areas, and never let a dog on the beach (with or without a leash) during the late spring and summer months when birds are nesting. Minor accommodations to these beach-nesting birds have made a real difference in their nesting success rates over the past decade. Other less common birds also nest on or near the Sound’s beaches. Willets, Black Skimmers, and American Oystercatchers nest in thinly vegetated beach and dune areas, often in the sites now protected for Piping Plover and Least Tern nesting. The classic winter birds of beaches, dunes, and open grassy areas throughout the Long Island Sound area. When winter sets in, look for mixed flocks of Lapland Longspurs (Calcarius lapponicus), Snow Buntings (Plectrophenax nivalis), and Horned Larks (Eremophila alpestris). Snow Bunting Horned Lark Lapland Longspur LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 197 9/7/16 10:06 PM 198 BEACHES AND DUNES Piping Plovers (Charadrius melodus) are so well camouflaged that they are easy to miss even when you are looking for them. Their nests on the upper beach are even easier to miss, so please stay out of marked beach bird nesting areas to avoid inadvertently harassing these endangered birds or destroying their nests. Steve Byland Beaches in winter Birding on beaches in winter can be very productive and interesting. Many northern species come south to winter along the Atlantic Coast, and for species used to the wide expanses of Arctic tundra, beaches must seem like familiar territory. Snow Buntings, Lapland Longspurs, and Horned Larks are all small songbirds that nest in the high Arctic and winter on open fields, beaches, and marshes near coastlines. Almost every winter a few spectacular Snowy Owls visit the marshes and beaches of Long Island Sound, but usually not in large numbers. In the winter of 2013–2014 and again in the winter of 2014–2015, however, many dozens of Snowy Owls were spotted throughout New England and the Atlantic Coast area, probably due to cyclical increases in the population of their lemming prey in the Arctic. In the breeding season of 2013 and apparently again in 2014, so many young Snowy Owls survived to fledge that many juvenile and young adult birds drifted far south of their normal wintering grounds in search of reduced competition from their peers and adult owls for food. Snowy Owls gravitate to open coastal beach and marsh areas that are similar to their normal tundra habitat. Snowys are solitary creatures in winter, and they can LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 198 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 199 be difficult to spot against clumps of snow and ice. On winter beaches and salt marshes these large, white owls will often take an exposed perch on a driftwood snag, post, or rock, looking for small mammals. Unlike their nocturnal cousin the Great Horned Owl, Snowy Owls are primarily daytime hunters that locate their prey by sight, although they can also hunt at night. Snowy Owl Bubo scandiacus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 199 9/7/16 10:06 PM 200 ANIMALS AND ALGAE Kevin Knuth HORSESHOE CRAB Limulus polyphemus Eddie Kidd MOON JELLY Aurelia aurita BORING SPONGE DAMAGE Cliona sp. Mandy Rogers LION’S MANE JELLY Cyanea capillata helgidinson SEA NETTLE Chrysaora quinquecirrha LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 200 RED BEARD SPONGE Microciona prolifera 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 201 Anatolij ATLANTIC SLIPPER SHELLS Crepidula fornicata WOLF SPIDER Hogna carolinensis GREEN FLEECE Codium fragile SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca ROCKWEED Fucus distichus KNOTTED WRACK Ascophyllum nodosum LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 201 9/7/16 10:06 PM 202 SHELLS NORTHERN MOON SNAIL Lunatia heros RIBBED MUSSEL Geukensia demissa KNOBBED WHELK Busycon carica ATLANTIC BAY SCALLOP Argopecten irridans BLUE MUSSEL Mytilis edulis ATLANTIC SURF CLAM Spisula solidissima CHANNELED WHELK Busycon canaliculatus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 202 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES BLOOD ARK Anadara ovalis 203 ATLANTIC SLIPPER SHELL Crepidula fornicata ATLANTIC JACKKNIFE CLAM Ensis directus COMMON PERIWINKLE Littorina littorea EASTERN MUDSNAIL Ilyanassa obsoleta COMMON JINGLE SHELL Anomia simplex EASTERN OYSTER Crassostrea virginica SOFT-SHELL CLAM Mya arenaria NORTHERN QUAHOG Mercenaria mercenaria LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 203 9/7/16 10:06 PM 204 GEESE Branta canadensis CANADA GOOSE Common goose of coastal waters, inland ponds, bays, and marshes. Widely used as an ornamental goose for ponds and other freshwater habitats. These introduced birds are difficult to separate from the true wild and migratory Canada Geese. Introduced birds are more often than not the large subspecies called the Common Canada Goose (length typically 45 in., 111 cm), whereas wild Canada Geese, which migrate south in fall and return north to nest in spring, are usually a mix of smaller races (length typically 36 in., 91 cm). Found throughout United States and Canada. On East Coast, range extends to northern Florida and expands south each year. Length: 36–45 in. (91–111 cm). Wingspan: To 60 in. (1.5 m). Common J F M A M J J A S O N D Branta bernicla BRANT Small coastal and offshore goose resembling a small Canada Goose. However, back is darker brown to almost black, and black neck color extends down to a sharp cutoff mark on lower breast. Instead of the Canada Goose’s bold chinstrap, the Brant has a small necklace of white lined with black. Bill is small and black. Breeds in the far north above Hudson Bay and migrates to coastal waters for fall and winter. Principal winter grounds range from the New England coast south to the northernmost coast of Georgia. There are scattered inland records and increased sightings farther south along the East Coast and on the Gulf Coast. Length: 26 in. (66 cm). Wingspan: 42 in. (107 cm). Note: In the 1970s and 1980s the Brant population was in serious decline because its favorite food, Eelgrass (Zostera), was decimated by a fungus. Fortunately, the birds gradually altered their diets and now they feed on the marine algae Sea Lettuce (Ulva lactuca) and the fresh shoots of Saltwater Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora), and the Brant population of the East Coast has begun to recover. Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D BRANT at Meigs Point, Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 204 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 205 CANADA GOOSE Sexes are alike in all plumages BRANT Sexes are alike in all plumages LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 205 9/7/16 10:06 PM 206 GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL Larus marinus GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL A common bird of harbor areas and shorelines. Of all the large inshore gulls, this species will follow boats out to sea the farthest. The Great Black-Backed Gull is gradually extending its range down the Eastern Seaboard toward Florida. Description: The largest gull of the shoreline. Jet-black back contrasts sharply with pure white underparts. White border shows from wingtips along rear edge of wings when in flight. Heavy yellow bill with red spot. Flesh-colored legs. First-year immatures can usually be told by massive size and by pale head and rump contrasting with brown back and underparts. Length: 30 in. (76 cm). Wingspan: 65 in. (1.7 m). Habits: Aggressive and territorial with other birds, but often nests peacefully in mixed-species colonies with other gulls. Found throughout northeast Atlantic Coast all year north of North Carolina and in winter south to northern Florida. Casual to Gulf Coast. Similar species: Superficially similar to the Herring Gull in plumage, but much larger, and note the much darker back, massive bill, and bulkier profile. The uncommon Lesser Black-Backed Gull also has an almost black back but is a bit smaller than a Herring Gull. Common J F M A M J J A S O N D Great Black-Backed Gull Massive dark bill Herring Gull First winter Checkered effect of highcontrast plumage pattern First winter Dull brown mantle lacks contrast Smaller bill, light at the base Length: 30 in. Length: 25 in. Comparison of young Herring and Black-Backed Gulls, often seen in mixed flocks on beaches LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 206 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 207 GREAT BLACKBACKED GULL Third winter The stark blackand-white contrast of the adult is often the best field mark at a distance Adult winter The largest gull in North America First winter Second winter Third winter Heavy bill at all ages First winter Adult breeding Pale pink legs at all ages LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 207 9/7/16 10:06 PM 208 HERRING GULL Larus argentatus HERRING GULL Description: An abundant bird­—the gull most people think of when they think of a seagull. Large, with gray back and black wingtips with white spots. White head and underparts. Flesh-colored legs. Yellow bill with blood-red spot on lower mandible. Yellow eye. In winter plumage, head is streaked brown with a dark eye line, giving the face a stern appearance. First-year immatures are chocolate brown with lighter speckles. Herring Gulls reach full adult plumage after four years. Plumage may be distinguished by year of age until adult plumage is reached. Length: 25 in. (64 cm). Wingspan: 58 in. (1.5 m). Habits: An aggressive, opportunistic bird, readily adapting to both natural and man-made environments from well inland to miles from shore at sea. Will follow fishing boats well away from land. On the coast will often pick up shellfish and crabs and drop them from a height to crack their shells. Ranges along the entire East Coast in winter and from Maritime Canada to the Carolinas year-round. Similar species: The similar-looking Ring-Billed Gull is smaller, with a more delicate bill. See also the comparison of first-year birds, p. 206. Abundant J F M A M J J A S O N D Great Black-Backed Gull Length: 30 in. Herring Gull Length: 25 in. Ring-Billed Gull Length: 18 in. The larger white-headed gulls are superficially similar but separate distinctly by size. The Great Black-Backed Gull is a much more massive bird than the Ring-Billed Gull. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 208 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 209 HERRING GULL Dull brown mantle and lighter brown breast lacks contrast First winter Adult Second winter Third winter Gray central mantle and partially gray wings Similar to adult winter, but with darker head and tail Second winter Adult breeding First winter Pink legs at all ages LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 209 9/7/16 10:06 PM 210 RING-BILLED GULL Larus delawarensis RING-BILLED GULL Description: A sleek, medium-sized gull of harbors, shore- lines, and shopping center parking lots. Adults easily identified by distinct ring around bill. Very common in our area during the colder months. Gray back. Greenish yellow legs. Black wingtips spotted with white; black color extends along fore edge almost to wing bend. Reaches full adult plumage after three years. Length: 18 in. (46 cm). Wingspan: 48 in. (1.2 m). Habits: A flexible, opportunistic species that has done very well in adapting to human development of the coastline. Mixes with other gulls in harbors and in large flocks resting on breakwaters and sandy shores. Will follow boats, hanging in the wind just astern and looking for handouts. Found throughout Long Island Sound. Ranges along the entire Atlantic and Gulf Coasts in the colder months. Breeds mostly in north-central Canada in summer. Similar species: The Herring Gull is the most similar (see below and pp. 208–209). If you get a chance to see the two species side by side, note the much smaller, lighter body and more delicate features of the Ring-Billed Gull. Abundant J F M A M J J A S O N D Herring Gull Diffuse, dark bill tip Ring-Billed Gull First winter Length: 25 in. Mottled brown back First winter Length: 18 in. Much gray in the back Well-defined black tip Comparison of first-winter Ring-Billed and Herring Gulls LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 210 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 211 RING-BILLED GULL First winter A more contrasting pattern on mantle than firstwinter Herring Gulls Adult breeding Second winter Gray mantle, showing minimal or no brown remnants Tail lighter than the similar second-winter Herring Gull First winter Relatively small bill at all ages Adult winter Bill ring Adult breeding Yellow legs at all ages LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 211 9/7/16 10:06 PM 212 LAUGHING GULL Larus atricilla LAUGHING GULL Description: A trim gull, with black head and deep gray back. Blood-red bill and legs. No white in wingtips. Note broken white ring around eye. In winter plumage, hood fades to dark patch at back of head. Immature shows a black band at end of tail feathers. Length: 17 in. (43 cm). Wingspan: 40 in. (1 m). Habits: This abundant gull’s laughing call is a familiar sound from the mid-Atlantic Coast southward, and the Laughing Gull is becoming more common in the Northeast as the climate warms. Will follow inshore boats, hanging above the stern in search of handouts. Ranges along entire East Coast in the warmer months and from Cape Hatteras south yearround. Similar species: Bonaparte’s Gull also has a black head in breeding plumage but is much smaller and more ternlike, and Bonaparte’s Gull rarely mixes with Laughing Gulls. Common J F M A M J J A S O N D Herring Gull Ring-Billed Gull First winter Length: 25 in. First winter Length: 18 in. Laughing Gull First winter Length: 17 in. Comparison of immature Ring-Billed, Herring, and Laughing Gulls LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 212 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 213 LAUGHING GULL Adult breeding First winter Shows brown in wing mantle Heavy terminal band Black wingtips Second winter Very light terminal band First winter Adult winter Dark bill Legs dark gray Dark red bill Legs dark gray Adult breeding Legs dark red in breeding plumage LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 213 9/7/16 10:06 PM 214 BONAPARTE’S GULL Larus philadelphia BONAPARTE’S GULL Description: A small, almost ternlike gull. Very buoyant when sitting on the water. Black head in breeding plumage. Wings in all plumages show a distinct white wedge on outer edge. Blood-red bill, deep pink legs. In winter plumage, black hood is reduced to a black smudge behind eye. Length: 13 in. (33 cm). Wingspan: 33 in. (84 cm). Habits: A fall-through-spring visitor to Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. At times found well offshore, where it mixes with true oceanic birds. Bonaparte’s is a small gull that doesn’t often mix with the larger gull species, preferring to stand apart from mixed flocks on beaches and sandbars—a useful tip for spotting small flocks of these gulls. Ranges in winter throughout Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and lower Mississippi River Valley. Similar species: The small size and delicate bill separate it from the more common and much larger Laughing Gull. The small size, rounded, almost dovelike profile, and delicate beak are distinctive. Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Laughing Gull Winter (nonbreeding) Length: 17 in. Bonaparte’s Gull Winter Length: 13 in. Comparison of winter Bonaparte’s and Laughing Gulls LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 214 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 215 BONAPARTE’S GULL White wedge near wingtips Dark wingtips with light band First winter Dark wing bars Tail band First winter Adult winter Cheek spot Delicate bill Adult breeding Red legs LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 215 9/7/16 10:06 PM 216 NESTING BIRDS Sterna dougallii ROSEATE TERN Pale gray to almost white. In breeding plumage, breast has a faint pink cast. Black bill with a deep red base. Long tail feathers form a deeply forked tail. In flight, wings are a clear, very pale gray. Feeds in inshore waters. An endangered species, common only around its few remaining breeding colonies. Length: 15 in. (38 cm). Wingspan: 29 in. (73 cm). Rare & local J F M A M J J A S O N D Sternula antillarum LEAST TERN The smallest tern. White forehead mark is present even in summer. The only local tern with a yellow bill, tipped with black. Immatures have especially noticeable dark leading edges on upper wings. An inshore bird; nests on beaches. Uncommon except near colonies. Length: 9 in. (23 cm). Wingspan: 20 in. (51 cm). Uncommon J F M A M J J A S O N D Charadrius melodus PIPING PLOVER Very pale. Plain face without dark cheeks. In breeding plumage, black bar across forehead and black collar around neck. These fade to pale buff in winter. Often sneaks away when approached, stopping and looking over its shoulder, relying on its sandy color for camouflage. Call “peep-low.” Length: 7.5 in. (19 cm). Wingspan: 19 in. (48 cm). Uncommon J F M A M J J A S O N D Sterna hirundo COMMON TERN Gray back and upper wings, white belly and underwings. Black cap extends down nape. Orange-red bill with black tip. In flight, gray wedge at center of back and darker wingtips. In winter plumage, white forehead and front half of crown. Common near nesting colonies and in early fall migration. Length: 14 in. (36 cm). Wingspan: 30 in. (76 cm). Common J F M A M J J A S O N D Haematopus palliatus AMERICAN OYSTERCATCHER A large black-and-white shorebird with an unmistakable bright orange bill. No other shorebird in the area has a similar bill. It is flattened like a knife blade and inserted into bivalves such as oysters to pry open their shells. Length: 18 in. (46 cm). Wingspan: 32 in. (81 cm). Uncommon J F M A M J J A S O N D Rynchops niger BLACK SKIMMER A medium-sized relative of gulls and terns, with a unique, long lower mandible used to skim surface waters for small fish. Dark, almost black back; white underparts. Large, bright red bill with black tip. Most often noticed skimming across the surface of shallow coastal waters. Very rare nester near the Sound. Length: 18 in. (46 cm). Wingspan: 44 in. (1.1 m). Uncommon J F LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 216 M A M J J A S O N D 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 217 Not to scale Black bill with deep red at base in breeding season ROSEATE TERN Very white overall Slimmer body than the very similar Common Tern LEAST TERN Long tail projects well beyond folded wings PIPING PLOVER Tiny; only local tern with yellow bill Bright redorange bill COMMON TERN AMERICAN OYSTERCATCHER BLACK SKIMMER LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 217 9/7/16 10:06 PM 218 WADING BIRDS Ardea herodias GREAT BLUE HERON Our largest heron is common in both freshwater and saltwater marshes and visits beaches and tidal flats throughout the Sound area. Immatures have streaking on throat and upper chest, lack long head plumes, and are a more uniform gray all over. Common in fresh and saltwater wetlands and tidal flats. Length: 46 in. (1.2 m). Wingspan: 72 in. (1.8 m). Common J F M A M J J A S O N D Tringa flavipes LESSER YELLOWLEGS Lesser Yellowlegs often occur in mixed flocks with Greater Yellowlegs, making it much easier to tell them apart. The Lesser Yellowlegs is more delicate-looking than the Greater Yellowlegs. When seen alone, separation is difficult. Call: a single “tsip” or double “tu-tu.” Common on beaches, on tidal flats, and in salt marshes throughout the Northeast coast. Length: 10.5 in. (25 cm). Wingspan: 25 in. (64 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Tringa melanoleuca GREATER YELLOWLEGS Larger and less delicately proportioned than Lesser Yellowlegs. Upper part brown flecked with white. Underparts show heavier barring on flanks than Lesser in breeding plumage. Often feeds running about with its bill in water swinging from side to side. Call: a loud “teu teu teu.” Found across United States in migration. Winters in Southeast from Virginia south to Florida and Gulf region. Length: 14 in. (36 cm). Wingspan: 28 in. (71 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Tringa semipalmata WILLET In flight the large white wing stripes are unmistakable. Grayish brown with distinct back and underpart barring in breeding plumage. Very vocal, calling its name repeatedly: “pill-willwillet!” Favors protected shoreline and upper beach areas for feeding and nesting and is also found in salt marshes. Length: 15 in. (38 cm). Wingspan: 26 in. (66 cm). Uncommon J F M A M J J A S O N D GREAT BLUE HERON in flight LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 218 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 219 GREAT BLUE HERON LESSER YELLOWLEGS Breeding Delicate bill, about as long as width of head Fall and winter More substantial bill, longer than width of head GREATER YELLOWLEGS Breeding plumage WILLET Fall and winter Large white wing stripes Not to scale LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 219 9/7/16 10:06 PM 220 SHOREBIRDS Calidris alba SANDERLING Anyone who spends time at the beach is familiar with these small sandpipers chasing the waves in and out like tiny wind-up toys. In winter plumage, very white-looking with gray back and jet black legs. In breeding plumage, rich cinnamon red around head and neck. Length: 8 in. (20 cm). Wingspan: 17 in. (43 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Charadrius semipalmatus SEMIPALMATED PLOVER Black collar around neck, black mask through eye, and white forehead. Bill yellow with black tip. Legs yellowish orange. In flight shows black-tipped tail with white sides. Call: a sharp “chu-wee.” Length: 7.5 in. (19 cm). Wingspan: 19 in. (48 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Calidris alpina DUNLIN Rusty red back, black underbelly. Long bill curves down at tip. In nonbreeding plumage changes to nondescript brown-gray plumage on back, head, and chest with paler underparts. Length: 9 in. (23 cm). Wingspan: 17 in. (43 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Calidris minutilla LEAST SANDPIPER A small sandpiper that prefers muddy areas toward the rear of the beach and pool edges with grass rather than the sandy beach itself. Crown and back are brownish rather than grayish. Adopts a crouched posture as it feeds. Length: 6 in. (15 cm). Wingspan: 13 in. (33 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Pluvialis squatarola BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER Breeding plumage boldly marked black and white. Underparts mainly black, with mottled light gray back that runs up neck to white cap. Short, black, heavy bill. Nonbreeding plumage predominantly gray, but may show areas of black on underparts. Call a distinctive mournful “pee-ooo-wee.” Length: 11.5 in. (29 cm). Wingspan: 29 in. (74 cm). Spring & fall J F M A M J J A S O N D Charadrius vociferus KILLDEER Two black neck bands, full white collar, and white at bill base and over eye. Long, tapered body, brown on back and white below. Common in most open environments, beaches, grassy fields, and fields near marshes. Length: 10.5 in. (27 cm). Wingspan: 24 in. (61 cm). Uncommon J F M A M J J A S O N D Common J F M A M J J A S O N D SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPER Calidris pusilla Relatively short, dark bill, and dark legs. We tend to see them mostly in migration, where the plumage is often a dull, nondescript gray. Spring birds in breeding plumage show much more rusty red tones on back and breast and have more contrast in dark patterning of back. Length: 6.5 in. (17 cm). Wingspan: 14 in. (36 cm). Late summer & fall J F LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 220 M A M J J A S O N D 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES Rufous breeding plumage turns gray in winter SANDERLING 221 Not to scale SEMIPALMATED PLOVER Bill droops noticeably at tip White belly in winter plumage DUNLIN LEAST SANDPIPER Generally rufous back and flank BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER KILLDEER SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPER LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 221 Short ,dark bill, dark legs, dull gray in fall and winter (nonbreeding plumage) When you approach a Killdeer nest, the birds will often do a broken wing display, pretending to be injured to draw you away from the nest. 9/7/16 10:06 PM 222 DUNES Dunes There are no true dune environments along the shores of Long Island Sound, at least not when compared to the square miles of dunes on Cape Cod or the smaller but substantial dune areas on the southern coast of Long Island. The few dune environments on the Sound are really more like extended upper beach areas, primarily because the limited supply of sand—as well as the intense human development of the Long Island Sound coastlines—keeps the overall size of dune fields small. The Sound’s dune environments are limited to a few sandspit areas such as, in Connecticut, Stratford’s Long Beach, Milford Point, Sandy Point in West Haven, and Bushy Point in Groton, and, on Long Island, Mount Misery Point in McAllister County Park at Port Jefferson, the long sandspit at Lloyd Point in Caumsett State Park, and the eastern stretches of Sunken Meadow State Park. The small upper beach and sandspit areas on the Sound’s coasts are not sheltered enough from salt spray to permit growth of mature Pitch Pine, Bearberry, Broom Crowberry, and Beach Heather dune swale communities seen in large northeastern coastal dune fields. The Sound’s small sandspit areas are also overwashed in storms too regularly to allow mature dune swale communities to develop. Despite this, virtually all of the classic northeastern coastal dune plant and animal species occur along the shores of Long Island Sound, and these sand plain communities just inland from the beaches form a distinctive environment that bridges the gap between the upper beach and coastal woodland and thickets or the edges of salt marshes. Dunes occur naturally along sandy beaches. Just beyond the wrack line where salt spray kills all but a few plants, vegetation becomes more dense and the stems and leaves of American Beach Grass, Beach Clotbur, Searocket, and other plants begin to trap windblown sand. As the sand piles up around LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 222 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES 223 the plants, they respond by growing upward, and soon a foredune forms at the top of the beach. Foredunes don’t attract plants; the plants themselves create the foredune and give the dune stability through their roots and rhizomes. On the upper beach, look for “sand shadows” next to beach plants. As the windblown sand meets a plant on the upper beach, the wind slows, dropping grains of sand on the leeward side of the plant. Soon a stretched oval shadow of piled sand forms next to the plant. In this way plants build the dune environment by collecting sand around them and growing upward to stay on top of the sandpile. Wind is a constant factor in dune environments. With little physical shelter, the dune plant community is exposed to strong northeast winds in winter and hot, drying southwesterly winds in summer. Wind constantly shifts the surface sand grains, exposing dune plants to low-grade sandblasting every day. Dunes are a very dry environment even in a relatively moist climate like the Sound. Rainfall quickly drains into the porous sand toward a groundwater table that may be 6–10 feet or more below the surface. Although salt spray can damage plants without tough leaves, it brings mineral nutrients to an environment where most soil nutrients are washed away. Nitrogen is especially limited in dune areas, contributing to the poor soil productivity. Dune environments receive intense light and heat under the summer sun, increasing evaporation. The dry, light-colored sand of bare dunes can act like a parabolic reflector in dune swales, concentrating the sun’s rays and bringing heat levels Salt spray damage on an Eastern Redcedar Juniper after Hurricane Irene. Coastal trees must be able to withstand constant low-grade exposure to wind-blown salt water, as well as occasional major storms. Sand shadow around a Common Saltwort. Note the pile of sand downwind of the plant, in the upper right. Sand shadow behind and under the plant Predominant wind direction LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 223 9/7/16 10:06 PM 224 DUNES A small dune area on the sandspit at Milford Point, Connecticut. In this foredune community Seaside Goldenrod, Red Goosefoot, American Beach Grass, and Switchgrass are all visible. well above that of the open beaches nearby. On more mature and stable dune fields farther from the shoreline, larger bushes and small trees such as Northern Bayberries, Black Cherries, and Eastern Redcedar Junipers provide shade and act as windbreaks. In eastern Long Island you may see small areas of the classic dune ground-cover communities of mixed Bearberry, Broom Crowberry, Bear Oak, and some Beach Heather, but these heathlike dune ground covers are mostly absent from Connecticut sandspits. Dune plants The leaves of dune plants must be tough and flexible to withstand the mechanical strain of whipping in the wind, as well as waxy or hairy to limit moisture loss. Many dune plants such as American Beach Grass have leaves that curl in high heat, limiting evaporation. Rhizomes permit many perennial dune forbs and grasses to spread aggressively. Through these rhizomes, plants can swiftly cover the ground and avoid burial in shifting sand through rapid upward growth. Eastern Redcedar Junipers (Juniperus virginiana) are the most common evergreen on the Sound’s coasts and are very common throughout the northeastern Atlantic shoreline. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 224 Many dune plants, like most beach plants, are annuals. Annual plants invest their reproductive energy into seed production, and they are most common in constantly changing or disturbed environments, where their seeds can rapidly germinate when conditions are favorable. With no permanent stems or roots to protect during the harsh winter 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES months, annual plants spread their seeds widely, placing their evolutionary bets on next year’s seedlings. Given that annual plants like Seaside Spurge, Common Saltwort, and Searocket are so common on beaches and dunes, this strategy has been successful. Foredune communities Foredunes are simply a higher continuation of the upper beach and are usually the first zone with significant vegetation. Foredune plants are largely the same plants you’ll see scattered on the upper beach—American Beach Grass, Seaside Spurge, Common Saltwort, Seabeach Orach, Searocket, Seaside Goldenrod—but now are more numerous. Other dune community plants that begin to appear on the foredune include Dusty Miller, Beach Pea, and Umbrella Sedge, a grasslike plant. The Wrinkled Rose is the hardiest and most salt-resistant of the dune shrubs and is common on foredunes and sandy areas throughout the Connecticut shoreline. Many common land plants and wildflowers are also hardy enough to live on foredunes, well back from the beach: Common Yarrow, Evening Primrose, Switchgrass, Virginia Creeper, and Poison Ivy. Dune communities Reduced exposure to salt spray is the main element that distinguishes true dune environments from the saltier foredune communities. All the foredune plants mentioned above are also present on dunes, but in true dune environments there are also shrubs and stunted trees. Wrinkled Rose, Winged (Shining) Sumac, Northern Bayberry, Beach Plum, and Black Cherry are all common dune shrubs. Black Cherry is also a common forest edge tree that can grow quite tall, but on dunes the salt spray and lack of water keep Black Cherries small and shrublike. Quaking Aspen appears on dunes that are well away from salt spray, and if present, the aspens are often the tallest trees in the dunes. Black Locust trees will tolerate the dry conditions of beaches, as seen in the small grove of Black Locusts at Sandy Point in West Haven. The Sound’s only cactus species appears in dunes as well as rocky shores. Eastern Prickly Pear Cactus is intolerant of salt spray or salt on its roots and is usually found well back from the high tide line in areas sheltered from salt spray by shrubs or on rocky headlands near the coast. Along with the ubiquitous American Beach Grass, additional dune grasses and sedges include Switchgrass, Downy Chess, Nutsedge, and Umbrella Sedge. In more sheltered dune areas well back from the beach, ground-cover plants like Bearberry, Broom Crowberry, and Beach Heather may form small, heathlike carpets, especially LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 225 225 Dune Shrubs Marsh Elder Iva frutescens Groundsel Tree Baccharis halimifolia Northern Bayberry Myrica pensylvanica Beach Plum Prunus maritima Black Cherry Prunus serotina 9/7/16 10:06 PM 226 DUNES Eastern Redcedar Juniper Beach Plum Bayberry Marsh Elder Dune community shrubs: Juniper, Beach Plum, Bayberry, and Marsh Elder, surrounded by American Beach Grass. Pitch Pines (Pinus rigida) are common in sandy coastal areas of Long Island but less so on the rockier coast of Connecticut. when sheltered from wind and salt spray by small trees and shrubs like Bayberry, Black Cherry, Bear Oak, and Beach Plum. In these dune heath areas you may also see a few distinctive nonflowering plants: Reindeer Lichen and British Soldier Lichen thrive on sandy soils, and you may also see the Earth Star fungus on bare patches of sand, especially after a rainstorm. Two conifers are common on dunes: the Eastern Redcedar Juniper is the most common evergreen along shoreline environments, and well away from the beach there may be Pitch Pines, particularly in areas that transition from dune into coastal forest on the Long Island coast of the Sound. Dune swales Dune swales are low areas in dunes that are more sheltered from the wind and have moister soils. These moist areas may contain a variety of the shrubs and small trees mentioned above but may also contain salt marsh plants like Glasswort, Sea Lavender, Spike Grass, and Saltmeadow Cordgrass (see “Salt Marshes”). Additional dune swale plants include such typical salt marsh border shrubs and grasses as Marsh Elder, Groundsel Tree, and Switchgrass. In many areas of the Sound the very small dune fields are often next to salt marshes on the landward side of sandspits, so salt marsh and dune environments often intermix. You can see this mixing of marsh and dune environments on Meigs Point at Hammonasset Beach State Park, on the sandspit at Milford Point, on the Bushy Point sandspit at Bluff Point Coastal Reserve in Groton, at LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 226 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES Lloyd Point in Caumsett State Park, and at the eastern end of Sunken Meadow State Park, where the sandspit meets the Nissequogue River. Animals Most beach animals and birds frequent dunes, particularly if they nest on beaches. Our two most endangered beach nesters, the Piping Plover and the Least Tern, both sometimes use the adjacent dune areas as nesting sites, particularly if the vegetation remains low and grassy and is not too thick. Other LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 227 227 Bushy Point in Groton, Connecticut, is one of the few places along the coasts of Long Island Sound where you can see a fairly mature beach dune environment, with all of the challenges and limitations that come with being only a few feet above the high tide line. Much of Bushy Point was overwashed by Hurricane Sandy, burying or killing many older shrubs and low trees. 9/7/16 10:06 PM 228 DUNES Eastern Prickly Pear Cactus (Opuntia humifusa) is an indication of a mature dune environment, fairly sheltered from direct salt spray. This native cactus thrives in the dry, sandy conditions of dune and upper beach environments, such as the large sandspit at Lloyd Point in Caumsett State Historic Park on Long Island. birds that nest in the transition areas from beaches to dunes include the Black Skimmer, American Oystercatcher, and Willet. Many inland birds also nest in dune areas, particularly the Northern Mockingbird, Common Grackle, American Robin, Song Sparrow, and, in marshy swales, Red-Winged Blackbird. In the shadows of dune plants small animals prowl, including large wolf spiders, Seaside Grasshoppers, field crickets, and (unfortunately) several species of ticks that mostly parasitize wild mammals such as White-Footed Deer Mice, Meadow Voles, Raccoons, and Red Foxes. Always wear long pants when you explore away from trails in sandspits and dune areas, and apply a DEET-based insect repellent on your clothes, socks, and shoes. Dune and beach vegetation often harbors the main carrier of Lyme Disease, the Black-Legged (Deer) Tick. The common Lone Star Tick can also carry diseases, so be sure to check your clothing and any exposed skin when you exit wild shoreline environments. The beaches of Long Island Sound are some of the best places to observe migrating insects in fall. On a clear September or October day with a brisk northwest wind sweeping them down to the coastline, hundreds of migrating Monarch Butterflies, Green Darner Dragonflies, and Black Saddlebags Dragonflies move along the shores of Long Island Sound, often using the dune vegetation for rest and shelter. Unfortunately our gorgeous flocks of migrating Monarchs may be a thing of the past. Over the past decade scientists have seen a Opposite– Lone Star Tick: Melinda Fawver; Black-Legged Tick: Sarah2 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 228 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES major decline in the number of migrating Monarchs, which overwinter in just a few valleys in northern Mexico. Those Mexican valleys are now fairly well protected as conservation areas, and researchers are looking at the increased use of glyphosate herbicides by farmers since 2003 as a possible factor in their decline. Monarch Butterfly caterpillars feed on milkweeds, and the major decline in milkweeds (particularly in the midwest farming areas) is suspected in the 59 percent drop in overwintering Monarch populations in Mexico in 2012. So appreciate these black-and-orange beauties while we have them, because they may be less common in the future. As in other environments, most animal activity in the dunes is at night, where the Raccoon, Virginia Opossum, Striped Skunk, Meadow Vole, and Eastern Cottontail rabbit are all common. Two less common dune specialists are Fowler’s Toad and the Eastern Hognose Snake. Fowler’s Toad is the only amphibian typically found on beaches and dunes, where it will bury itself in sand under shrubs to escape the heat of the day. Hognose Snakes are nonpoisonous and harmless but will sometimes perform an elaborate rearing and hissing display if startled. Hognose Snakes are very reluctant to bite humans, even if handled (but please don’t handle them), and are more likely to roll over and play dead if you approach the snake quietly. 229 Lone Star Tick Amblyomma americanum Black-Legged Tick or Deer Tick Ixodes scapularis FALL COASTAL MIGRATORY INSECTS Black Saddlebags Dragonfly Tramea lacerata LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 229 Common Green Darner Dragonfly Anax junius Monarch Butterfly Danaus plexippus 9/7/16 10:06 PM 230 DUNE PLANTS BLACKGRASS Juncus gerardia BLACKGRASS, flowers Juncus gerardia SWITCHGRASS Panicum virgatum BEARBERRY Arctostaphylos uva-ursi COMMON REED Phragmites australis WILD YELLOW INDIGO Baptisia tinctoria LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 230 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES BROOM CROWBERRY Corema conradii BEAR OAK Quercus ilicifolia BEACH HEATHER Hudsonia tomentosa BEACH HEATHER Hudsonia tomentosa 231 Jenny Webber REINDEER LICHEN Cladonia rangiferina LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 231 BRITISH SOLDIER LICHEN Cladonia cristatella 9/7/16 10:06 PM 232 DUNE PLANTS STAGHORN SUMAC Rhus typhina SHINING SUMAC Rhus copallina NORTHERN BAYBERRY Myrica pensylvanica BEACH PLUM Prunus maritima WRINKLED ROSE Rosa rugosa AUTUMN OLIVE Elaeagnus umbellata LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 232 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES BLACK CHERRY Prunus serotina MARSH ELDER Iva frutescens GROUNDSEL TREE Baccharis halimifolia COMMON JUNIPER Juniperus communis PITCH PINE Pinus rigida BLACK OAK Quercus velutina LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 233 233 9/7/16 10:06 PM 234 DUNE PLANTS AND ANIMALS Sirena Designs HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY Vaccinium corymbosum AMERICAN HOLLY Ilex opaca SHADBUSH Amelanchier canadensis RED MAPLE Acer rubrum BLACK LOCUST Robinia pseudoacacia SASSAFRAS Sassafras albidum LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 234 9/7/16 10:06 PM BEACHES AND DUNES Blackday lnzyx SEASIDE GRASSHOPPER Trimerotropis maritima BLACK FIELD CRICKET Acheta assimilis SEASIDE DRAGONLET Erythrodiplax berenice FOWLER’S TOAD Bufo woodhousei Vibe Images EASTERN HOGNOSE SNAKE Heterodon platirhinos LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 235 235 Lisa Hagan,m Shutterstock VIRGINIA OPOSSUM Didelphis virginiana 9/7/16 10:06 PM 236 DUNE ANIMALS AND BIRDS Geoff Kuchera RACCOON Procyon lotor STRIPED SKUNK Mephitis mephitis Creative Nature Wild Geese MEADOW VOLE Microtus pennsylvanicus EASTERN COTTONTAIL Sylvilagus floridanus Pim Leijen Gerald Kraus RED FOX Vulpes vulpes WHITE-TAILED DEER Odocoileus virginianus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 236 9/7/16 10:06 PM us s BEACHES AND DUNES 237 Proedding RED-TAILED HAWK Buteo jamaicensis OSPREY Pandion haliaetus Steve Byland COMMON GRACKLE Quiscalus quiscula SONG SPARROW Melospiza melodia GREAT EGRET Ardea albus SNOWY EGRET Egretta thula LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 237 9/7/16 10:06 PM 238 Branford, Connecticut’s Thimble Islands, once a series of granite hilltops. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 238 9/7/16 10:06 PM 239 Rocky Shores Brant (Branta bernicla) on the rocks, Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. Rocky shores are relatively high-energy coasts, even in the normally placid waters of Long Island Sound. About 8,000 waves a day wash over the rocks of the Connecticut coast and the rock-cobbled beaches of outer Long Island, constantly threatening to pull away or damage an organism that isn’t very sturdy and firmly attached. Hard stone does little to dampen or absorb the energy of waves, and shoreline rocks reflect much of the wave energy that hits them. The resulting turbulence often limits the survival of both plants and animals near the rocks. Plants and animals in rocky intertidal areas face hours of submergence in salt water and further hours of dry exposure twice every day, a tough regime even in places that are more protected from wave action. Every plant and animal you come across on our rocky shores has made remarkable adaptations to survive the physical demands of rocky coasts, the presence of predators, and the complex competition with their fellow residents of the rocks. A note about safety on rocky shores Shoreline rocks can be very slippery, even when they look dry. The thin coating of bacteria or algae that covers shoreline rocks at or below the splash zone can look dry on the surface and still be very slippery underneath. When you walk on the portions of rocks that are submerged at high tide, use great caution, and stay off them entirely if possible. You won’t just increase your own safety, you’ll likely save the life of many rocky intertidal plants and creatures that could easily be crushed or damaged by a careless footstep. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 239 9/7/16 10:06 PM 240 ROCKY SHORES Vertical zones All marine environments show vertical zoning of habitats based on the degree of exposure to saltwater tides. On rocky shores this zonation is plain to see, from the bands of dark cyanobacteria to the barnacles and periwinkles, mussels, and various types of algae down to the wettest zone just above the low tide level. The zones of plants and animals are not just a matter of water—they also represent the results of fierce competition among the various organisms for space on the rocks at tolerable levels of moisture and temperature for each species. Rocky shore areas on the Sound’s coasts show a predictable sequence of vertical zones from dry rock down to the permanently submerged areas of the subtidal zone: the splash zone, the high, mid-, and low intertidal zones, and intertidal pools. On Long Island there are no bedrock outcrops along the shore, but you can still see vertical zonation on the larger rocks and glacial boulders, particularly on the rock-andcobble North Shore beaches east of Port Jefferson. Splash zone The splash zone extends from the average high tide line upward across rock faces that regularly receive some splashed water from waves at high tide. Above the splash zone on rocky shores that don’t receive much foot traffic you may see various lichen species. The lichen Verrucaria erichsenii (no common name) appears as a rough black crust, often in cracks and crevices of rocks as well as on exposed surfaces. The common light green to gray Green Shield Lichen also appears on coastal rocks, but not as close to the splash zone as Verrucaria. In many shoreline parks this dry lichen zone has often been worn away by foot traffic, particularly on horizontal rock surfaces. On almost all of Connecticut’s shoreline rocks the lower splash zone and high intertidal zone is marked by a prominent black band of cyanobacteria (Calothrix sp.) that grows in a strip one to two feet tall. The exact height of the black-zone cyanobacteria band depends on the tidal range for the area— in the Sound tide heights can range from under two feet near the Rhode Island border and Orient Point to more than seven feet in the Western Basin ports and inlets. This thin coating of cyanobacteria is an important food source for rock-grazing snails like the Common and Rough Periwinkles. High intertidal zone The high intertidal zone of rocky shores is a marine environment, but just barely so. This zone is covered by tidal water for just a few hours each day, which severely limits feeding opportunities for filter feeders like barnacles. This zone is hot LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 240 9/7/16 10:06 PM ROCKY SHORES LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 241 241 9/7/16 10:06 PM 242 ROCKY SHORES in summer, with temperatures that can easily top 100 degrees Fahrenheit on exposed surfaces, and winter brings both bitter cold and grinding sea ice. Barnacles Barnacles are relatives of shrimp that spend most of their lives in a highly specialized shell cemented to a hard surface. The nineteenth-century biologist Louis Agassiz said that a barnacle was “nothing more than a little shrimp-like animal, standing on its head in a limestone house and kicking food into its mouth.” We normally see barnacles at low tide, when their shells are tightly closed to conserve moisture. Once immersed in water, barnacles open the beaklike center plates of their shells and project their feathery legs into the currents, filtering plankton and other small bits of nutrients from the water. Northern Rock Barnacle Semibalanus balanoides In this photo taken in April, young, newly attached barnacles coat every available surface, including the shells of Blue Mussels and older, established barnacles. By fall most of the young barnacles will be worn away, shrugged off by the mussels and older barnacles. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 242 Barnacles have a complex life cycle that includes a planktonic stage, which allows young barnacles to spread widely and to cover nearly every hard surface along the coast with tiny barnacles each spring. Barnacles mate in fall but retain their eggs within the shell and release the planktonic larvae in winter. About four to six weeks later the young barnacles begin to settle out of the water column on any available solid surface. In Long Island Sound in late February or early March a massive wave of mature barnacle larvae are ready to settle out of the water column. Docks, boat hulls, shoreline rocks, mussels, and even slow-moving animals like Horseshoe Crabs become covered in a gray haze of tiny new barnacles. The larvae 9/7/16 10:06 PM ROCKY SHORES 243 are attracted to groups of other barnacles, so existing rocky shoreline communities get a new crop of young barnacles settling over them every spring. Barnacles are aggressive competitors against other barnacles, and by late fall most of those young barnacles will have been displaced or grown over by older, established barnacles. The high intertidal zone is dominated by the Northern Rock Barnacle, which is well adapted to harsh conditions here but is less well adapted to compete with Blue Mussels and algae for living space in the lower intertidal zones. A second, smaller species of barnacle, the Little Gray Barnacle, is much less common than the Northern Rock Barnacle. The Little Gray Barnacle is no match for the highly competitive Northern Rock Barnacle, and the Little Grays are usually forced to occupy the highest, least desirable portions of the high intertidal zone. Common Periwinkle The most common snail in the Sound’s intertidal areas is the Common Periwinkle. This snail can be incredibly abundant: on some rocky shores and stony cobble beaches the density of Common Periwinkles can reach 1,000 individuals per square yard. Unlike the region’s two other periwinkle species, the Common Periwinkle has a planktonic development stage, allowing it to spread quickly and populate new areas in vast numbers. Periwinkles feed on the thin coating of algae and cyanobacteria found on rocks in the intertidal zone. When you examine the high intertidal zone you’ll see a range of shapes and sizes in the Common Periwinkle, from small, darker juvenile snails to larger, usually lighter and smoother adults. Although the Rough Periwinkle is also a common high intertidal species, it is often difficult to separate the Rough Periwinkle’s shells from the very similar shells of juvenile Common Periwinkles. To complicate matters, both species show a range of shell colors and shapes. Rough Periwinkles are more often found high in the high intertidal zone or even in the splash zone, but firmly distinguishing them from juvenile Common Periwinkles would require dislodging and closely examining many snails, and that would be very disruptive for the snails. By sheer numbers the odds are simple: the small, rough-shelled, gray-brown intertidal snail you are looking at is almost certainly a Common Periwinkle. Common Periwinkles (Littorina littorea) nestle in a rock crevice to retain moisture during low tide. The Common Periwinkle was long thought to have been introduced from Europe by immigrants who settled in Nova Scotia, and it is still often listed in books as an exotic invader of the New England coast. In 2001, scientists looked at the DNA of New England Common Periwinkles and discovered LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 243 9/7/16 10:06 PM 244 LICHENS, ALGAE, AND ANIMALS VERRUCARIA Lichen Verrucaria erichsenii GREEN SHIELD LICHEN Flavoparmelia caperata CYANOBACTERIA Calothrix sp. BLUE MUSSELS Mytilis edulis NORTHERN ROCK BARNACLES Semibalanus balanoides BARNACLE SETS, detail LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 244 9/7/16 10:06 PM ta ROCKY SHORES COMMON PERIWINKLES Littorina littorea COMMON PERIWINKLES Littorina littorea GUT WEED Ulva intestinalis GUT WEED, detail Ulva intestinalis STONE HAIR Blidingia minima STONE HAIR, detail Blidingia minima LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 245 245 9/7/16 10:07 PM 246 ALGAE AND ANIMALS ROCKWEED Fucus distichus ROCKWEED, detail Fucus distichus SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca GREEN FLEECE Codium fragile KNOTTED WRACK Ascophyllum nodosum LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 246 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 247 EASTERN MUDSNAILS Ilyanassa obsoleta IRISH MOSS Chondrus crispus WHIPWEED Chordaria flagelliformis ATLANTIC SLIPPER SHELLS Crepidula fornicata Brian Gratwicke GRASS SHRIMP Palaemonetes pugio LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 247 COMMON SEA STAR Asterias forbesi 9/7/16 10:07 PM 248 ROCKY SHORES that they are genetically distinct from European periwinkles and have had a separate lineage for at least 10,000 years. In the last Ice Age, the Common Periwinkle found refuge from the glaciers in the Nova Scotia region and almost certainly along the shores of the broad coastal plain that existed well south of present-day Long Island when the sea level was more than 350 feet lower than it is today. We now know that the expansion of the Common Periwinkle from the Nova Scotia area south to Cape May, New Jersey, over the past 150 years is a native species reclaiming its former range, not an invasive species displacing native snails. Horse Island, in Branford, Connecticut’s Thimble Islands. The islands have a core of granite gneiss, the same bedrock typical on the mainland, and most are also ringed by glacial boulders. What little soil the islands have is mixed glacial debris of rocks, sand, and clay. Note the eroding bank of soil at the right of the photo, cut back several feet by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 248 Algae The most common algae of the high intertidal zone is Gut Weed, which typically grows in large, bright green mats on rocks and in tidal pools. Gut Weed has long, translucent green strands that hang like mats of wet hair at low tide but float when immersed because the strands are actually hollow tubes filled with gas that stand erect in the water like underwater grass at high tide. Stone Hair Algae is a similar-looking bright green algae that lives in the same areas as Gut Weed. As the name implies, Stone Hair has a very fine, hairlike structure, much finer and shorter than the coarser texture of Gut Weed. Note that both Stone Hair and Gut Weed patches are very slippery, even when they look dry on the surface, so avoid stepping on any intertidal algae. 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 249 Mid-intertidal zone The mid-intertidal zone is a milder area than the high intertidal zone, with greater water exposure for longer periods, less heat stress, and more planktonic food wafting in on the tidal waters to support filter feeders like barnacles and mussels. Because it is such a desirable location for sedentary creatures, space is at a premium in the mid-intertidal zone, and species competition over rock space is fierce—the lowest spaces in the zone are the most desirable. On rocky shores, the Blue Mussel most characterizes the mid-intertidal zone, where it is best adapted to compete for space against the barnacles above and the Rockweed algae below. Like their chief sessile, filterfeeding competitor the Northern Rock Barnacle, mussels survive their intertidal existence by trapping seawater within their shells and waiting out the four to five hours of dryness, occasionally gaping their shells slightly for gas exchange. Blue Mussel Blue Mussels are most often a violet blue, but their shells may also look brown or gray-violet and even show subtle stripes of lighter color. Healthy, young Blue Mussel shells have a paperthin, blue-black periostracum, or external coating, that often has partially worn away on older specimens. In the spring Blue Mussels high in the intertidal zone are often covered by gray young barnacles that obscure the mussel’s native colors. Adult Blue Mussels are sedentary creatures that do not usually move unless they are accidentally detached from their rocky LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 249 9/7/16 10:07 PM 250 ROCKY SHORES Blue Mussel beds at Milford Point, Connecticut. Photo courtesy of Frank Gallo. Blue Mussels Mytilis edulis substrate. However, young Blue Mussels about half an inch or smaller are surprisingly mobile. They use their attachment byssal threads to rope-climb over rocks to achieve better positioning for their final homes, particularly when they can join other mussels in tight groups. Blue Mussels are filter feeders, opening their shells to expose their incurrent and excurrent siphons, filtering various forms of plankton and vegetation debris from the waves washing over the rocks. Mussels are very efficient at filtering water: A classic school demonstration starts with six to eight live Blue Mussels in the bottom of a jar of murky coastal water. Within an hour, the jar of water is completely clear. Northern Rock Barnacles and Blue Mussels can thrive anywhere from the high intertidal to the subtidal zone, but competition with other intertidal algae and animals restricts both species to particular vertical zones where they are better adapted than competing species. Mussels outcompete barnacles for desirable rock space in the mid-intertidal zones but cannot withstand as long and hot a dry period as barnacles. The mussels push the barnacles out of the best mid-intertidal spaces, relegating them to the less advantageous high intertidal zone, even though there is less food there and climate conditions are harsher. Blue Mussels can live well in the lower intertidal zone, but in there they are more exposed to predators like the Oyster Drill, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 250 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 251 the Common Sea Star, and crabs, so Blue Mussels thrive best in the mid-intertidal area, where the sea stars and oyster drills find conditions too dry. Rockweeds Below and mixed in with Blue Mussels are several Fucus Rockweed species that compete with mussels for space and often dominate the lower, more desirable portions of the mid-intertidal zone. All three Fucus species found in Connecticut are called Rockweed. In the mid-intertidal zone, the two most common Rockweed species are Fucus distichus and F. spiralis. Fucus distichus is the most common Rockweed along the Connecticut shore, covering the rocks at Lighthouse Point, for instance. The very similar F. spiralis has blades that are distinctly twisted instead of lying flat, but F. spiralis is less common. Neither F. distichus or F. spiralis has paired float bladders along its blades like our third Rockweed species, F. vesiculous, which often appears at a lower intertidal level than the other Rockweeds. The Smooth Periwinkle is common on rocky shores in Connecticut but is less visible than the Common Periwinkle owing to its habit of hiding in Rockweed branches at low tide to avoid drying. To find Smooth Periwinkles, examine and move aside the branches of Rockweed patches, and you’ll usually spot the very smooth and shiny shells of Smooth Periwinkles. Although Yellow Periwinkle is an alternate common name for LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 251 Rockweed Fucus distichus In the Sound the lowest range of the intertidal zone is dominated by Blue Mussels (Mytilis edulis) and Irish Moss (Chondrus crispus), a red algae. In this springtime photo, the mussels and rocks are covered with barnacle sets, or young barnacles. Most of the spring sets will have washed away or died by the following winter. 9/7/16 10:07 PM 252 ROCKY SHORES Tide pools are miniature worlds, outside the normal bounds of vertical zones on rocky shores. Many algae and animals that would perish high above the low tide line can survive between tides in such pools. Here Rockweed, Sea Lettuce, Irish Moss, and Common Periwinkles find a refuge well above their normal low intertidal zone. Green Fleece Codium fragile the species, the colors of Smooth Periwinkles are variable and range from greenish brown to a brighter greenish yellow. Sea Lettuce is one of the most common algae species on the Connecticut coast, growing everywhere from subtidal sandy beaches to salt marshes, and it is always plentiful on rocky shores, appearing in the mid-intertidal through subtidal zones. Populations of Sea Lettuce rise sharply in areas that receive an excess of nitrogen, the most generally troublesome of all pollutants in the Sound today, so the superabundance of Sea Lettuce along the coast is a constant warning about the health of the Sound. Green Fleece algae is another indication of excess nitrogen, but Green Fleece is an invasive species that was accidentally spread through oyster aquaculture along the East Coast. Found along most of the Long Island Sound coastline, Green Fleece is more common in sheltered areas like harbor zones or behind sandspits or breakwaters. Knotted (Bladder) Wrack (Ascophyllum nodosum) is one of the largest and most beautiful algae of the intertidal algae. Common on most rocky shores, and often mixed with the Fucus species, it may be absent in areas with stronger wave action. Look carefully among the algae in the mid intertidal zone for the Atlantic Oyster Drill, which looks like a miniature whelk shell. As their name implies, oyster drills prey on oysters by drilling a hole into their shells, but oyster drills also prey on Blue Mussels in the lower intertidal areas. Atlantic Oyster Drills are usually not found in the drier areas of the upper intertidal zone but might be hidden within or under masses LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 252 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 253 of Rockweed. In rocky beach areas that also have mudflats, the Eastern Mudsnail is common on the flats at low tide. Low intertidal zone In many ways the lowest intertidal areas are the most desirable for filter-feeding mussels, but the low intertidal zone is also full of mussel predators like crabs, Atlantic Oyster Drills, and sea stars, so the lowest intertidal areas are in many ways a mixed blessing. With the benefits of more food comes the curse of more competitors and a host of potential predators. At a glance the defining organism of the low, rocky intertidal zone is Irish Moss, the most common large algae there. When you see Irish Moss, you’re looking at the lowest reaches of the intertidal zone. Nominally a red algae, the thick, bushy patches of Irish Moss can range in color from deep violet or almost black to a bright brick red, and Irish Moss is often bleached by sun to an ivory color at the tips of its blades. Irish Moss is most abundant in shallow, rocky subtidal areas but also enters the lowest intertidal areas. Irish Moss Chondrus crispus The long, dark brown strands of Whipweed (Chordaria flagelliformis, also called Devil’s Whip or Brown Spaghetti) are common along rocky beaches, intertidal rocks, and on stretches of sand beach between rocks. The Atlantic Slipper Shell is one of the most abundant mollusks along the Connecticut coast, as evidenced by the hundreds of thousands of slipper shells that line the beaches. Although the shell is clamlike, the Atlantic Slipper Shell is a very specialized snail that forms clusters of individuals that grip tightly to rocks in the lower intertidal and subtidal zones. Slipper shells are filter feeders. When underwater, Atlantic Slipper Shells feed by relaxing their grip to open a small gap at the edges of their shells where they draw in water to filter out plankton and other nutrients. Especially in rocky shore areas, the low intertidal zone is hardly distinguishable from the shallow subtidal zone, especially at night, when subtidal creatures like crabs climb onto the rocks and rocky beaches seeking mussels and other prey. Rock Crabs are rocky shore specialists, and the ubiquitous Green Crab is also common. In recent years two invasive crab species have entered Connecticut’s rocky shore environment. The more established invader is the Asian Shore Crab, which was first noticed on New Jersey beaches in 1989 and has since spread both north and south along the Atlantic Coast. The Asian Shore Crab competes directly with native Rock Crabs but ironically is also dominating an older invasive species, the Green Crab, a European crab that became established on New England’s coast in the 1800s. In the past few years another LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 253 Whipweed Chordaria flagelliformis Green Crab Carcinus maenas 9/7/16 10:07 PM 254 ROCKY SHORES invasive crab species, the Chinese Mitten Crab, has appeared in the New York Harbor area. Mitten crabs have since been spotted in rocky areas of the western shores of Long Island Sound and have been found in Greenwich, Connecticut. The Chinese Mitten Crab is not common yet, but it is expected to spread north and east along the coast over the next decade. Both Asian crab species are thought to have arrived on US shores accidentally, probably as planktonic larvae in discarded water ballast from ships traveling from Asian waters. The Common Sea Star is sometimes abundant offshore in subtidal and deeper waters and is occasionally found along the low tide line of rocky beaches, particularly those with large patches of Blue Mussels. Sea stars prey on clams, oysters, and mussels and can be a serious nuisance for commercial oyster operations in Long Island Sound. Research has shown that northeastern sea star populations fluctuate dramatically over decades, and currently we seem to be in a low period for sea star populations in Long Island Sound. Intertidal pools In many ways the vertical habitat zoning in rocky shore environments is straightforward, with barnacles and cyanobacteria at the highest levels and Irish Moss and crabs at the lowest. Intertidal pools are the exception that adds complexity and interest to the scheme, allowing low intertidal or even subtidal organisms to survive in higher and drier areas. The pools and even rock crevices that retain moisture provide cool, damp refuges during low tide and thus are always worth investigating. There are no unique animals or plants in tidal pools—it’s the same cast of shoreline characters outlined above—but you may find crabs, sea anemones, or even small fish and shrimp. Striped Killifish Fundulus majalis Sheepshead Minnow Cyprinodon variegatus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 254 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 255 Small subtidal fish are often trapped in intertidal pools by the retreating tide. The fish will panic and streak about as you approach the pool, but wait a minute or two and the fish will calm down and begin to school normally again. Striped Killifish, Sheepshead Minnows, Atlantic Silverside, and small, white-gray Grass Shrimp are all frequently found in intertidal pools. Sea anemones are fairly common in the rocky subtidal zones of the Sound, but they are rarely seen by beachcombers except in tidal pools. The Frilled Anemone and Lined Anemone both occur in larger intertidal pools. When disturbed, anemones retract their tentacles into the body and may only show as brown to pale gray clumps of tissue, usually in the more secluded and protected areas of an intertidal pool. Wait a few minutes for the creatures to adjust to your presence, and a surprising range of animals may come out of hiding. It’s always worthwhile to check dark overhangs and crevices around tidal pools for Rock Crabs and Green Crabs, but do not disturb them; handling is traumatic and often fatal for all shoreline creatures. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 255 Common Periwinkles (Littorina littorea) cover the bottom of a small pool in the intertidal zone. The red coating is Rusty Rock Algae (Hildenbrandia rubrum). 9/7/16 10:07 PM 256 ROCKY SHORES Purple Sandpiper Calidris maritima Black-Crowned Night-Heron Nycticorax nycticorax Birds Mention rocky shorelines to Long Island Sound birders, and the first bird you will likely hear about is the Purple Sandpiper. Many of the region’s coastal birds visit rocky shores, but the Purple Sandpiper is rarely seen anywhere else. Purple Sandpipers winter along the northeastern coasts, and most experienced birders can tell stories of suffering through terrible winter conditions while watching tiny Purple Sandpipers nonchalantly picking over coastal rocks for invertebrates, apparently unaware of the frigid weather. Willets mostly nest in salt marshes but can often be seen picking over shoreline rocks for the small invertebrates and crabs they feed on. Brant geese are vegetarians that feed on Sea Lettuce and Eelgrass. Brian E Kushner LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 256 9/7/16 10:07 PM ROCKY SHORES 257 They are often seen standing on or floating around offshore rocks, probably an indication that there are algae or grass beds in the local subtidal area. A few other bird species are often seen along rocky shorelines, stone breakwaters, and offshore rocks. Black-Crowned Night-Herons seem to specialize in searching the nooks and crannies of rocky shores for crabs and other small animals. As their name suggests, it’s best to look for these night-herons in the twilight hours of dawn and dusk. Black-Crowned NightHerons will often tuck into niches in stone breakwaters just above the water line, waiting patiently for a crab to make the mistake of moving within their sight. Double-Crested Cormorants often sun themselves on rocks along the shoreline or just offshore. Although cormorants are excellent divers, they lack the wax glands that other water birds like ducks use to waterproof their feathers, and so cormorants must literally hang their wings out to dry by extending them and letting the wind and sun dry the feathers. Ornithologists think that the spread-wing stance may also be a territorial or mating display to fellow cormorants. Immature Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus Peregrine Falcons are primarily seen during the fall migration season in Long Island Sound, but may appear in almost any season along our coasts. Peregrines can appear over any coastal habitat. If you see a sudden panicked flurry among shorebird flocks, watch the sky for a hunting Peregrine. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 257 9/7/16 10:07 PM 258 Barn Island Wildlife Management Area, Stonington, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 258 9/7/16 10:07 PM 259 Salt Marshes The salt marsh at Sandy Point, West Haven, Connecticut, along the southwestern edge of New Haven Harbor. The marshes act both as a natural filter for harbor pollutants and as a buffer zone during major storms, helping to prevent flooding and property damage in coastal neighborhoods. Salt marshes are North America’s most productive ecosystem—their productivity is equaled only by tropical rain forests. Marshes provide a significant source of nutrients to the Long Island Sound estuary and are the coastal nursery ground for almost every important commercial and sport fish in our waters. More than 170 fish species and 1,200 invertebrate species live in Long Island Sound during at least part of the year, and most of those species use the salt marshes at some point in their life cycles. Salt marshes play an important role in the cycling of atmospheric gasses that have increased because of human activity. Marshes also act as sinks for the excess nitrogen that runs off our highly developed modern landscapes, and they absorb a large amount of the excess carbon generated from the burning of fossil fuels. Salt marshes are natural water treatment facilities, cleaning the coastal waters through filtering by marsh grasses and filter feeders that live in and around the marsh, as well as through the activities of the large detritivore community within marshes themselves. The natural salt marsh food chains have a large capacity to absorb and convert dissolved forms of organic matter into grass and animal biomass, cleaning coastal waters and adding vital nutrients to the larger Long Island Sound ecosystem. Marshes also act as natural buffers and sponges in stormy conditions. They protect the coastline against storm surges and break the full force of storm waves and flooded rivers. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 259 9/7/16 10:07 PM 260 SALT MARSHES The productivity of salt marshes Although few animals feed directly on marsh leaves, marsh grasses shed all their leaves during fall and winter, and this major source of vegetable matter is broken down by bacteria and fungi into fine detritus that is carried out into the estuary by ebbing tides. Salt marsh grass provides a rich source of energy for tiny planktonic animals, filter feeders like clams, oysters, scallops, Grass Shrimp, amphipods, and other small animals. In turn, these small animals become food for larger predators and scavengers such as crabs, lobsters, fish, birds, and mammals. Marshes around Long Island Sound produce around 29 ounces per square yard of organic material each year, and that enormous productivity comes from three fundamental marsh components: 1. Mud algae, diatoms, and seaweeds at the marsh surface 2. Phytoplankton in the marsh water 3. Large salt marsh plants, especially grasses Salt marshes are a unique form of grassland in that the entire annual growth dies back in winter, leaving only the underground rhizomes to renew the marsh in spring. Ninety percent of a marsh’s annual productivity is realized at the end of the growing season in October, when the grass leaves die off, decompose, and wash into the estuary through tidal flow over winter and early spring. In these tons of dead grass leaves Live marsh grasses Dead marsh grasses Salt marsh in growing season Salt marsh in winter LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 260 Primary breakdown by microfauna Small vertebrates and invertebrates Larger predators (sport sh, crabs) 9/7/16 10:07 PM SALT MARSHES 261 Comparative production rates Tons of organic matter per acre per year 10 8 6 4 2 0 0.33 tons 0.5–1.5 tons 1.5–5 tons 5–10 tons 0.5–1.5 tons 0.33 tons Desert Dry agriculture Moist agriculture Salt marshes & estuaries Coastal waters Open ocean waters After Teal and Teal, Life and Death of the Salt Marsh per acre, much of the productivity drains from the marsh as an organic soup of plant detritus to be consumed by bacteria, fungi, and other tiny planktonic animals. Although these microscopic decomposer organisms are not particularly visible to us, they are critical to the estuary food chain, because their activity makes the bounty of the salt marsh grasses available to the rest of the food chain. Animals in the next link of the marsh food chain are detritivores such as fiddler crabs, Salt Marsh Snails, Grass Shrimp, and marsh amphipods that consume the partially decomposed grass, turning it into animal biomass. Other partially decayed marsh detritus is swept out with each high tide into the estuary waters, where it is consumed by filter feeders such as mussels, barnacles, and clams. Snails, clams, mussels, and other detritivores and filter feeders form the base of the food chain of predatory animals. Small marsh fish such as killifish and sticklebacks feed on detritivores like amphipods and Grass Shrimp, as do such crabs as the Green and Blue Crabs. The Diamondback Terrapin, crabs, and even such birds as the American Black Duck all feed on the abundance of Salt Marsh Snails. Smaller marsh predators become food for larger animals such as Bluefish, Striped Bass, herons, and Ospreys. Although the productivity of the salt marsh may be hard to see directly, marshes are the largest contributors of biological wealth in the Long Island Sound estuary and are the base of the food chain for most of the birds, fish, and other more visible wildlife along our coasts. Energy conversion Marshes capture and convert about 6 percent of the sunlight that falls on them during the year. This figure may sound modest, but the salt marsh compares very well to other plant communities. A farm field of corn captures about 2 percent LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 261 9/7/16 10:07 PM 262 SALT MARSHES of the sun’s energy; coral reefs capture about 3 percent. On average, an East Coast salt marsh creates 5–10 tons of organic matter per acre every year, with the warmer southeastern marshes at the higher end of the productivity scale. Most heavily managed farm crops only produce about half that tonnage per acre per year. Marsh ecosystems depend on tidal flow as well as rivers and streams to deliver raw nutrients along with the mud and sediments washed from inland areas down to the coast. Because marsh vegetation largely dies back each fall and winter, marshes are quick to convert nutrients into organic matter available to estuary and marine animals. In contrast to forests, where much of the annual productivity is bound up in the wood and roots of trees and other perennials for many years, marshes release almost all of their annual production when the grasses die back and are washed into the estuary to be broken down and gradually converted into microscopic animal biomass at the base of the food chain. Long Island Sound salt marshes Salt marshes on the shores of Long Island Sound are relatively small because our coastline is so young, and so rocky, with relatively few large areas of tidal flats and coastal sediment beds that form the foundation for salt marsh growth. Most current Long Island Sound salt marshes are less than 3,000 years old, and many are much younger. The salt marshes that certainly existed on the shores of the southern New England coastal plain up to about 25,000 years ago were obliterated by the Laurentide Ice Sheet as it covered the region. Although the ice sheet began to retreat 20,000 years ago, the slow recovery to temperate climactic conditions and the rapidly rising sea level combined to limit the growth of marshes in our region until relatively recently. Before that time the ocean was rising at too fast a rate to permit the long-term development of mature salt marshes. On the older unglaciated coasts to our south the shoreline has had millions of years to accumulate the sandy barrier islands that protect the shore from wave action, and the rich deep silt flats that nurture the vast salt marshes of the southeastern Atlantic coastline. The region’s largest salt marshes are located where rivers meet Long Island Sound, because as the river water slows to meet the Sound, sand and clay particles fall out of the water column and settle, building the tidal flats that form the foundation for marsh growth. The mouth of the Connecticut River is lined with salt marshes, primarily on the less developed eastern bank in Old Lyme. The Quinnipiac River flows through an extensive salt marsh just north of New Haven. Salt marshes LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 262 9/7/16 10:07 PM SALT MARSHES Bluff Point CONNECTICUT Lighthouse Point NEW YORK Chaffinch Island Hammonasset S.P. Milford Point Sunken Meadow Barn Island The Race Orient Point Montauk Point LONG ISLAND SOUND Sherwood Island Caumsett Rocky Neck S.P. 263 Mattituck Port Jefferson Wildwood LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK Salt marshes also form on the leeward side of coastal sandspits and rocky points, as in such Connecticut locations as Hammonasset Beach State Park, Bluff Point State Park, and marshes of the Charles Wheeler Wildlife Management Area behind Milford Point. In all three areas, a sandspit or rocky point combines with river sediments to create and protect large areas of mature salt marsh. On the North Shore of Long Island salt marshes are scattered and small because Long Island’s rivers are scattered and small. Modest marsh areas exist in Oyster and Northport Bays, along Sunken Meadow Creek, and on the Nissequogue River. In the past, the sheltered harbors and necks certainly hosted more salt marsh areas, but shoreline development has destroyed or buried most of them. What makes a salt marsh? Salt marshes occur on sheltered, low-energy shorelines protected from direct wave action, where slow currents allow mud or fine sand sediment to build up in shallows, providing a support for salt-tolerant grasses and other plants to take root. Locations around the mouths of rivers that meet Long Island Sound, peninsulas, and sand banks all shield salt marshes from direct exposure to waves. The major salt marshes in the Long Island Sound region. Most of the Sound’s salt marshes are in central and eastern Connecticut, where river deltas from the glacial era and sediments from modern rivers and streams provide the underlying platform for marsh development. On the North Shore of Long Island there are far fewer rivers and thus far fewer salt marsh areas. The North Shore is dominated for most of its length by the shoreline cliffs and narrow beaches of the Harbor Hill– Roanoke Point Moraine, which are unsuitable for salt marsh formation. The large salt marshes on the south shore have formed behind barrier islands. Marsh structure and diversity are largely determined by two factors: tides and salinity. Because so few plants can survive the constant exposure to salt water and anoxic (oxygen-poor) soils, salt marshes are relatively simple environments with a few dominant species. Northeastern and mid-Atlantic coastal salt marshes exist largely because of two grass species: Saltwater (Smooth) Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) and Saltmeadow Cordgrass (S. patens). LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 263 9/7/16 10:07 PM 264 SALT MARSHES High summer in the salt marsh at Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. In the foreground a shallow marsh pool is lined with tall Saltwater Cordgrass. Across the middle distance lies one of Long Island Sound’s best high marsh areas, between Meigs Point Trail at the right and the Cedar Island Trail at left. Both trails run along the high ground of two small recessional moraines, formed when glaciers retreated in this area about 18,000 years ago. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 264 Origins Salt marshes typically form when seeds or rhizomes of Saltwater Cordgrass colonize shallow tidal flats. As the cordgrass shoots develop, they further slow the movement of water, leading to more sediment deposition and limiting erosion during storms and high tides. As the tidal flats grow into a more mature marsh platform, tidal creeks develop that drain the marsh during low tides. The movement of tidal water acts almost like a breathing mechanism for the marsh, bringing in fresh nutrients and sediment on the flood tide and draining away wastes and detritus on the ebb. Marsh grasses propagate primarily by rhizomes—spreading underground stems that both expand the size and area of the original shoot of grass and help bind and stabilize the tidal mud beneath them. Rhizomes also allow marsh grasses to store energy underground for the next growing season. As the grasses take root, the tangle of rhizomes and stems traps more sediments and sand, gradually building up a tough platform of dense roots, covered by sticky surface mats of blue-green algae that are resistant to normal currents and tides. Once this platform reaches above the mean high tides, 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES 265 the marsh begins to stratify into a lower marsh area that floods twice a day with the tides and an upper marsh platform that floods only a few times a month during spring high tides. Winter ice is a major limiting factor in northeastern salt marshes. Sharp, heavy plates of ice often cover the surface of the upper marsh and line the banks of marsh creeks in winter. These ice plates effectively shear off the stems of taller plants, so trees and bushes that might tolerate the salty water cannot gain a foothold in the upper marsh. The marsh grasses survive the ice shearing because their rhizomes and roots are safe under the mud and peat surface, ready to send up new green shoots in spring. Marsh environments experience a wide range of temperatures as well as rapid temperature changes, as the exposed marsh heats during low tides in warmer months and then cools rapidly when high tides flood the marsh. Tidal movements, rainwater runoff, and the variable flow rate of rivers all affect the salinity of the water around marshes. Evaporation during low tides increases the salinity of shallow pools and open pannes in the salt marsh, sometimes to levels well above the salinity of ocean water. However, Long Island Sound is an estuary with average salinities well below those of LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 265 9/7/16 10:08 PM 266 Low salt marsh in autumn, Hunter Island, Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 266 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 267 267 9/7/16 10:08 PM 268 SALT MARSHES Winter in the salt marsh. Willard Island, Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. the open-ocean. About 470 cubic meters (120,000 gallons) of freshwater enter Long Island Sound each second, with 70 percent of that flowing from the Connecticut River alone. Marsh plants and animals must be able to tolerate salinities ranging from 33 to 37 parts per thousand (as in open-ocean waters) to almost freshwater (<5 ppt). Salt marshes occur primarily where salinity ranges from 20 ppt to 30 ppt, as in much of Long Island Sound. MARSH BORDER HIGH MARSH • Rare tidal flooding • Dry, non-saline soil Switchgrass Marsh Elder • Floods twice a month • Moderate soil salinity • Soil always moist, except in salt pannes, which may dry out Seaside Goldenrod MARSH CREEK Blackgrass Marsh Elder Groundsel Tree Northern Bayberry Switchgrass Seaside Goldenrod Saltmeadow Cordgrass Spike Grass Blackgrass Glassworts Saltmarsh Aster Dwarfe Creeks lined with tall Saltwater Cordgrass MSHW=Mean Spring High Water Line, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 268 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES 269 Patterns and zonation The structure of a salt marsh is a direct reflection of area tide levels. Its patterns of vertical zonation are so consistent that you can determine local tide levels simply by looking at the marsh plants, because each zone has characteristic vegetation. There are four major zones of the salt marsh: Lower marsh The area between the mean low water (MLW) line and the mean high water line (MHW). The lower marsh is dominated by a single grass species, Saltwater Cordgrass, which tolerates flooding at high tides but cannot thrive where its roots are permanently underwater. Upper marsh The marsh area above the MHW and below the mean spring high water line (MSHW), the highest of the monthly high tides. This area is dominated by Saltmeadow Cordgrass (Salt Hay), which can tolerate the twice-monthly flooding of spring high tides but otherwise must grow above the normal high tide level. Salt pannes Shallow, water-retaining, open areas within the marsh, usually with a bare, muddy bottom and a sparse collection of plants. At low tide salt pannes may dry completely to a hard mud surface dotted with caked salt crystals. Pannes are very high in salinity owing to the evaporation of brackish water. The thin vegetation of salt pannes is usually dominated by especially salt-tolerant plants, including Spike Grass, Glass- Low salt marsh is defined by Saltwater Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora), which grows especially tall where there is a big tidal range, as in the Western Basin. LOW MARSH Subtidal • Floods twice a day • Highly saline soil, dense mud with very poor aeration • Soil always very wet ut SALT PANNE Spike Grass Dwarfed Saltwater Cordgrass Sea Lavender Glassworts Saltwater Cordgrass Saltwater Cordgrass Sea Lavender Glassworts MSHW MHW Only Saltwater Cordgrass MLW MSLW Spring High Water Line, MHW=Mean High Water Line, MLW=Mean Low Water Line, MSLW=Mean Spring Low Water Line LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 269 9/7/16 10:08 PM 270 SALT MARSH STRUCTURE Beach Plum Prunus maritima Switchgrass Panicum virgatum Northern Bayberry Myrica pensylvanica Saltwater Cordgrass also lines the banks of salt marsh creeks Groundsel Tree Baccharis halimifolia Unconsolidated glacial sediments from outwash plains (typical of Long Island) or glacial river deltas (commonly in Connecticut) Marsh Elder Iva frutescens Saltmeadow Cordgrass Spartina patens Blackgrass Juncus gerardia High Marsh creek Ma rsh p ea t la yer Salt marsh die-off damage to the low marsh Blue Crab Callinectes sapidus Marsh Fiddler Uca pugnax Atlantic Silverside Menidia menidia Three-Spined Stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus Striped Killifish Fundulus majalis LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 270 Salt ma 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES 271 Habitat types, plant species, and animal species in the salt marsh are tightly correlated with tide heights. Just an inch or two of increased tide height can radically change the species mix in a marsh, one reason that sea level rise and climate change deeply worry biologists who study salt marshes and their inhabitants. As sea levels rise in the Long Island Sound area, we may lose many of our salt marshes—and the creatures that live in them or depend on them for food. We’ll also lose the powerful benefits that marshes provide in protecting the coastlines during storms and in filtering pollutants that enter the Sound from streams and rivers. Saltmeadow Cordgrass Spartina patens Salt marsh panne Saltwater Cordgrass Spartina alterniflora High marsh Low marsh LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 271 9/7/16 10:08 PM 272 SALT MARSHES worts, Sea Lavender, and sometimes a low-growing form of Saltwater Cordgrass. Marsh borders The higher ground surrounding the marsh, above the mean spring high water level, where flooding is rare and less salttolerant plants can survive. In most Connecticut salt marshes you can spot the marsh border quickly by looking for Marsh Elder (High Tide Bush) and Groundsel Tree, two shrubs that normally line the border. Salt pannes are low, muddy areas of the marsh with no grass cover. Pannes often flood during spring tides. The water they contain is often far more salty than seawater, owing to evaporation. Salt on Saltwater Cordgrass leaves (Spartina alterniflora) The lower marsh In Connecticut salt marshes the lower marsh vegetation is composed almost exclusively of Saltwater Cordgrass stands. Besides tolerating saltwater immersion of its roots and rhizomes, Saltwater Cordgrass has a range of other adaptations to living between the low and high tide lines. The waterlogged soils of salt marshes and tidal flats are poorly oxygenated, and all plant roots require oxygen to do the work of transporting nutrients throughout the plant. Saltwater Cordgrass has a special honeycomblike air circulation tissue called aerenchyma within its stems, rhizomes, and roots that allows the plant to grow on waterlogged soils and still oxygenate its roots. Its leaves also have special salt glands on their surface that excrete excess salt absorbed through its roots. If you look closely at a living cordgrass leaf, you’ll see tiny white crystals of salt, excreted by the salt glands, all along the blade. Although we normally look at the characteristic strengths of a dominant species like Saltwater Cordgrass in adapting to harsh conditions, it’s always important to consider the competition a species faces from other plants. Saltwater Cordgrass is well adapted to life in marshes between the average low and high tide lines, but it is a poor competitor with grasses above the high tide line. The Saltmeadow Cordgrass that dominates the high marsh has tough, aggressive roots and rhizomes that prevent Saltwater Cordgrass from spreading into this zone. So in a sense Saltwater Cordgrass lives its life trapped between the low and high tide lines, well adapted to life there but unable to spread beyond that ecological niche. A handful of other plant species can exist at the margins of the lower marsh. Sea Lavender will grow just below the high tide line, as will Glassworts. Spike Grass is the most salt tolerant of all the marsh grasses but is sparse below the high tide line. A few marine algae species are found in the lower salt marsh. Sea Lettuce is common in the lower marsh, as is the nonnative Green Fleece. Knotted Wrack and Rockweed will also grow in salt marshes if they can find stable attachment points. Often you’ll see Rockweed and Knotted Wrack around LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 272 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES 273 drainage culverts and gates in the marsh or growing on large boulders on salt marsh creeks. Under the lower marsh Marshes develop in protected shore waters where sand and silt collect into tidal flats that are at least partially exposed above the low tide line. The underlying silty soil in marshes is always soaked with water and is poor in oxygen. Anaerobic bacterial decomposition of organic matter in the soils leaves hydrogen sulfide as a by-product, giving marshes their characteristic rotten egg smell. The burrows of marsh animals like fiddler crabs and marsh crabs help somewhat to aerate the marsh soils, but the anaerobic conditions prevent all but a few plants from taking root. The thick, sticky mat of blue-green algae, green algae, and bacteria on the surface of marsh mud is an important contributor to the overall biological productivity of the salt marsh. The algae mat also helps stabilize the mud and prevent erosion, and traps new silt particles brought in with each new high tide, helping to build the marsh. Glassworts (Salicornia sp.) often grow in the highly saline conditions of salt pannes. In the lower marsh, solid attachment areas are at a premium for animals like Atlantic Ribbed Mussels and barnacles, which attach to the bottom of grass stems and rhizomes of Saltwater Cordgrass. In this transition zone between the open water and creeks and the lower marsh, the byssal threads and other excretions of Ribbed Mussels help bind the loose silt sediments to the complex of mussel shells and Saltwater Cordgrass rhizomes, both protecting the lower marsh from washing away and slowly building the marsh by trapping sand and silt sediment particles. The tight intertwining of Ribbed Mussels and Saltwater Cordgrass roots and rhizomes is mutually beneficial: the rhizomes give the mussels a firm anchor point in an environment that offers few places to attach, and the mussels increase soil nitrogen around the rhizomes, stimulating growth. Much of the productivity of the lower salt marsh is created by blue-green and green algae, which attach to the stems of Saltwater Cordgrass and the mud surface in the lower marsh. If you look closely at the cordgrass stalks just above the water line or mud level, you will often see the tiny, coffee bean–like shells of Salt Marsh Snails, which feed on the film of algae that grows on the base of cordgrass stalks. These air-breathing snails avoid immersion at high tide by climbing the stalks to stay above water level. Invertebrates of the lower marsh and marsh creeks In the intertidal zone of salt marshes you’ll see many of the common species that also inhabit rocky shores, tidal flats, and beaches. The Eastern Mudsnail, Common Periwinkle, and LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 273 Ribbed Mussels (Geukensia demissa) play an essential role in the low salt marsh, binding the marsh sediments to resist erosion from tides and storms. 9/7/16 10:08 PM 274 GRASSES AND RIBBED MUSSEL SALTWATER CORDGRASS Spartina alterniflora SALTWATER CORDGRASS Spartina alterniflora SALTMEADOW CORDGRASS Spartina patens SALTMEADOW CORDGRASS, cowlicks High marsh ditch with both Saltwater Cordgrass (in ditch) and Saltmeadow Cordgrass (surrounding) SALTWATER CORDGRASS AND RIBBED MUSSELS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 274 9/7/16 10:08 PM a USSELS SALT MARSHES MARSH ELDER Iva frutescens RIBBED MUSSELS Geukensia demissa SPIKE GRASS Distichlis spicata SWITCHGRASS Panicum virgatum BLACKGRASS Juncus gerardia BLACKGRASS, flower detail LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 275 275 9/7/16 10:08 PM 276 PLANTS AND ALGAE GLASSWORTS Salicornia sp. GROUNDSEL TREE Baccharis halimifolia ERECT SEA BLIGHT Suaeda linearis SEA LETTUCE Ulva lactuca GREEN FLEECE Codium fragile ROCKWEED Fucus distichus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 276 9/7/16 10:08 PM SALT MARSHES SEA LAVENDER Limonium carolinianum SEA LAVENDER, basal rosette SEASIDE GOLDENROD Solidago sempervirens MARSH ORACH Atriplex patula PERENNIAL SALTMARSH ASTER S. tenuifolium COMMON REED Phragmites australis LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 277 277 9/7/16 10:09 PM 278 SALT MARSHES Rough Periwinkle are all frequently found on mudflats and creek banks within the marsh. The snails eat algae and other organic material on the surface of the mudbanks and tidal flats. On the creek mudbanks, usually near the top just under the upper layer of grasses, you may see groups of holes and small heaps of freshly dug mud. These are made by one of the two species of fiddler crabs that inhabit Connecticut marshes. The constant digging of fiddler crabs is important for marsh grasses, because these burrows bring oxygenated water and nutrients into the silty marsh soils. The most common fiddler crab in Connecticut salt marshes is the Mud Fiddler Crab, but the Red-Jointed Fiddler Crab is also common. Both fiddler crabs feed on the rich layer of algae, bacteria, and plant detritus on the surface of marsh mud. Salt Marsh Snails (Melampus sp.) on a Saltwater Cordgrass stem (Spartina alterniflora). Marsh Crabs are about the size of a fiddler crab but are dark violet to black in color and have a more square-shaped body. Marsh Crabs are less common in Connecticut marshes than fiddler crabs and are less visible to the marsh visitor because they are active primarily at night. Although they will prey on fiddler crabs, Marsh Crabs are primarily herbivores that feed on the stalks and leaves of Saltwater Cordgrass. In healthy lower marsh environments, the feeding of Marsh Crabs has little effect on the abundance of Saltwater Cordgrass, but recently these crabs have been implicated in the die-off of lower marsh grasses in sections of many New England salt marshes. In marsh die-off syndrome, the local population of Marsh Crabs eats away large patches of Saltwater Cordgrass, leaving bare, muddy creek banks. Research by Brown University professor Mark Bertness and his graduate students has shown that marsh die-off tends to occur in areas where sport fishing has depleted the number of predatory fish and Blue Crabs that normally prey on Marsh Crabs. Released from predation pressure, the enlarged population of Marsh Crabs damages the salt marsh by eating far more grass. Within the marsh creeks the beautiful Blue Crab is the characteristic salt marsh crab. Blue Crabs are frequent targets of human crab fishers as well as the larger herons and so are wary of any movements around their area. If you are patient and stand still by a marsh creek for a few minutes looking carefully under the surface, you will often be rewarded with spotting a Blue Crab or the smaller Green Crab, also common in salt marsh creeks. Grass Shrimp (also called Prawns, Palaemonetes sp.) are also common in salt marsh creeks and play an important role in the salt marsh and estuary food chains. Grass Shrimp are LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 278 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES detritus feeders that break down larger bits of dead grass leaves. Bits of the reduced leaves that are not eaten by the shrimp become food for filter feeders like clams, mussels, and barnacles. The Grass Shrimp in turn are eaten by larger fish and birds that move into the marsh creeks at high tide. Fish of the lower marsh and marsh creeks Salt marshes are important nursery areas for many fish and are also rich in species that spend their lives in and around marshes. Small salt marsh fish eat algae, detritus from the breakdown of marsh grasses, amphipods, copepods, isopods, shrimp, marsh snails, and insects. Mummichogs and killifish are important predators on mosquito larvae, helping to limit populations of marsh mosquitos and other biting insects. 279 Salt marsh die-off, at Stony Creek, Branford, Connecticut. Here almost all of the low salt marsh grass, Saltwater Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora), has been chewed away, leaving large brown banks of exposed marsh peat that erode easily in storms. If you quickly approach a salt marsh creek in summer or fall, you’ll see an explosion of tiny, panicked fish darting in every direction. The fish are small and fast-moving, and most are a nondescript brownish color, but if you wait until the fish settle down and look closely, you can identify a few species. The Common Mummichog is the most abundant fish in the lower marsh and marsh creeks. Mummichogs can grow as long as seven inches, but most individuals in marsh creeks and shallows are one to two inches long. Tiny flashes of silver are usually from the Atlantic Silverside, a fish that also ranges into the coastal and deeper waters of Long Island Sound. Striped Killifish and Sheepshead Minnows are other common residents of salt marsh creeks. Young Winter Flounder use the shelter of salt marsh creeks to grow before venturing into deeper waters, but the flounders are a favorite target for Ospreys, as are the schools of silvery Atlantic Menhaden and Blueback Herring that also enter tidal creeks in the marsh. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 279 9/7/16 10:09 PM 280 SMALL CREEK FISH AND CRABS STRIPED KILLIFISH 6–7 in. Fundulus majalis 2–4 in. THREE-SPINED STICKLEBACK Gasterosteus aculeatus 1.2–2.5 in. SHEEPSHEAD MINNOW Cyprinodon variegatus COMMON MUMMICHOG 3–3.5 in. Fundulus heteroclitus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 280 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 281 RED-JOINTED FIDDLER CRAB Uca minax MUD FIDDLER CRAB Uca pugnax Carapace 0.8 in. wide Carapace (shell) 0.7 in. wide Carapace 1 in. wide MARSH CRAB Sesarma reticulatum BLUE CRAB Callinectes sapidus Carapace 7–8 in. wide Color ranges from bright green to graygreen to brown GREEN CRAB Carcinus maenas Carapace 3–3.5 in. wide LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 281 9/7/16 10:09 PM 282 SALT MARSHES Larger species of coastal fish range into the marsh at high tide. Smaller Bluefish and Striped Bass enter for the rich pickings of small marsh fish and crabs in tidal creeks. These larger predatory and sport fish species are important to salt marsh ecology because they limit the populations of plant-eating prey that might otherwise damage the marsh. Diamondback Terrapin Diamondback Terrapins are turtles native to brackish and salt marshes ranging from Cape Cod south to the Florida Keys and the Gulf Coast. Their common name derives from the diamond patterns of the shell carapace, the details of which are highly variable but are always in a bold geometric pattern. The name “terrapin” is derived from the Algonquian word “torope,” which the Native Americans used to describe the Diamondback. Terrapins are shy and are fast, strong swimmers with large webbed feet and strong jaws for crushing their favored prey of small fish, clams, mussels, periwinkles, and mud snails. To see them, approach salt marsh creeks slowly and scan the water for swimming turtles as well as the water’s edge along the mudbanks for basking turtles. In early summer, check roads near marshes for female turtles seeking out nesting sites. Terrapins can survive in the wild from 25 to 40 years, making them one of North America’s longest-lived animals. Diamondbacks are also unusual in that they can survive in a variety of water salinities, from freshwater (<5 ppt salt) to ocean water (32 ppt), but they prefer the brackish water of salt marshes (15–25 ppt). Special lacrimal glands near their eyes Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys terrapin 5–7 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 282 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 283 allow terrapins to drink salt water and then excrete the salt as tears. Diamondbacks mate in late spring and lay egg clutches in June and July. The females prefer to lay their eggs in sand banks but will also dig nests under vegetation in the high marsh. Females often wander long distances from the marsh to find suitable nesting areas, making them vulnerable to cars and domestic animal predation. Young turtles emerge from eggs in August and September and are a favorite food of herons, Bluefish, and Striped Bass. Diamondbacks overwinter by hibernating in deep marsh creeks under mud bottoms or high marsh vegetation, but the Diamondback’s winter biology is not well understood. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Diamondback Terrapin was nearly hunted to extinction for its meat, then used in a fashionable soup. As the popularity of turtle soup faded in the early twentieth century, Connecticut populations of Diamondbacks recovered somewhat. Today the main threat to terrapins is habitat loss. Biologists estimate that almost 75 percent of terrapin marsh habitat has been eliminated since colonial times. Accidental death owing to human activity is another problem: terrapins are often caught and drowned in crab pots and nets or hit by boat propellers or cars. In Connecticut, the Diamondback Terrapin is not on the state’s endangered or threatened lists, but terrapins are considered endangered in Rhode Island and threatened in Massachusetts. Another common turtle that often enters salt marshes is the Snapping Turtle. Snapping Turtles are readily distinguished from terrapins by a larger head, lack of strong linear patterns on the shell, and generally darker overall color. Adult Snapping Turtles (up to 18 inches long) are also much larger than adult Diamondback Terrapins (usually 5 to 7 inches long). Snapping Turtles are almost exclusively aquatic. They are more noticeable in late spring and early summer, when female turtles wander into the upper marsh or uplands near marshes to lay their eggs. Birds of the lower marsh The lower salt marsh offers a wide variety of animal and vegetal food sources to ducks, wading birds, and aerial divers like terns and Ospreys. Water is deeper in the low marsh, so long-legged wading birds like the Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, and Snowy Egret are a common sight there in all seasons except winter—and there is enough food in salt marshes that some Great Blue Herons even hang around in winter. Wading shorebird species are other frequent marsh visitors, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 283 9/7/16 10:09 PM 284 SALT MARSHES particularly in spring and fall migration seasons. Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs and Glossy Ibis are very common in water less than a foot deep, and Willets both feed and nest in many marsh sites along the coastlines. lightningboldt Snapping Turtle Chelydra serpentina American Black Ducks and Gadwalls are year-round residents of Connecticut salt marshes, and the salt marsh habitat is an important breeding environment for these ducks, which have lost much of their former nesting habitat to coastal development. Other duck species use our marshes primarily in migration and in winter, when the marsh offers food as well as shelter from human activity and the weather. Given the relatively shallow water, the low marsh is used most intensively by dabbling duck species like Mallards, Gadwalls, Green-Winged and Blue-Winged Teals, American Wigeons, and Wood Ducks. Deeper water near the marsh attracts the nonnative Mute Swan, as well as such diving ducks as the Hooded and Red-Breasted Mergansers, Greater and Lesser Scaup, Common Goldeneyes, and Ruddy Ducks. DoubleCrested Cormorants also frequently dive for fish in or near salt marshes and can often be seen perched on docks, pilings, and other nearby structures. Coastal diving birds like terns depend intensively on the health of our salt marshes. Terns feed on small fish species such as Mummichogs, Silversides, Sand Lances, and Sheepshead Minnows, which they take in shallow dives at the water American Black Duck Anas rubripes LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 284 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 285 surface. All of these small fish either live entirely in or around salt marshes or depend on the protection of marshes early in their lives. Connecticut’s Common Terns nest primarily in colonies on offshore islands like Guilford’s Falkner Island and feed all along the coast and in the central part of the Sound, but their prey fish are all nurtured in salt marshes. The endangered Least Tern takes small fish directly from salt marsh creeks and from shallow coastal waters near marshes. Black Skimmers also hunt more open waters near marshes for the same small fish species taken by terns. Along creek banks in the lower marsh look for the secretive Clapper Rail in early morning or evening twilight hours. Scanning the same areas of marsh creeks will often turn up a Black-Crowned Night-Heron or the less common but similar Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron. All three birds hunt for fiddler crabs, snails, and other small marsh invertebrates. The night-herons will also take larger crabs and fish from the marsh creeks. The upper marsh The upper marsh, or marsh platform, is the area of salt marshes above the typical high tide line (MHW) but below the level of the high water in monthly spring tides (MSHW) (see illustration, p. 289). Although the upper marsh is above the average high tide, it is flooded twice monthly by spring high tides, and thus the plants in the upper marsh must also Black-Crowned Night-Heron in flight Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron in flight Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron Nyctanassa violacea Black-Crowned Night-Heron Nycticorax nycticorax LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 285 9/7/16 10:09 PM 286 WATER BIRDS GREAT BLUE HERON Ardea herodias GREAT EGRET Ardea albus SNOWY EGRET Egretta thula WILLET Tringa semipalmata Glenn Young LESSER YELLOWLEGS Tringa flavipes LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 286 GREATER YELLOWLEGS Tringa melanoleuca 9/7/16 10:09 PM a SALT MARSHES GLOSSY IBIS Plegadis falcinellus Steve Byland BLUE-WINGED TEAL Anas discors 287 MALLARD Anas platyrhynchos Steve Oehlenschlager GADWALL Anas strepera pstclair MUTE SWAN Cygnus olor LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 287 CLAPPER RAIL Rallus longirostris 9/7/16 10:09 PM 288 SALT MARSHES Common Salt Marsh Border Shrubs Marsh Elder Iva frutescens Groundsel Tree Baccharis halimifolia Northern Bayberry Myrica pensylvanica Beach Plum Prunus maritima Black Cherry Prunus serotina LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 288 be able to tolerate regular immersions in salt water. As with the lower salt marsh, the upper marsh owes its existence to a single dominant grass species, in this case Saltmeadow Cordgrass. Saltmeadow Cordgrass (Salt Hay) is the low-growing grass that forms the open meadowlike expanses most people think of when referring to salt marshes. It is brilliantly green from late spring to early fall and has a peculiar growth habit of not usually growing fully upright. The grass stalks tend to lean over against their neighbors, giving Saltmeadow Cordgrass meadows their typical cowlicked appearance. In northeastern salt marshes Saltmeadow Cordgrass is joined by scatterings of Spike Grass. Spike Grass is not competitive enough with Saltmeadow Cordgrass to dominate most marsh areas, but in areas of the upper marsh where the soil has been disturbed or is particularly salty, Spike Grass may occur in pure stands. Spike Grass is the most salt tolerant of all high marsh grasses and will also grow in salt pannes in the upper marsh, where because of evaporation the underlying mud is often much saltier than pure seawater. In typical mixed marshes Spike Grass is not easy to spot among the more common Saltmeadow Cordgrass, but from September on, the distinctive white flowers of Spike Grass are visible, making the overall distribution of Spike Grass in the marsh more obvious. In raised areas of the salt marsh or along the upland rim of the marsh, Blackgrass (Black Rush) mixes in with Saltmeadow Cordgrass and Spike Grass. Areas of the marsh dominated by Blackgrass have a different visual texture and color, because Blackgrass leaves are spiky and erect as well as a darker shade of green in summer. In the spring Blackgrass is the first marsh grass to turn a brilliant spring green, and in the fall Blackgrass leaves turn the very dark brown or black color that gives the rush its name. In the less salty conditions of the upper marsh more plants are able to tolerate the occasional baths of salt water. Two herbaceous plants are very common in the upper marsh: Glassworts and Sea Lavender. Glassworts have a distinctive twig and leaf structure adapted to conserve water and resist salt spray. The leaves are much reduced and hug the fleshy stems, but Glassworts are true flowering plants. Unless you are a botanist the three Glasswort species are difficult to distinguish, and botanists themselves do not always agree over which is which, so we’ll just call them Glassworts. Luckily, Glassworts are so distinctive that once you know what they look like you can easily spot them in the marsh, particularly in the fall, when Glasswort stems turn a brilliant red against the green of the marsh grasses around them. When in bloom 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES Marsh border High salt marsh Low salt marsh Tidal flat 289 Subtidal zone Marsh Elder Groundsel Tree Switch Grass High marsh MSHW Saltmarsh Cordgrass Blackgrass, Spike Grass Sea Lavender, Glassworts, Saltwater Cordgrass Typically less than a foot in height within Long Island Sound Tides within Long Island Sound range from 2.6 ft. in the east to 7.4 ft. in the west Low marsh High salt marsh primarily exists within this narrow range MHW Low salt marsh can survive across a much broader tidal range Saltwater Cordgrass MLW Tidal flat MSLW Subtidal zone in the summer and early fall, Sea Lavender adds a beautiful violet haze to the waterside edges of the upper marsh. Sea Lavender is particularly tolerant of salt water on its roots and will even grow slightly below the high tide line. Scattered through the upper marsh grasses you’ll see a number of other flowering plants. In the late summer and fall, the golden flowers of Seaside Goldenrod are unmistakable, and even before they flower, the fleshy, tough leaves of this perennial stand out in the upper sections of salt marshes. The much less conspicuous Common Orach and Perennial Saltmarsh Aster are also common along the upland rim of the high marsh. White flowers make Spike Grass (Distichlis spicata) easy to spot in the fall months. Invertebrates of the upper salt marsh As in the lower marsh, the most visible invertebrates of the upper marsh are the small Mud Fiddler and Red-Jointed Fiddler Crabs that scurry into holes or under grasses before you as you walk through the marsh. However, by sheer number the dominant invertebrate of the upper marsh is the Salt Marsh Snail, sometimes called the Coffee Bean Snail because of its size and glossy brown color. These tiny snails are the LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 289 9/7/16 10:09 PM 290 SALT MARSHES most abundant invertebrate in the high marsh, occurring in densities of hundreds per square yard in healthy marshes. Salt Marsh Snails start their lives as aquatic larvae in nearby estuary waters, but as adults the snails are air-breathing and avoid immersion in water by climbing grass stems during high tides. Salt Marsh Snails are an important link in the salt marsh food chain. They feed on algae and grass debris on the surface of the marsh and in turn are eaten by American Black Ducks, Diamondback Terrapins, and other larger marsh animals. Inspection of the grass and underlying mud surface will show other upper marsh invertebrates, although not in the same numbers as fiddler crabs and Salt Marsh Snails. Saltmarsh Isopods and Saltmarsh Amphipods are small, pillbuglike crustaceans that feed on decomposing salt marsh grasses and algae from the surface of the marsh soils. Wolf spiders are a common upper marsh predator of small insects. Meadow Grasshoppers, Salt Marsh Grasshoppers, and Ground Crickets are generally easy to spot in summer and early fall as you walk across the marsh. You won’t have to look for one unfortunately common insect—if they are present in the marsh, the biting Greenhead Flies will find you. Fortunately, the Greenhead Fly is not as common in Long Island Sound marshes as it is farther northeast on Cape Cod and nearby islands. Greenhead Fly Tabanus sp. The various species of salt marsh mosquitos are other pests you’ll come across in the summer and fall months. It’s always wise to bring a DEET-based repellent along for any trip into a salt marsh in summer or early fall, both to avoid the annoyance of insect bites and to prevent more serious problems that can come from insect- or tick-borne diseases. Marsh mosquitos can carry West Nile virus, although the chances of catching the disease from the average mosquito bite is extremely low. A much more serious problem is the presence of ticks in the salt marsh. Even if it’s 90 degrees Fahrenheit on a sunny summer day, never enter salt marsh borders or upper marsh areas without long pants sprayed with a DEET-based repellent. There are just too many shrubs and long grass stems in the marsh to risk wearing shorts, and long pants will also protect you from other common problems like Poison Ivy in marsh border areas. Both the Black-Legged (Deer) Tick (Ixodes scapularis) and the American Dog Tick are common in salt marshes. The Black-Legged Tick is the vector for the Lyme disease spirochete bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi. American Dog Ticks can carry diseases like Rocky Mountain spotted fever, but luckily that disease is rare in the Northeast. Photo: Roman Ivaschenko. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 290 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES Birds of the upper marsh These days the most emblematic bird of the upper salt marsh is the Osprey, which both nests and hunts over salt marshes throughout Long Island Sound. The return of the Osprey as a common coastal bird is a wonderful environmental success story. After World War II the widespread use of the insecticide DDT devastated American populations of Ospreys, because DDT and its organochlorine breakdown products readily enter the coastal food chain and become concentrated in top-level predators like the Osprey. The DDT-based chemicals made the eggshells of birds of prey like the Osprey too thin to hatch successfully, and in the postwar decades Osprey populations plunged in the northeastern United States. After the use of DDT was banned in the United States in 1972, the Connecticut’s Osprey population began a long, slow recovery. Today the Osprey is once again one of our most populous coastal hawks, and Osprey nests are a common site on the coasts. In spring and fall migration and over the winter, Northern Harriers (formerly called the Marsh Hawk) and Short-Eared Owls hunt over the Sound’s salt marshes. Sadly, in recent decades the Short-Eared Owl population has been reduced owing to the loss of both freshwater and saltwater marsh habitats, and today the sight of the Short-Eared Owl’s low, tilting flight over the marsh is an unusual moment to treasure. Northern Harriers tell a happier story. Once devastated by the same DDT eggshell problems as the Osprey, harriers are now a common sight all along the Sound’s coasts in every season except the height of summer. The nearly ubiquitous Red-Tailed Hawk commonly hunts Meadow Voles in the salt marsh, and you’ll sometimes see American Kestrels perched on dead snags with a good view of the marsh or hovering over the marsh hunting for their prey of larger insects and small mammals. The larger heron species are usually the most visible birds within the upper marsh, hunting along natural tidal creeks and the straight, artificial mosquito ditches for crabs and small fish. The Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, and Snowy Egret are the most often spotted, but the smaller Green Heron is also common, if less visible owing to its size and more secretive habits. The even shyer Clapper Rail both feeds and breeds in the upper marsh but is rarely seen because of its retiring nature and activity during dawn and dusk hours. Black-Crowned Night-Herons prowl marshes at twilight but also commonly fly and feed during daylight hours. Willets often nest in or near the upper marsh, and if you are near a nest, the Willet pair will circle you, calling loudly and LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 291 291 Lone Star Tick Amblyomma americanum Black-Legged Tick (Deer Tick) Ixodes scapularis Carrier of Lyme disease American Dog Tick Dermacentor variabilis Photos: Melinda Fawver, Sarah2, photobee. 9/7/16 10:09 PM 292 SALT MARSHES Salt marsh, Rocky Neck State Park, East Lyme, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 292 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 293 293 9/7/16 10:09 PM 294 SALT MARSHES Salt marsh creeks make rich fishing grounds for the Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), the most visible bird of prey in Long Island Sound salt marshes. displaying their bright white wing stripes as they fly or land nearby. If this happens, please retreat from the area, because a close approach to the nest stresses both the adults and eggs or nestlings. Our common gull species also frequent salt marshes in search of food. Besides the birds themselves, you will often see the footprints of Herring and Ring-Billed Gulls in salt pannes and creek banks of salt marshes, where the gulls particularly relish eating fiddler crabs and the larger crab species. Small songbirds are a major part of the bird life of the upper marsh. The Seaside Sparrow and the Saltmarsh Sparrow are salt marsh specialists and are rarely seen in other environments. These marsh sparrow species cling precariously to the tops of marsh grasses while singing their territorial songs but can also behave almost more like mice than birds, running head-down and low through grasses to avoid detection. Marsh Wrens are the third of the classic salt marsh songbird species around Long Island Sound and are common and cacophonous residents of our marshes. Mammals of the upper marsh The upper platform of salt marshes is a dry enough habitat to attract mammals, at least as a food resource, and a few smaller mammals live in the marsh itself. Although you won’t often see them, Meadow Voles are common in the upper marsh, and it is these voles that attract Northern Harriers, Red-Tailed Hawks, and other predatory birds to the upper salt LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 294 9/7/16 10:09 PM SONGBIRDS SWAMP SPARROW Melospiza georgiana 295 SONG SPARROW Melospiza melodia SEASIDE SPARROW Ammodramus maritimus MARSH WREN Cistothorus palustris SALTMARSH SPARROW Ammodramus caudacutus NELSON’S SPARROW Ammodramus nelsoni The Saltmarsh Sparrow is one of North America’s most endangered species, owing to the loss of high marsh areas through sea level rise and habitat destruction. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 295 9/7/16 10:09 PM 296 SALT MARSHES The Green Heron (Butorides virescens) is the smallest of the herons in Long Island Sound marshes. This heron can be either stealthy and inconspicuous or remarkably tame and approachable. Either way, the Green Heron is a versatile predator of large insects, small fish, frogs, and worms and is common in both freshwater and saltwater wetlands. marsh. Muskrats are common in brackish salt marshes that are near freshwater wetlands, such as along the Connecticut River north of the I-95 highway bridge, where the marshes gradually transition from brackish to freshwater as you travel north toward Middletown. Northern Raccoons are clever and versatile omnivores that frequently enter the upper salt marsh in search of mussels, crabs, and other small animals. Raccoons are chiefly nocturnal, so you won’t often see them, but you can find their tracks in salt pannes or creek banks in the marsh. Although the Eastern Cottontail rabbit rarely grazes in the upper marsh, Cottontails are very common in our coastal parklands with grassy areas next to salt marshes. Salt pannes Salt pannes are a common microhabitat in the upper marsh, and where present they form a break from the usual vegetation patterns. Pannes (pronounced “pans”) are pretty much what they sound like: shallow, open, muddy areas that often fill with tide- or rainwater. The vegetation pattern in salt pannes is different because of very high salinity—through the evaporation of brackish tidewater, salt pannes typically become even saltier than pure seawater (>32 ppt salt). Only a few salt marsh plants can survive the harsh conditions of salt pannes: bone dry for days, flooded by salt water several times per month at least, with wildly varying soil temperatures and salinities. One moment the salt panne water may be intensely salty with 100 degree Fahrenheit soil temperatures, but a sud- LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 296 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 297 den, heavy rain can turn the water almost fresh for hours and lower the soil temperature 30 degrees or more. In salt pannes a stunted form of Saltwater Cordgrass grows to only a foot or two in height. The adaptations of Saltwater Cordgrass to poorly aerated soils and high water salinity also help it compete in salt pannes. Spike Grass is the most salt tolerant of all the marsh grasses and will often form almost pure (if sparse) stands within salt pannes. Glassworts and Sea Lavender will also colonize salt pannes. Salt pannes in the upper marsh usually originate when strong storms dump wrack line material onto the upper marsh, killing the grasses underneath the wrack and leaving an unvegetated area as the wrack debris eventually disintegrates. Salt pannes can also form when the upper marsh is disturbed by human activity, such as heavy foot traffic through a section of marsh, by digging or heavy machinery traffic that kills the grassy surface, or through poor salt hay harvesting practices. Once a salt panne forms, it is self-perpetuating, with salt levels so high that no marsh plant can survive in the center of the panne. The upper borders Four dominant border plants allow you to see the marsh border above the maximum high tide line. Marsh Elder is the classic high tide bush and the most visual marker for the salt marsh border. Once you can identify Marsh Elder, you will be able to read the marsh quickly, because Marsh Elder typically grows in a narrow band right up against the mean spring high water line, where it must tolerate some salt water in storms, but Marsh Elder is not competitive enough with LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 297 randimal Eastern Cottontail Sylvilagus floridanus A shallow salt marsh panne with stunted Spike Grass (Distichlis spicata), Glassworts (Salicornia sp.), and Saltwater Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora). The highly saline water in pannes, plus the harsh temperature regime of hot, dry low tides followed by cold, wet high tides, stunts the few plants that can survive in salt pannes. 9/7/16 10:09 PM 298 SALT MARSHES more terrestrial shrubs and grasses to spread far beyond the MSHW line. Switchgrass joins Marsh Elder along the marsh border but also spreads into more upland areas along the marsh border, and Switchgrass is also common in other coastal environments. Groundsel Tree is another shrub that grows near the MSHW line, but it is usually found on ground a bit higher and farther back from the marsh edge. The fourth highly visible marsh edge plant is Seaside Goldenrod, which is sparse in the high marsh but becomes very common in the marsh border area. See “Coastal Forests” for more information on the transition zones among salt marshes, beaches, and coastal forests. The invasion of Phragmites Along virtually all Connecticut and Long Island salt marsh upper borders there are stands of the invasive Eurasian subspecies of the Common Reed (Phragmites australis australis), often simply called Phragmites. Phragmites is particularly well adapted to disturbed ground that is a little saltier than average, although this reed species is so adaptable that it can live in just about any kind of wetland area except true salt marshes, where it inhabits the marsh border. Biologists differ on the ecological value of Phragmites as a food source. For decades the environmentalist’s view of Phragmites was that it was a cancer on the landscape, driving out native plants while supplying little nutritive value to wetland ecosystems. More recent research on Phragmites’ impact has provided a more balanced view, showing that Phragmites does contribute useful primary productivity and biomass to coastal and wetland ecosystems, albeit not to the same degree that the displaced native plants formerly did. Eastern Redcedar Junipers (Juniperus virginiana) are one of the most common trees along the borders of salt marshes and at the seaward edges of maritime forests. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 298 Salt marsh conservation Thanks largely to the modern environmental movement, there is now a broader societal understanding of the ecological importance of wetlands and the economic and practical value of natural coastal habitats. However, there isn’t a square inch of Long Island Sound’s shorelines that hasn’t been heavily influenced or thoroughly modified by human activity, and over the past 300 years, more than half of the Sound’s salt marsh habitat has been lost to filling and development. The story in our region is not unique—there were approximately 220 million acres of salt marsh in North America in preColumbian times, and today only about 104 million acres of marshes remain intact. In the past 40 years the importance of protecting both inland and coastal wetlands has driven both state and federal legal protections for wetland areas, but coastal salt marshes 9/7/16 10:09 PM SHRUBS AND TREES BLACK CHERRY Prunus serotina COMMON JUNIPER Juniperus communis WINGED SUMAC Rhus copallina STAGHORN SUMAC Rhus typhina NORTHERN BAYBERRY Myrica pensylvanica BEACH PLUM Prunus maritima LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 299 299 9/7/16 10:09 PM 300 SALT MARSHES The ubiquitous and troublesome perennial wetland grass Common Reed, often called simply Phragmites. Common Reed comes in two forms, a benign native subspecies, Phragmites australis americanus, and a highly invasive nonnative subspecies from Eurasia, P. australis australis, introduced by European settlers of the New World. The nonnative form of Common Reed aggressively competes with native wetland grasses such as cattails in freshwater wetlands and drives out marsh edge grasses and shrubs at the borders of salt marshes. Common Reed offers poor nutrition for native wetland animals and reduces the biodiversity of habits it invades. Unfortunately, Common Reed is very common throughout Long Island Sound wetlands. coninue to face a host of threats beyond potential burial under new shoreline construction projects. Owing to both long-term climate change and the more recent acceleration of global warming and sea level rise, salt marshes on Long Island Sound are now in a dangerous period where the accelerating rise in sea level may be too fast for our existing marshes to adapt. In more than 500 years, from 1300 to 1850, the average rate of sea level rise was approximately 0.04 inches per year. The rate in the twentieth century rose to 0.09 inches per year, and the trend has now accelerated to just above 0.12 inches per year. Climate scientists estimate that because of global warming the rate could rise as high as 0.24 inches year or more over the next century. Owing to the melting of glaciers and the polar ice caps, each 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) rise in average global temperature will raise the earth’s sea level by approximately three feet. Even if salt marshes could shift landward as fast as the sea rises, in most areas coastal development has cut off their path of retreat. Ringed by coastal houses, roads, railroads, and the rocky Connecticut landscape itself on their landward sides, these salt marshes simply have no place to go as the sea level rises. In many places along the Connecticut coast you can see the remains of former salt marshes along what are now becoming beaches, rocky shores, or tidal flats. Large, dark chunks of salt marsh peat from former marshes lie surrounded by new sand and mud; the peat gradually washes away in storms, and LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 300 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 301 any trace of the former marsh vanishes. In the Long Island Sound region the sea level has risen about seven inches over the past 300 years. The recent hurricanes Irene and Sandy tore away large chunks of Connecticut salt marsh in places like Greenwich Point, Guilford’s Chaffinch Island Park, and the western edges of the Barn Island Wildlife Management Area in Stonington. On the North Shore of Long Island the few surviving salt marshes tend to be situated in more protected bays and inlets and suffered less damage in recent storms, but they face the same ultimate challenges—the marshes are ringed by roads and houses, and as the sea rises, there is no room for the marshes to retreat. Change comes slowly in salt marshes. The mosquito control ditches that were cut into most of the region’s larger salt marshes in the mid-1930s are still there, still open after 80 years. The ditches were carved out during the Great Depression as part of a Civilian Conservation Corps program. The goals were twofold: to drain marshes for increased salt hay production and to decrease local mosquito populations. Ironically, the ditching accomplished neither goal, but the ditches exist to this day as reminders of how even such a productive ecosystem as the salt marsh may not be able to repair itself and adapt within human time scales. The threats to our coastal marshes may be less visible today than in the past, but they are no less real. Although salt marshes have a significant capacity to absorb and process nutrients, we are overwhelming all the environments of Long Island Sound with excess nitrogen in the 1 billion gallons of wastewater we dump into the Sound every day. Much of LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 301 Eroding marsh, Chaffinch Island Park, Guilford, Connecticut. Aerial photos from the 1930s show that this small bay was entirely filled by salt marsh 80 years ago. 9/7/16 10:09 PM 302 SALT MARSHES The reality of salt marsh loss on Long Island Sound. At Greenwich Point, Connecticut, the small salt marsh shown at the top in 2008 was entirely washed away in 2013 (bottom photo). A combination of steady sea level rise and recent storms proved fatal for this small marsh, and the same process now threatens our larger salt marshes as well. Photographs by Patrick Comins, National Audubon Society Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 302 9/7/16 10:09 PM SALT MARSHES 303 this wastewater dumping occurs in or near salt marshes. Salt marshes historically were nitrogen-limited environments, where the competitive relationships among marsh grass species were caused in part by tolerance of low nitrogen levels. The artificially heavy loading of nitrogen in the salt marsh environment (called eutrophication) is one of the reasons that the invasive Common Reed (Phragmites) is changing the mix of grasses in so many upper salt marsh areas. The health and resilience of Long Island Sound’s salt marshes are crucial to the health of our coastlines. Our future challenges will be to develop conservation strategies that recognize the economic and ecological benefits of our marshes, to develop better wastewater treatment strategies that will reduce the nitrogen levels threatening all our coastal environments today, and to give coastal marshes enough space for them to respond over time to the rising seas. The Meadow Vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus), the most common small mammal in area salt marshes. When you see Northern Harriers (Circus cyaneus), Red-Tailed Hawks (Buteo jamaicensis), and Short-Eared Owls (Asio flammeus) coursing over the marshes and eyeing the grasses closely, this is the little guy they are hunting. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 303 9/7/16 10:09 PM 304 Bluff Point State Coastal Reserve, Groton, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 304 9/7/16 10:09 PM 305 Coastal Forests The Fresh Pond, coastal woodlands, and the Western Basin of Long Island Sound beyond, at Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve, Lloyd Neck, Long Island. On the bluffs and marine scarps of the Long Island coast of the Sound, and on Connecticut’s rocky coastal headlands, the relatively modest sandspits, narrow beaches, and small salt marshes quickly transition into low bramble and shrub areas along the inland margins of beaches and marshes, and then into maritime forests on drier ground. These maritime forest areas contain a distinct assemblage of trees, shrubs, and bramble species that can tolerate some salt spray and withstand the dry, sandy soils near the coast. The coastal forests on Long Island’s North Shore are well developed where they have been preserved, in areas like Caumsett, Sunken Meadow, and Wildwood State Parks. In Connecticut there are particularly good maritime forest areas in the Willard Island and Cedar Island sections of Hammonasset Beach State Park, the Bluff Point Coastal Reserve in Groton, and the Barn Island Wildlife Management Area in Stonington. These maritime forests have two distinct elements: • A transitional edge dominated by low shrubs, bramble species, and tree species stunted by salt spray or very dry conditions • True forest areas dominated by taller trees and a forest understory, still under the influence of some salt spray Transitional beach, dune, and marsh edges The upper marsh and beach border is often a prickly tangle of shrubs, vines, and pioneer plants that specialize in transitional LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 305 9/7/16 10:09 PM 306 COASTAL FORESTS areas and disturbed ground. Marsh Elder, Groundsel Tree, Northern Bayberry, Black Cherry, Eastern Redcedar Juniper, and Shining (Winged) Sumac are common native shrubs in areas that are near salt water and regularly receive salt spray and occasional soakings with salt water in major storms. In more sheltered border areas, Staghorn Sumac and Smooth Sumac will join the mix of shrubs, and particularly in areas recently disturbed by human activity, the invasive sumac look-alike Ailanthus (Tree of Heaven) may be abundant. Aside from Black Cherries that manage to grow beyond bush height, the most common small trees are Eastern Redcedar Junipers, a species that is common in all Long Island Sound coastal environments from rocky shores to coastal bluffs and sandspits. Junipers are remarkably tough, but hurricanes Irene (2011) and Sandy (2012) battered many marsh and shoreline junipers near the coast. These junipers still show the effects of severe salt spray damage, where the windward side of the tree (usually the side that faces the Sound, or the southeast) has a lot of dead or salt-burned foliage. Pitch Pines are also common coastal evergreens, although in Connecticut they are less common than Eastern Redcedar Junipers. Many regional coastal parks, such as Connecticut’s Hammonasset Beach State Park and Sherwood Island State Park, are planted with Yellow-Rumped Warbler (Setophaga coronata) on Northern Bayberry (Myrica pensylvanica) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 306 9/7/16 10:09 PM COASTAL FORESTS the very tough Japanese Black Pine, a near look-alike to Pitch Pine that has needles in pairs rather than the three-needle bunches seen in Pitch Pines. The shrubs and stunted trees of the beach and marsh margins support a dense tangle of bramble species, vines, and small softwood trees like sumacs. Poison Ivy, Virginia Creeper, Wild Grape, Dewberry (Rubus sp., often collectively called “wild raspberries”), Catbrier, and the very similar Bullbrier can form bramble hedgerows so thick and thorny that few animals can pass through them. Unfortunately, much of the Sound’s coastal area has been disturbed by human activity many times over the past several centuries. Farming, road building, dredge spoil dumps, salt marsh filling, and other activities destroy natural plant communities and allow invasive nonnative species to move in and dominate the disturbed ground. Asiatic Bittersweet, Multiflora Rose, Japanese Honeysuckle, Autumn Olive, Wineberry, Ailanthus, and Japanese Knotweed are all nonnative species that are commonly seen in salt marsh, beach, and maritime forest border areas. Maritime forests The maritime forests that surround Long Island Sound are a distinct assemblage of tree and understory species, where such trees as Sassafras, Smooth Serviceberry (Shadbush), American Holly, American Linden (Basswood), Quaking Aspen, Red Maple, and other species are more common than you would see in inland forests. Many of the maritime forest LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 307 307 A small grove of Sassafras trees showing their characteristic twisted trunks. Sassafras is one of the most common hardwoods in coastal forests. (Continues on p. 320) 9/7/16 10:09 PM 308 COASTAL FORESTS Main trail, Bluff Point State Park and Coastal Reserve, Groton, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 308 9/7/16 10:09 PM COASTAL FORESTS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 309 309 9/7/16 10:09 PM 310 FOREST EDGE PLANTS POISON IVY Toxicodendron radicans VIRGINIA CREEPER Parthenocissus quinquefolia BEAR OAK Quercus ilicifolia CATBRIER Smilax glauca FOX GRAPE Vitis labrusca JEWELWEED Impatiens capensis LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 310 9/7/16 10:10 PM lia COASTAL FORESTS 311 DEWBERRY Rubus sp. WINEBERRY Rubrus phoenicolasius ASIATIC BITTERSWEET Celastrus orbiculatus BLACK SWALLOWWORT Cynanchum louiseae JAPANESE HONEYSUCKLE Lonicera japonica AILANTHUS (TREE OF HEAVEN) Ailanthus altissima LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 311 9/7/16 10:10 PM 312 FOREST EDGE PLANTS JAPANESE KNOTWEED Fallopia japonica COMMON REED Phragmites australis AUTUMN OLIVE Elaeagnus umbellata MULTIFLORA ROSE Rosa multiflora FIELD BINDWEED Convolvulus arvensis BLACK LOCUST Robinia pseudoacacia LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 312 9/7/16 10:10 PM COASTAL FORESTS 313 MARSH ELDER Iva frutescens GROUNDSEL TREE Baccharis halimifolia SWITCHGRASS Panicum virgatum NORTHERN BAYBERRY Myrica pensylvanica HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY Vaccinium corymbosum EASTERN REDCEDAR JUNIPER Juniperus virginiana LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 313 9/7/16 10:10 PM 314 FOREST EDGE PLANTS BEACH PLUM Prunus maritima BLACK CHERRY Prunus serotina QUAKING ASPEN Populus tremuloides STAGHORN SUMAC Rhus typhina SHINING SUMAC Rhus copallina JAPANESE BLACK PINE Pinus thunbergiana LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 314 9/7/16 10:10 PM a COASTAL FORESTS SASSAFRAS Sassafras albidum BLACK OAK Quercus velutina NORTHERN RED OAK Quercus rubra EASTERN WHITE OAK Quercus alba AMERICAN HOLLY Ilex opaca RED MAPLE Acer rubrum LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 315 315 9/7/16 10:10 PM 316 FOREST PLANTS SMOOTH SERVICEBERRY (SHADBUSH) A. canadensis COMMON APPLE Malus pumila UMBRELLA SEDGE Cyperus strigosus AMERICAN LINDEN (BASSWOOD) Tilia americana HACKBERRY Celtis occidentalis PITCH PINE Pinus rigida LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 316 9/7/16 10:11 PM mericana COASTAL FORESTS FLOWERING DOGWOOD Cornus florida 317 MOUNTAIN LAUREL Kalmia latifolia KPG Payless2 MAPLELEAF VIBURNUM Viburnum acerifolium SPICEBUSH Lindera benzoin COMMON MILKWEED Asclepias syriaca DEER-TONGUE GRASS Panicum clandestinum LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 317 9/7/16 10:11 PM 318 WILDFLOWERS AND GRASSES YARROW Achillea millefolium ORCHARD GRASS Dactylis glomerata ORCHARD GRASS, flowers FOXTAIL GRASS Alopecurus sp. WILD GERANIUM Geranium maculatum PINK AZALEA Rhododendron periclymenoides LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 318 9/7/16 10:11 PM des COASTAL FORESTS 319 GOLDENROD Solidago sp. WRINKLED ROSE Rosa rugosa PASTURE ROSE Rosa carolina SWAMP ROSE MALLOW Hibiscus moscheutos WHITE WOOD ASTER Eurybia divaricata LATE PURPLE ASTER Symphyotrichum patens LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 319 9/7/16 10:11 PM 320 COASTAL FORESTS trees are what ecologists call early successional or pioneer species, species that specialize in moving into disturbed grounds or marginal habitats. These fast-growing, relatively small trees are gradually replaced in mature oak-hickorymaple hardwood forests but tend to persist in areas right next to the coast. The presence of these pioneer trees also reminds us that the coasts of Long Island Sound have been heavily modified by human activity and that even our best-protected coastal forests are relatively young. A century ago most of what is now coastal forest was open farmland or logged-out woodlots that were gradually abandoned as coal and oil replaced wood for winter heating and better transportation systems made midwestern farms far more competitive than New England and Long Island farms. Many inland birds of forest and field are also common in maritime forests. As a transitional edge habitat near beaches and salt marshes, coastal forests are often rich with small animal life, and that abundance attracts top predators like the Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus). The most common broadleaf tree in the maritime forests of Long Island Sound is Sassafras, with its distinctively twisted trunks and (mostly) mitten-shaped leaves. Young Sassafras trees often line coastal woodland hiking trails. In the spring, the many Smooth Serviceberry trees (locally called Shadbush because they blossom in spring when the shad are running in local streams) are white with blooms, joined by a few Flowering Dogwoods, as well as by Common Apples that survive from abandoned coastal fruit orchards. In more mature maritime forests White, Black, and Red Oaks and mature Red Maples are the largest trees. Often these large maples and oaks predate the rest of the maritime forest and were once field trees growing along farm walls and roadways. You can often see the remains of old stone walls that once marked the Megan Lorenz LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 320 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS borders of farm fields but now run through coastal forests that grew up when these coastal farms were abandoned about a century ago. The understory growth at the edges of maritime forests is a combination of marsh and beach edge species plus common coastal thicket plants. At marsh and beach edges Marsh Elder, Groundsel Tree, Bayberry, and Black Cherry trees predominate. The invasive shrubs Autumn Olive and Japanese Honeysuckle and the invasive vine Black Swallowwort are unfortunately very common, driving out native species that have more food value for small animals. All three common sumac species, Shining, Smooth, and Staghorn, occur along the paths that receive some direct sunlight, and all produce valuable fruit and seeds for migrants. In open areas along the paths and in small clearings Common Milkweed and DeerTongue Grass are common, although open fields shift in plant composition from year to year. For example, Jewelweed may dominate the open areas in some years but will fade back to a secondary role in others. Switchgrass, Orchard Grass, and Foxtail Grass are often the most common grasses, along with Umbrella Sedges, with their distinctive flowers that look like short bottlebrushes. 321 Black-Crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) are stocky, short-legged herons that are fairly common in most wetland environments and along the shores of Long Island Sound. Night-herons are versatile predators of just about any kind of animal life, and they favor crabs and small fish in salt marshes, on beaches, and on rocky shorelines and offshore breakwaters. As their name suggests, night-herons are most active in the twilight hours and at night. Transition to mature inland hardwood forest The region’s maritime forests share almost all the same tree species as inland forests, but with a much higher percentage of smaller pioneer species. The transition from maritime forest to inland forest, therefore, is often subtle, especially if you look only at the trees. Often the most noticeable transitions LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 321 9/7/16 10:11 PM 322 COASTAL FORESTS into inland forest are in the understory trees and shrubs. Classic eastern forest understory species such as Mountain Laurel, Spicebush, and Mapleleaf Viburnum are uncommon in maritime forests and become dominant forest species only when well away from salt spray or saline soils. Most ferns are similarly uncommon in maritime forests, growing into lush ground cover only in upland forests far from salt spray. lukicarbol Long-Eared Owl Asio otus Animals Many of the birds and mammals that feed in the upper marsh shelter and nest in the adjacent coastal forests. Great Horned Owls, Long-Eared Owls, and the tiny Northern Saw-Whet Owl all hunt in woodlands and forest margins but spend the day roosting in the nearby coastal forest, as does that versatile predator of all coastal habitats, the Black-Crowned NightHeron. Spring migrant birds In the spring maritime woods attract a wide variety of migrating woodland birds. Beginning in March, Red-Winged Blackbirds, Common Grackles, Northern Cardinals, and Marsh Wrens announce the coming of warm weather. Noisy gangs of boreal songbirds heading north to the Canadian woods move through the trees, including Golden-Crowned and Ruby-Crowned Kinglets, Brown Creepers, Black-Capped Chickadees, and White-Throated Sparrows. On a moist, early May morning, with warm-front winds from the southwest, large groups of songbirds will move through the woodlands surrounding Long Island Sound, including Red-Eyed Vireos, Veerys, Yellow Warblers, Yellow-Rumped Warblers, American Redstarts, and Common Yellowthroats. Carolina Wrens, Marsh Wrens, and Song Sparrows move through as migrants but also remain to breed in the Connecticut and Long Island coastal woodlands. Brown Creeper Certhia americana Fall migrants In the fall many of the same woodland species move south again, but fall migration also brings large flocks of Blue Jays, Tree Swallows, and all of the common blackbird species. Often the flocks flow over the Sound’s coasts, heading southwest in a continuous stream across the sky. But if the flocks do drop into the trees, the experience can be amazing, as 300–400 noisy Blue Jays suddenly blast a riotous mix of jay calls and blue-and-white blurs across the treetops. All the songbirds in the trees draw down migrating hawks, particularly forest bird hunters like the common SharpShinned Hawk. Watch for these sleek, short-winged pursuers as they fast-cruise through the forest canopy, looking for an unwary songbird to pick off. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 322 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS 323 In the fall the woods can be full of blackbirds, wood warblers, and Cedar Waxwing flocks. Palm and Yellow-Rumped Warblers are common in both spring and fall migration. The thickets along the wood edges draw Gray Catbirds, Northern Mockingbirds, and a range of sparrow species. Later in the fall Ruby-Crowned and Golden-Crowned Kinglets move through park woods and some linger well into winter, joining gangs of Black-Capped Chickadees, Tufted Titmice, and Brown Creepers in winter foraging flocks. In winter it’s worthwhile to scan clusters of Eastern Redcedar Junipers and other dense conifers along the edges of the woods for roosting Northern Saw-Whet Owls. Fall hawk-watching The Connecticut coast has been a destination for regional birders interested in migrating hawks for decades. As knowledge of the unique advantages of the Sound’s shoreline promontories for hawk-watching became more widespread, many shoreline locations such as Lighthouse Point in New Haven, Stratford Point, and Hammonasset Beach State Park in Madison became known as places to see virtually all the Red-Winged Blackbird Agelaius phoeniceus Northern Saw-Whet Owl Aegolius acadicus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 323 9/7/16 10:11 PM 324 SONGBIRDS GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET Regulus satrapa L 4 in. WS 7 in. RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET Regulus calendula L 4.25 in. WS 7.5 in. RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH Sitta canadensis WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH Sitta carolinensis L 5.75 in. WS 10.5 in. L 4.5 in. WS 8.5 in. L 5.25 in WS 8 in. BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE Poecile atricapillus L 11 in. WS 16 in. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 324 BLUE JAY Cyanocitta cristata 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS 325 WHITE-THROATED SPARROW Zonotrichia albicollis L L 6.25 in. WS 8.25 in. 6.75 in. WS 9 in. SONG SPARROW Melospiza melodia WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW Zonotrichia leucophrys L 7 in. WS 9.5 in. GRAY CATBIRD Dumetella carolinensis L LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 325 8.5 in. WS 11 in. 9/7/16 10:11 PM 326 BIRDS CAROLINA WREN Thryothorus ludovicianus L 5.5 in. WS 7.5 in. MARSH WREN Cistothorus palustris L 5 in. WS 6 in. HOUSE WREN Troglodytes aedon L 4.75 in. WS 6 in. NORTHERN CARDINAL Cardinalis cardinalis L 8.75 in. WS 12 in. NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRD Mimus polyglottos L LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 326 10 in. WS 14 in. 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS 327 EASTERN SCREECH OWL Megascops asio L 8.5 in. WS 20 in. SHARP-SHINNED HAWK Accipiter striatus L LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 327 11 in. WS 23 in. 9/7/16 10:11 PM 328 COASTAL FORESTS major hawk, falcon, and eagle species, sometimes in a single day. Hawks also migrate over Long Island’s North Shore but tend to be more scarce there both because fewer hawks make the flight across the Sound on their way south and because those hawks that do make it to eastern Long Island tend to fly across the island and then move southeast along the south shore barrier islands before crossing the mouth of New York Harbor to head south along the New Jersey coastline. New Haven’s Lighthouse Point Park, the premiere fall hawkwatching site on Long Island Sound, owes its reputation to the geography of the site. Surrounded by the Sound (right of photo) and New Haven Harbor (bottom of photo), the point acts as a funnel for westward-bound hawk flights. The large, open field at the center left of the photo affords the fall hawk-watchers a 360-degree view of the migration. Lighthouse Point Park in New Haven owes its reputation as the Sound’s best hawk-watching site to its geography. The point sits at a sharp angle at the east side of the mouth of New Haven Harbor. As migrating hawks and other birds channel down the Connecticut coast, flying from east to west, they encounter Lighthouse Point and are faced with a difficult decision. Do they brave the three-to-four-mile flight west across New Haven Harbor or try the even more daunting 20mile flight across Long Island Sound? Indecision often causes the birds to mill about over Lighthouse Point, perfect for the bird watchers who congregate there from late August through mid-November to enjoy one of Long Island Sound’s greatest and most accessible wildlife experiences. As the sun heats the landscape, the warm ground heats the air near the ground, and that warm air forms columns of rising air called thermals. Most migrating hawks circle in these thermals to gain altitude and then glide relatively effortlessly on their way, instead of having to use active flapping flight to travel the thousands of miles from northern North America to the southern United States, Central America, and South Photo courtesy of Michael Marsland LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 328 9/7/16 10:11 PM HAWKS 329 Rusty red breast; wing linings more white than in the Red-Shouldered BROAD-WINGED HAWK Buteo platypterus L 15 in. WS 34 in. Broad white bands in the tail Large, evenly spaced dark-light bands on tail RED-SHOULDERED HAWK Buteo lineatus Thin white bands on a dark tail L 17 in. WS 40 in. Tail dark with thin white bands Rusty red breast and underwings RED-TAILED HAWK Buteo jamaicensis Dark “belly band” Brick red tail L 19 in. WS 49 in. Brick red tail in the adult; note “belly band” LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 329 9/7/16 10:11 PM 330 COASTAL FORESTS America. Warm thermals form over solid ground but not over the relatively cold waters of the Sound. Hawks are understandably reluctant to fly out over water, where they get no assist from rising thermals and must actively flap across the water to the next piece of land. Start in the early morning to get the best views of migrating songbirds and hawks moving low over the point and forests. These early hawks will often be looking for a breakfast of songbirds, so a morning walk through the maritime woodlands on any of the Sound’s coasts will often be rewarded with views of Sharp-Shinned and Cooper’s Hawks rocketing through the woods below treetop level, looking for breakfast. Later in the day the movement of soaring groups of hawks becomes harder to view, because the thermals rising above the coastline bring the hawks so high that they become difficult to spot even with binoculars. Soars with wings held in a shallow V dihedral angle Turkey Vulture Cathartes aura Black Vulture Coragyps atratus Soars with relatively flat wings; note the light wingtips Black Vultures LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 330 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS 331 American Kestrel Falco sparverius Male Female Resident birds The breeding maritime woodland birds are the common but beautiful residents of most woodlands and forest edges of the Atlantic Coast. Song Sparrows, American Goldfinches, Baltimore Orioles, and Northern Cardinals inhabit forest edges. Birding in bramble areas will often yield White-Throated Sparrows, Eastern Towhees, and the tiny but gorgeous Common Yellowthroat. Overhead in the crown foliage of the trees, look and listen for Red-Eyed Vireos. This vireo is the most common bird in the deep woodlands during the summer, but it is heard more often than seen because it favors the treetops for feeding and nesting. Watch the trees for flashes of crimson from American Redstart warblers, common but not easy to spot high in the trees. Forest edges and marshes ring with the calls of Red-Winged Blackbirds from mid-March until they depart southward in late fall. Both of our region’s vulture species can be seen over Long Island Sound’s coasts, but they are particularly common over rocky headlands and coastal bluff areas, where they get more lift from the warm air rising over the land. Both the Turkey Vulture and the smaller Black Vulture are formerly more southerly birds that have moved steadily up the Atlantic Seaboard as the climate has warmed over the past 50 years. The Black Vulture is the newer arrival, with the first recorded nest in Connecticut in 2002. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 331 9/7/16 10:11 PM 332 BIRDS Charles Brutlag CEDAR WAXWING Bombycilla cedrorum Paul Reeves Photography COMMON YELLOWTHROAT Geothlypis trichas EASTERN TOWHEE Pipilo erythrophthalmus Rachelle Vance AMERICAN ROBIN Turdus migratorius Gregg Williams DOWNY WOODPECKER Picoides pubescens LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 332 MOURNING DOVE Zenaida macroura 9/7/16 10:11 PM COASTAL FORESTS 333 Mammals Maritime forests are usually home to the same range of forest mammals as more inland forests. Most forest and coastal edge mammal species are nocturnal or active only at dawn and dusk, so you won’t often see such common residents as White-Tailed Deer, Raccoons, Virginia Opossums, or Flying Squirrels. The structural height complexity of woodland edges (dense foliage from ground level all the way up to the treetops), the diverse range of plant species, and the shelter that dense bramble provides all make coastal woodlands particularly attractive to small mammals—and to the animals that hunt them. White-Footed Deer Mice, Eastern Chipmunks, Raccoons, Gray Squirrels, American Red Squirrels, and Flying Squirrels are all common. Red Foxes were once more common in Connecticut coastal forests, but with the rise of the Eastern Coyote population in the past 20 years, foxes are now a bit less common. White-Tailed Deer thrive in edge habitats with a rich supply of shrub-height plants and thus are common in coastal woods, though they are not often see by casual hikers. Eastern Cottontail rabbits and Groundhogs are very common in maritime woodland edges, in open meadows, and along grassy roadsides near bramble thickets, where they can quickly retreat from predators. White-Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) drink from the brackish water of a salt marsh on Long Island’s North Shore. Gerald Kraus LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 333 9/7/16 10:11 PM 334 MAMMALS Nicolase Lowe WHITE-TAILED DEER Odocoileus virginianus DMM Photography Art WHITE-FOOTED DEER MOUSE Peromyscus leucopus Orhan Çam GRAY SQUIRREL Sciurus carolinensis LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 334 hkuchera RACCOON Procyon lotor elharo EASTERN CHIPMUNK Tamias striatus Anterovium AMERICAN RED SQUIRREL Tamiasciurus hudsonicus 9/7/16 10:11 PM onicus COASTAL FORESTS Tony Campbell NORTHERN FLYING SQUIRREL Glaucomys sabrinus Josef Pittner EASTERN COYOTE Canis latrans var. Mario Beauregard WOODCHUCK (GROUNDHOG) Marmota monax LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 335 335 dannytax RED FOX Vulpes vulpes mandritoiu EASTERN COTTONTAIL Sylvilagus floridanus hakoar LONG-TAILED WEASEL Mustela frenata 9/7/16 10:11 PM 336 Groundsel Tree in flower, Rocky Neck State Park, East Lyme, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 336 9/7/16 10:11 PM 337 Connecticut Locations Trail to Meigs Point, Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. Connecticut offers an amazing variety of shoreline habitats in a relatively small area. With rocky shores, salt marshes, small coves and beaches, brackish tidal rivers, and a range of island types, the shoreline offers both human and wildlife visitors a wealth of marine habitats to explore. Connecticut also benefits from its location along the Atlantic Migration Flyway for birds, and streams of migrant birds and (in the fall) migrating insects course over its shores. Connecticut’s coasts and tidal rivers also draw migratory fish like Bluefish and Striped Bass that move up and down the Atlantic Coast with the seasons, and there are recovering populations of anadromous fish such as Alewives and herring that come from the ocean and swim up its rivers to breed in freshwater. I chose these nine locations in Connecticut and the four locations in the next chapter on New York parks with two major factors in mind: easy year-round access to the public at a reasonable price and each location’s strengths in various aspects of natural history. Long Island Sound offers some of the most beautiful coastal habitats in the United States. Common Tern (Sterna hirundo) over New Haven Harbor, Connecticut. Unfortunately, only a small percentage of the Sound’s coasts are available to the general public, because they are either privately held or town parks that are aggressively managed to exclude nonresidents, particularly in summer. However, the information in this field guide applies well to all the natural shores of Long island Sound and every kind of park, not just the locations mentioned in these final two chapters. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 337 9/7/16 10:12 PM 338 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS High salt marsh and coastal woodlands on the Sherwood Millpond coast of the park. The New Creek marshes on the northeastern coast of Sherwood Island contain a wide variety of wildlife and draw many migrating waterbirds. Sherwood Island State Park, Westport Sherwood Island State Park is a 235-acre coastal island now connected to the mainland by the Sherwood Island Connector and a smaller bridge on Sherwood Island Lane. Because it is the only coastal state park in Fairfield County, the park is heavily used by beachgoers in summer. Sherwood Island is also Connecticut’s most heavily manicured coastal park, consisting mostly of mowed fields with small clusters of woodland and no natural shoreline habitat on the Soundfacing side. However, in the fall, winter, and spring Sherwood Island is excellent for birding and coastal hikes, particularly in the marshes on the inland-facing side of the park, and for scanning the Sound for ducks from the point in front of the main park pavilion. Although relatively small in size, Sherwood Island’s salt marshes are vibrantly healthy and contain both low marsh and high marsh areas, as well as many salt marsh creeks that draw in wading birds. The adjacent Sherwood Millpond and Compo Cove are both excellent for bay ducks and other waterfowl, particularly in the spring and fall migration seasons. There is also a small area of coastal woodland at the western end of the park that draws lots of migrant songbirds in the spring and fall. The large mowed fields of the park are not good for wildlife but do make for excellent visibility in the fall hawkwatching season. Information Park phone: (203) 226-6983 Address for GPS or online maps: 412 Sherwood Island Connector, Westport, Connecticut 06880 Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer months LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 338 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS 339 Milford Point, Milford The Milford Point area is composed of the Connecticut Audubon Society’s eight-acre Coastal Center at Milford Point, the private property of a dozen houses and surrounding land, and Milford Point itself, which is part of the Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge. Milford Point is one of Connecticut’s most important coastal bird breeding areas and migration feeding and resting areas, and it is also one of the top birding areas of the state. In 2011, Milford Point was voted Connecticut’s top birding site by Connecticut Magazine. The point is ideally located at the intersection of the east-west Connecticut coast flyway and the north-south Housatonic River valley flyway, and it is particularly rich in bird life during the fall migration season. Milford Point provides access to many coast habitats within a relatively small area. In about a mile of level hiking you can see coastal sandspits and the beginnings of a new salt marsh, as well as one of the most extensive coastal dune areas in Connecticut. Milford Point also adjoins Connecticut’s largest unditched salt marsh, the Charles Wheeler Salt Marsh and Wildlife Management Area. The 840-acre Wheeler Marsh is unique in the state as a very large salt marsh that was never crisscrossed with the mosquito ditches that were cut in the 1930s in a misguided attempt to control mosquito populations. A flock of Dunlin (Calidris alpina) courses over the extensive tidal flats that make Milford Point Connecticut’s best location for shorebird watching. Information Phone: (203) 878-7440 Address for GPS or online maps: 1 Milford Point Road, Milford, Connecticut 06460 Entrance fee: None, although donations are appreciated LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 339 The Audubon Sanctuary at Milford Point contains one of the Sound’s few Horseshoe Crab sanctuaries, where you can see the crabs laying eggs in late spring. 9/7/16 10:12 PM 340 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Sandy Point Bird Sanctuary, West Haven Sandy Point is famed for its excellent birding and fishing, for its wide, harborside beach of fine sand, and for the hundreds of terns and other shorebirds that use the point throughout the year as a breeding area in summer and migration waystation in spring and fall. The point is home to one of Connecticut’s largest nesting colonies of Least Terns and has nesting Piping Plovers, an endangered species with just a handful of nesting sites on the Connecticut coast. In 2012, Sandy Point was officially designated as a Connecticut refuge for Horseshoe Crabs, one of only three such refuges on the Connecticut coast. Sandy Point projects deep into the center of New Haven Harbor, making it an ideal setting for coastal birding and hiking. The point is a crucial nesting area for one of Connecticut’s most endangered beach-nesting birds, the Piping Plover. In spring and summer PLEASE stay well away from the roped-off nesting areas on the point. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 340 The Sandy Point area offers a variety of coastal habitats within a relatively small area. Sandy and Morse Points have healthy if small patches of beach and dune vegetation, and although the salt marsh habitat at Sandy Point is not large, the strategic location of the point at the mouth of New Haven Harbor virtually guarantees good migration season birding, excellent fishing, and fairly good winter birding. As a classic coastal sandspit Sandy Point’s vegetation is a mix of beach and dune plants, supplemented within the lagoon and on the sheltered northern shores by low marsh vegetation. Uncrowded except on summer weekends, Sandy Point is an ideal place to study the classic beach and upper beach vegetation of Long Island Sound. Information Address for GPS or online maps: 44 Beach Street, West Haven, Connecticut 06516 Entrance fee: Parking fee during the summer beach season 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS 341 Lighthouse Point, New Haven Lighthouse Point has been one of New Haven’s most popular parks since the late nineteenth century. From the early 1970s, Lighthouse Point has also become the site of an annual fall hawk watch that has grown in size and renown, making the park one of the best-known hawk-watching sites in New England. The park features rocky shores, coastal woodlands, and excellent views of harbor and Long Island Sound wildlife, and it even offers a bit of salt marsh creek habitat along its eastern edge at Morris Creek. The lawn areas at the center of the park primarily support summer recreational picnicking and sports activities, but in the fall this relatively open landscape plays host to hawk watchers because it affords a 360-degree view of the sky above the point. Lighthouse Point is also a great place to watch for migrating butterflies. Lighthouse Point Park offers some of the best publicly accessible rocky shoreline habitat on Long Island Sound. Fall is a great time to visit the western flank of the park along the New Haven Harbor coastline because the rocky shore flora and fauna will be well developed after the summer season, but any time of year offers interesting things to explore among the rocks. Try to time your visit as near as possible to low tide for the day. At low tide the outcrops of granite gneiss are interspersed with small coves of sand beach, making it easier to explore the lower sections of the rocks for intertidal creatures. The rocky shore habitat at Lighthouse Point is very accessible, particularly at low tide. Information Address for GPS or online maps: 10 Lighthouse Road, New Haven, Connecticut 06512 Entrance fee: Parking fee during the summer and fall seasons LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 341 In mid-September the point is host to a weekend festival of hawk-watching, wildlife crafts, and wild hawk and owl demonstrations. 9/7/16 10:12 PM 342 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Chaffinch Island Park, mouth of the West River in Guilford, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 342 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 343 343 9/7/16 10:12 PM 344 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS A lone Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) presides over the small headland at the western end of the bay. Chaffinch Island Park, Guilford This 22-acre jewel of a park is a compact distillation of all the environments of the Long Island Sound coast: rocky shores, salt marsh, a sandy beach, and a surprisingly interesting mix of coastal plants, many of them unusual along the shoreline. The park is not literally an island but almost one—the short causeway that links the park to the mainland passes over a salt marsh creek that once separated the high ground of Chaffinch Island from the mainland. The concentration of planted Hackberry trees makes Chaffinch Island especially attractive to the small group of emperor and snout butterflies that live particularly on and around Hackberries, so the unusual butterflies coupled with the interesting plant mix make Chaffinch Island more attractive to naturalists than the average small coastal town park. Unfortunately, Chaffinch Island also shows the classic damage signs of sea level rise, in the small bay between the rocky headlands. The bay shoreline is odd: you don’t normally see a marsh forming the shoreline, with a sandy beach behind. This is because the marsh is rapidly eroding and the beach is actually storm-driven sand that has been pushed up and over the old high marsh. Aerial photos from 1934 show that onethird of the bay—what is now open water today—was once salt marsh, with a thin line of sand at the water’s edge. About a third of the Chaffinch Island salt marsh has vanished in the past 80 years. Information Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) are common over the park except in winter and nest in nearby marshes. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 344 Address for GPS or online maps: 39 Chaffinch Island Road, Guilford, Connecticut 06437 Entrance fee: None, although the limited number of spaces available may make parking difficult on a summer weekend after 9:00 a.m. 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS 345 Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison Hammonasset Beach State Park is the keystone of Connecticut’s coastal park system. It is the largest and most heavily visited shoreline park, drawing more than 1.8 million visits per year, mostly by beachgoers and campers in the summer months. Hammonasset is also the most ecologically important and comprehensive coastal reserve in Connecticut, encompassing large salt marshes, breeding areas of endangered coastal species, extensive lawns and open grassy fields, coastal forests, sandy dune areas, and rocky coastline. In its sheer size, beauty, and complexity, Hammonasset is the essential Connecticut coast experience, and the park draws naturalists and birders from all over the country to appreciate the wilds of the Long Island Sound coastline. The park’s Meigs Point is a mile-long section of the larger Hammonasset–Ledyard recessional moraine that formed about 17,500 years ago. The large boulders along the Meigs Point Trail and beach were plucked from various places in the Connecticut hills to the north, were swept down from the hills to the Hammonasset area by the south-flowing glacial ice, and then melted out of the glacier in a long line that runs from under Long Island Sound, across the end of Meigs Point, and out into Clinton Harbor as a line of massive boulders, before going under the Clinton Harbor mouth and reemerging at Kelsey Point on the eastern side of Clinton Harbor and traveling east-northeast across eastern Connecticut. The Cedar Island trail through the high marsh provides excellent birding during spring and fall migration seasons and is beautiful at every time of year. Information Phone: (203) 245-2785 Address for GPS or online maps: 1239 Boston Post Road, Madison, Connecticut 06443 Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer and certain other times of year LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 345 The Hammonasset shore regularly attracts unusual and interesting birds, such as the Harlequin Duck (Histrionicus histrionicus). 9/7/16 10:12 PM 346 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Meigs Point Trail, Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 346 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 347 347 9/7/16 10:12 PM 348 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Rocky Neck State Park, East Lyme Rocky Neck has a split personality: the gently sloping cove beach and rocky headland that gave the park its name are separated from the salt marsh and upland woods by the Amtrak railroad line that carves through the southern end of the park. This awkward juxtaposition of rail line and beach also creates another split, separating the often crowded and hectic beach areas from the salt marsh and surrounding forested hills, so that even at the height of summer traffic most of the park is peaceful and an excellent habitat for local wildlife. The raised railroad bed also protects the extensive wetlands from the kind of storm wave damage that has eroded many other Connecticut marshes, creating a unique, shallow brackish marsh that is one of the best places in the state to see groups of migrating dabbling ducks that feed in shallow waters. The east and west upland ridges that lie on either side of Bride Brook are covered with a coastal forest that quickly grades into a mature upland forest with an extensive understory of Mountain Laurels, which is unusual for a park so close to the shoreline. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 348 Bride Brook drains to the Sound through the outlet sluice channel that goes under the railroad bed. This connected but also removed aspect of the Bride Brook salt marsh makes it unique on the Connecticut coast—a true salt marsh with the feel of a more inland brackish marsh. Bride Brook is a major breeding area for Connecticut’s threatened Alewife population, a saltwater fish that breeds in freshwater rivers and streams. The culvert at the east end of Rocky Neck beach allows the fish to swim under the railroad bed to reach the marsh and river beyond. Information Phone: (860) 739-5471 Address for GPS or online maps: 244 West Main Street, East Lyme, Connecticut 06357 Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer and certain other times of year 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS 349 Bluff Point State Park and Coastal Reserve, Groton Bluff Point is a 1.8-mile-long north-south peninsula that projects into Fishers Island Sound and is bounded on the west by the Poquonock River and to the east by Mumford Cove. Most of the coastal reserve is mature coastal woodlands, but the park also contains Bushy Point, the largest natural beach and dune area in Connecticut, and also has a geologically interesting rocky headland area at the southern end of the point. The main trail through the park is a spacious unpaved road that offers beautiful views of the woodlands as well as the banks of the Poquonock River, a brackish tidal stream with many small beach areas just off the main trail that give an excellent overview of estuary plants and animals. As the trail nears the southern end of the park, you can either follow it up onto the Bluff Point headland for great views across Fishers Island Sound or detour onto the natural beach and dune areas of Bushy Point. Birders call the northwest corner of Bluff Point the “hot corner” because of all the migration action seen there in both spring and fall. Bluff Point offers inviting woodlands for migrating birds, but as a peninsula it’s a dead end. As the migrating flocks double back to the north end of the peninsula, the northwest corner becomes a whirl of activity. On a good spring or fall morning thousands of birds pour through the “hot corner,” making this spot one of the best areas in Connecticut to watch songbird migration. The main trail through Bluff Point takes you through some of the best-preserved coastal woodlands on Long Island Sound. Information Address for GPS or online maps: 50 Depot Road, Groton, Connecticut 06430 Entrance fee: None LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 349 The Bluff Point marshes attract a wide variety of shore and wading birds, including the Willet (Tringa semipalmata). 9/7/16 10:12 PM 350 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Banks of the tidal Poquonock River along the main park trail, Bluff Point State Park, Groton, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 350 9/7/16 10:12 PM CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS 351 ecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 351 9/7/16 10:12 PM 352 CONNECTICUT LOCATIONS Barn Island Wildlife Management Area, Stonington With more than 1,300 acres of marsh and coastal woodland, Barn Island is Connecticut’s largest and most diverse wildlife management area and one of the best locations in New England for enjoying coastal salt marshes and their inhabitants in spring and summer. A Great Egret (Ardea alba) lifts off from the high marsh at Barn Island. Migrating Monarch Butterflies (Danaus plexippus) were once a common sight along the marsh edges of Barn Island and throughout the Connecticut coast in the fall months, but their numbers are now sadly depleted owing to use of herbicides that have sharply reduced the populations of milkweed plants on which the butterflies depend for breeding. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 352 The large salt marshes are the glory of Barn Island, and this is the best place in Connecticut to see the range of plant and animal life of the marshes. The dikes that form the main trail from the entrance road east across the islands of hardwood and the impoundment areas give you a high but close vantage point over the marsh grasses and creeks. This viewpoint is great for the long distances of bird-watching, but the trail and the areas around the culverts also afford close looks at life in the creeks. The main trail through the Barn Island marshes brings you through a series of hardwood islands, upland areas just high enough above the high tide level to support trees and shrubs that cannot grow in the marsh itself. The smaller hardwood islands are true coastal forest, with a mix of tree species a bit different and more salt tolerant than the classic Connecticut oak-hickory-maple forests. The marsh border is also a distinct community of plants adapted both to forest borders and to the semibrackish conditions found at the edge of salt marshes. Information Address for GPS or online maps: 240 Palmer Neck Road, Stonington, Connecticut 06379 Entrance fee: None 9/7/16 10:12 PM 353 Marsh creek, Barn Island Wildlife Management Area, Stonington, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 353 9/7/16 10:12 PM 354 Shining Sumac in autumn, Lloyd Point, Caumsett State Historic Park, Lloyd Harbor, Long Island. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 354 9/7/16 10:12 PM 355 New York Locations Song Sparrow in the marsh at Hunter Island, Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City. The New York locations suggested here present two very different aspects of the shores of Long Island Sound. The northern coasts of the Sound along Westchester County and the Bronx are essentially a continuation of the pattern of alternating bedrock headlands and small bays or marshes found along the Connecticut coast. In contrast, because of its origins as mixed glacial till with no exposed bedrock, the North Shore of Long Island is mostly an extended series of earthen bluffs—the storm-cut face of the Harbor Hill and Roanoke Point glacial moraines that define the southern edge of Long Island Sound. The westernmost section of the North Shore is a series of peninsulas, the famous necks of Great Neck, Kings Point, Glen Cove, Lloyd Point, and Eaton’s Neck. The bays between these headlands of glacial till are drowned river valleys. As the glaciers melted away they created torrents of meltwater that ran off the higher ground of central Long Island, creating steep river valleys in the soft glacial till. As the sea level gradually rose and formed Long Island Sound, these short but deep river valleys filled in and became the series of bays and necks that characterize the western portion of the North Shore. East of Port Jefferson and the Mount Sinai Harbor the North Shore is a 50-mile series of high, steep earthen bluffs, with only one natural harbor at Mattituck Inlet. The roughly 100-foot-high rugged cliffs are a natural barrier to beach access, and in only a few places—such as at Wildwood State Park—do natural low points allow access to the narrow, stony beaches of the eastern stretch of the North Shore. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 355 Great Blue Herons (Ardea herodias) are common in brackish wetlands and shorelines throughout Long Island Sound. 9/7/16 10:12 PM 356 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City At 2,766 acres, Pelham Bay Park is New York City’s largest recreation area, with two golf courses and the large Orchard Beach recreation complex. Yet Pelham Bay Park also contains a wide variety of natural habitats, including almost 800 acres of coastal woodland, freshwater marshes, coastal meadows, and western Long Island Sound’s largest areas of undisturbed high and low salt marsh. In 2005, the National Audubon Society designated Pelham Bay Park as an Important Bird Area in recognition of its significance to both local forest and wetland breeding birds and to migrating and overwintering waterfowl. In winter, watch the small offshore rocks and islands for wintering Harbor and Gray Seals, which often rest on these rocks, particularly at low tide. Crab Apples (Malus coronaria) in the fall on the trail to Hunter and Twin Islands. The most interesting sections of Pelham Bay Park for naturalists and hikers are the Hunter Island and Twin Island areas at the eastern edge of the park. The rocky coasts of both islands are part of a granite gneiss formation that slopes down to the south, under the Sound, and continues hundreds of feet under the surface of Long Island. Scattered over the large expanses of granite bedrock are glacial boulders. Although most of the boulders are the same granite gneiss as the underlying stone, many are true glacial erratics—large chunks of stone that were moved many miles from their original bedrock sources by the glaciers covering the area from about 26,000 years ago to about 18,000 years ago. The deep grooves in the granite gneiss shields in the park were made by rocks dragged over the bedrock’s surface by the mile-thick sheet of ice. The Twin Island shore presents excellent views of the Narrows area of the Sound and is particularly good for fall and winter birding for sea and diving ducks and other waterfowl. The Kazimiroff Nature Trail through Hunter Island (under two miles, or about 45 minutes of casual hiking) affords excellent LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 356 9/7/16 10:12 PM 357 On the Kazimiroff Nature Trail, Hunter Island, Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 357 9/7/16 10:12 PM 358 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Two Trees Island, on the tip of Twin Island, Pelham Bay Park. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 358 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 359 359 9/7/16 10:13 PM 360 NEW YORK LOCATIONS views of the coastal forest. The unusual beauty of the Hunter Island forest is the result of a fortunate history. The island was once part of several large, private estates whose landowners preferred to keep most of their land in unmodified, wild condition. As a result, many sections of the island woods are composed of trees far older than you would see in most coastal forests, which typically have been clear-cut for building or firewood several times since the colonial era. The deep grooves in the rocks along the southern shore of Twin Island were carved by glaciers as they passed over the area from about 26,000 years ago to about 18,000 years ago. At the eastern tip of Hunter Island there is a boardwalk across a small area of high salt marsh, one of the few remaining such marshes in the western reaches of Long Island Sound. The marsh area also offers a lesson in climate change and sea level rise. Notice the long, straight line of boulders that runs eastward across the center of the marsh—this was once the boundary marker between two nineteenth-century farm fields. In the late 1700s and early 1800s, the sea level was about two feet lower than it is today, and what is now salt marsh was once coastal farm fields. Information Park phone: (718) 430-1891 Address for GPS or online maps: Entrance Road: 10 Orchard Beach Road, Bronx, New York Pelham Bay Park is an important regional fall hawk-watching site. The park is located at the point where large numbers of migrating hawks, eagles, and Ospreys flow down the Connecticut and Westchester County coasts before cutting across the Narrows of the Sound to continue their journey south. Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer Red-Tailed Hawk Buteo jamaicensis Paul Reeves Photography LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 360 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 361 High salt marsh at the eastern tip of Hunter Island, Pelham Bay Park. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 361 9/7/16 10:13 PM 362 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Caumsett State Historic Park, Lloyd Harbor, Long Island Caumsett State Historic Park is one of the largest and most important natural preserves along the North Coast of Long Island. The park protects more than 1,200 acres of mature upland oak–tulip tree–maple forest, as well as significant areas of salt marsh, natural beach, and coastal grassland habitat. Although Caumsett contains many natural treasures, the current project to preserve and extend the native coastal grasslands within the park may be the most ecologically important, as grasslands of all kinds are one of the most endangered habitat types along the Atlantic Coast. Many grassland birds such as the Savannah Sparrow, Eastern Meadowlark, and Bobolink have become much less common owing to loss of their natural meadow breeding areas, and the project seeks to restore this crucial habitat. Caumsett contains an extensive motor vehicle–free path and road system, as well as many hiking trails through the large tracts of coastal forest. Formerly a dairy farm, Caumsett was created in 1921 by Marshall Field III as a personal estate and hunting preserve. The estate, including a mansion, stables, and a road system, was acquired by New York State in 1961 to create the current park. Aside from the restored meadows, the key highlights for the naturalist and hiker are the extensive tracts of mature upland and coastal forest, the salt marsh behind Lloyd Point, and the natural beach and small dune area of Lloyd Point itself. The 100-foot-high bluffs along the Sound are visually spectacular and geologically interesting: the red band midway up the cliffs is composed of Long Island’s oldest exposed sediments dating from the Cretaceous Period (see photograph, pp. 44–45). Information Park phone: (631) 423-1770 Native Prickly Pear Cactus (Opuntia humifusa) on the sand spit at Lloyd Point, an extensive natural beach and dune area. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 362 Address for GPS or online maps: 25 Lloyd Harbor Road, Huntington, New York Entrance fee: Fee for parking in the park 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 363 Caumsett’s Fresh Pond (middle distance) sits on a bluff above Long Island Sound (far distance). LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 363 9/7/16 10:13 PM 364 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Mixed goldenrods and other native grasslands in the restored natural coastal meadow area at Caumsett. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 364 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 365 msett. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 365 9/7/16 10:13 PM 366 NEW YORK LOCATIONS The endangered Piping Plover nests on the beach at Sunken Meadow, as do small numbers of Least and Common Terns. Above: Ospreys nest in the local salt marshes and are a common sight over Sunken Meadow and the Nissequogue River. Sunken Meadow State Park, Kings Park, Long Island Sunken Meadow State Park offers a variety of coastal habitats to explore, from coastal and inland forests to natural beach and dune habitat and the salt marshes of Sunken Meadow Creek and the Nissequogue River on the park’s eastern border. The beach and dune portions of Sunken Meadow State Park are on a long, eastward-pointing sandspit that lies at the mouth of the Nissequogue River. A larger upland portion of Sunken Meadow contains a golf course and extensive areas of coastal forest with hiking trails. Although most of the roughly three miles of beach is manicured for summer bathing, the beach area at the eastern end of the park is natural. On the western end of the beach there are high bluffs formed by part of the Roanoke Point Moraine. With only a tiny headwater stream at its base, Sunken Meadow Creek is not a true creek for most of its length; it is more like a tidal inlet behind the beach sandspit. This brackish salt marsh habitat is particularly rich with wildlife. The beach boardwalk gives you good elevation to scan the Sound for seabirds, diving ducks, and other waterfowl, and the salt marsh areas along the creek are excellent for birds, fish, crabs, and other marsh wildlife. In spring and summer the endangered Piping Plover and Least Tern have small nesting colonies on the beach. Please obey the signs and fencing that mark off nesting areas, because human disturbance endangers the birds and their vulnerable chicks. Information Park phone: (631) 269-4333 Address for GPS or online maps: Entrance road: Sunken Meadow Parkway, Fort Salonga, New York Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer and certain other times of year LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 366 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 367 The brackish Sunken Meadow Creek, with tidal flats and low salt marsh along its banks. Robert Cicchetti LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 367 9/7/16 10:13 PM 368 NEW YORK LOCATIONS The small but beautiful dune environment at the eastern end of Sunken Meadow State Park, Kings Park. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 368 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 369 Park. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 369 9/7/16 10:13 PM 370 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Wildwood State Park, Wading River, Long Island Wildwood State Park takes advantage of a narrow notch on the high bluffs of the eroded Roanoke Point Moraine to allow access to the beach without requiring a steep climb down the bluffs. The primary feature of the park is the close views of the bluffs (marine scarps), which rise 50–100 feet over the narrow beach, which is pebbled with quartz and quartzite stones eroded from the bluffs above and scattered with much larger glacial boulders. Wildwood is home to one of the few maritime American Beech (Fagus grandifolia) forests on the Atlantic Coast. Beeches are particularly easy to spot in winter because they retain their dead leaves long after other forest trees have lost theirs. Opposite: Glacial boulders—massive chunks of bedrock embedded in the beach at Wildwood. These rocks have eroded from the cliffs above as normal weathering and storms cut away the face of the Roanoke Point recessional moraine. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 370 The bluff plant community is unique in the Long Island Sound area, for in addition to the usual Black Cherries, sumacs, oaks, and maples, the bluff area contains an unusual number of American Beech trees, forming one of the few maritime beech forest communities on the East Coast. In late fall, winter, and early spring the American Beeches are easy to spot because they retain many of their tan-orange leaves long after other deciduous trees have shed their leaves in the late fall. These maritime beech forests are found only where north-facing bluffs provide some shelter from wind and salt spray. Even with that shelter, many of the beeches have been stunted by the combination of salt spray and very dry, welldrained sandy soil. The bluffs were formed about 18,000 years ago when the retreating glaciers halted and deposited the high Roanoke Point Moraine that forms most of the North Shore of Long Island. Over thousands of years, weathering and erosion from coastal storms cut steep bluffs into the soft, earthen moraine deposits. As the soft moraine erodes, sand, silt, pebbles, and larger glacial boulders fall onto the narrow beach below. The beach remains narrow because of its relatively sheltered location on the Sound. Strong shore currents or big ocean waves are needed to sweep eroded sand back onto the beach, forming the large beaches and sandspits found on Long Islands’ south- 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 371 371 9/7/16 10:13 PM 372 NEW YORK LOCATIONS Glacial boulders on the beach at Wildwood State Park, with Roanoke Point in the distance. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 372 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 373 373 9/7/16 10:13 PM 374 NEW YORK LOCATIONS facing ocean shores. Here, storms and rain wash much of the sand and silt into the water, where it settles and stays put. Erni Long-Tailed Ducks (Clangula hyemalis) seem to particularly like the roughly cobbled rocky bottom off the Wildwood beach. Look for individuals or small groups of Long-Tails in fall, winter, and early spring. Most of Wildwood’s 600 acres is maritime and upland forest. Hiking trails along the bluff edge afford sweeping views of the Central Basin. The beach is good for waterfowl birding in the fall, winter, and spring, but the lack of nearby wetlands, tidal flats, or salt marshes tends to limit the range of waterfowl. In late spring and summer the forests of Wildwood are full of nesting songbirds, and because the park is far out on eastern Long Island, the summer crowds tend to be moderate even on weekends, which makes for great birding and forest hiking. Note that Wildwood’s beach area is used for nesting by small numbers of the endangered Piping Plover and Least Tern, so please honor the signs and warning fences around the nesting areas. In the summer heat, scaring the parent birds off their nests for even a short period can prove fatal to nestlings. Information Park phone: (631) 929-4314 Address for GPS or online maps: 6361 North Wading River Road, Wading River, New York Entrance fee: Fee for cars during summer and certain other times of year The most common birds on the Wildwood beach are Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus). Here a first-year immature wears its speckled brown plumage. Herring Gulls take four years to mature to the pure white head and gray back of adults. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 374 9/7/16 10:13 PM NEW YORK LOCATIONS 375 Most of Wildwood’s 600 acres are pristine coastal hardwood forests. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 375 9/7/16 10:13 PM 376 Great Egret (Ardea alba), common throughout the coasts of Long Island Sound. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 376 9/7/16 10:13 PM 377 Bibliography Books about Long Island Sound Andersen, T. 2002. This Fine Piece of Water: An Environmental History of Long Island Sound. New Haven: Yale University Press. Bell, M. 1985. The Face of Connecticut: People, Geology, and the Land. Bulletin 110. Hartford: State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut. Buckles, M. P. 1997. Margins: A Naturalist Meets Long Island Sound. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. 1977. Long Island Sound: An Atlas of Natural Resources. Hartford: Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. Koppelman, L. E., P. K. Weyl, M. G. Gross, and D. S. Davies. 1976. The Urban Sea: Long Island Sound. New York: Praeger. Latimer, J. S., et al., eds. 2014. Long Island Sound: Prospects for the Urban Sea. New York: Springer. Long Island Sound Study. 2006. Living Treasures: Plants and Animals of Long Island Sound. http://longislandsoundstudy.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/LivingTreasuresBlue_Full_Lores.pdf. Patton, P. C., and J. M. Kent. A Moveable Shore: The Fate of the Connecticut Coast. 1992. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Weigold, M. E. 2004. Long Island Sound: A History of Its People, Places, and Environment. New York: New York University Press. General coastal and regional environments Alden, P., and B. Cassie. 1998. National Audubon Society Field Guide to New England. New York: Knopf. Alden, P., and B. Cassie. 1999. National Audubon Society Field Guide to the Mid-Atlantic States. New York: Knopf. Amos, W., and S. Amos. 1985. Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. New York: Knopf. Bertness, M. D. 2007. Atlantic Shorelines: Natural History and Ecology. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Bulloch, D. 1991. The American Littoral Society Handbook for the Marine Naturalist. New York: Walker. Dreyer, G. D., and M. Caplis. 2001. Living Resources and Habitats of the Lower Connecticut River. Bulletin 37. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Finch, R. 1996. The Smithsonian Guides to Natural America: Southern New England. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books–Random House. Hammerson, G. A. 2004. Connecticut Wildlife: Biodiversity, Natural History, and Conservation. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England. Hay, J., and P. Farb. 1982. The Atlantic Shore: Human and Natural History from Long Island to Labrador. Orleans, MA: Parnassus. Jorgensen, N. 1978. A Sierra Club Naturalist’s Guide to Southern New England. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. Kaufman, K., and K. Kaufman. 2012. Kaufman Field Guide to Nature of New England. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Keatts, H. 1995. Beachcomber’s Guide from Cape Cod to Cape Hatteras. Houston, TX: Gulf. Lippson, A., and R. Lippson. 1984. Life in the Chesapeake Bay: An Illustrated Guide to Fishes, Invertebrates, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 377 9/7/16 10:13 PM 378 BIBLIOGRAPHY and Plants of Bays and Inlets from Cape Cod to Cape Hatteras. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Lippson, A., and R. Lippson. 2009. Life along the Inner Coast: A Naturalist’s Guide to the Sounds, Inlets, Rivers, and Intracoastal Waterway from Norfolk to Key West. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Olmstead, N., ed. 1978. Plants and Animals of the Estuary. Bulletin 23. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Perry, B. 1985. The Middle Atlantic Coast: Sierra Club Naturalist’s Guide. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. Proctor, N., and P. Lynch. 2005. A Field Guide to North Atlantic Wildlife. New Haven: Yale University Press. Safina, C. 1997. Song for the Blue Ocean. New York: Henry Holt. Safina, C. 2011. The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World. New York: Henry Holt. Shumway, S. 2008. Atlantic Seashore: Beach Ecology from the Gulf of Maine to Cape Hatteras. Guilford, CT: Falcon Guides. Sterling, D. 1978. The Outer Lands: A Natural History Guide to Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, Nantucket, Block Island, and Long Island. New York: W. W. Norton. Thomson, B. 1977. The Changing Face of New England. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Thurston, H. 2012. The Atlantic Coast: A Natural History. Vancouver, BC: Greystone Books. Weiss, H. M. 1995. Marine Animals of Southern New England and New York: Identification Keys to Common Nearshore and Shallow Water Macrofauna. Bulletin 115. Hartford: State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut. White, C. 1989. Chesapeake Bay: A Field Guide. Centreville, MD: Tidewater. Beaches and dunes Dean, C. 1999. Against the Tide: The Battle for America’s Beaches. New York: Columbia University Press. Kaufman, W., and O. H. Pilkey. 1983. The Beaches Are Moving: The Drowning of America’s Shoreline. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Leatherman, S. P. 2003. Dr. Beach’s Survival Guide: What You Need to Know about Sharks, Rip Currents, and More before Going in the Water. New Haven: Yale University Press. Neal, W. J., O. H. Pilkey, and J. T. Kelley. 2007. Atlantic Coast Beaches: A Guide to Ripples, Dunes, and Other Natural Features of the Seashore. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press. Shumway, S. 2008. Atlantic Seashore: Beach Ecology from the Gulf of Maine to Cape Hatteras. Guilford, CT: Falcon Guides. Zim, H. S., and L. Ingle. 1989. Seashore Life: A Guide to Animals and Plants along the Beach. New York: St. Martin’s. Birds Crossley, R. 2011. The Crossley ID Guide. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Devine, A., and D. Smith. 1996. Connecticut Birding Guide. Dexter, MI: Thomson-Shore. Dunn, J., and J. Alderfer. 2011. National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America. 6th ed. Washington, DC: National Geographic. Dunne, P., D. Sibley, and C. Sutton. 1988. Hawks in Flight: The Flight Identification of North American Raptors. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 378 9/7/16 10:13 PM BIBLIOGRAPHY 379 Endicott, J., and D. Tipling. 1997. Seabirds of the World: The Complete Reference. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. Gallo, F. 2017. Birding in Connecticut. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press. Mackenzie, L. 1961. The Birds of Guilford Connecticut: An Annotated List. New Haven: Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. O’Brien, M., R. Crossley, and K. Karlson. 2006. The Shorebird Guide. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Olsen, K., and H. Larsson. 2003. Gulls of North America, Europe, and Asia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Peterson, R. T. 2010. Peterson Field Guide to Birds of Eastern and Central North America. 6th ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Proctor, N. 1978. 25 Birding Areas in Connecticut. Chester, CT: Pequot. Richards, A. 1988. Shorebirds: A Complete Guide to Their Behavior and Migration. New York: W. H. Smith. Rosgen, D., and G. Billings. 1996. Finding Birds in Connecticut: A Habitat-Based Guide to 450 Sites. Norfolk, CT: Gene Billings. Sibley, D. 2014. The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America. 2nd ed. New York: Knopf. Zeranski, J., and T. Baptist. 1990. Connecticut Birds. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. Coastal forests Jorgensen, N. 1978. Southern New England: A Sierra Club Naturalist’s Guide. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. Wessels, T. 1997. Reading the Forested Landscape: A Natural History of New England. Woodstock, VT: Countryman. Fish Boschung, H., et al. 1986. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Fishes, Whales, and Dolphins. New York: Knopf. Coad, B. 1992. Guide to the Marine Sport Fishes of Atlantic Canada and New England. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Gilbert, C., and J. Williams. 2002. National Audubon Society Guide to Fishes. New York: Knopf. Migdalski, T. 2010. Fishing Long Island Sound: A Guide for Beach and Boat Anglers. Ithaca, NY: Burford Books. Robbins, C., and C. Ray. 1986. A Field Guide to Atlantic Coast Fishes of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Thomson, K. S., W. H. Weed, and A. G. Taruski. 1971. Saltwater Fishes of Connecticut. Bulletin 105. Hartford: State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut. Geology Bell, M. 1985. The Face of Connecticut: People, Geology, and the Land. Bulletin 110. Hartford: State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut. Coleman, M. E. 2005. The Geologic History of Connecticut’s Bedrock. Special Publication 2. Hartford: Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 379 9/7/16 10:13 PM 380 BIBLIOGRAPHY Jorgensen, N. 1977. A Guide to New England’s Landscape. Chester, CT: Pequot. Sirkin, L. 1996. Block Island Geology: History, Processes and Field Excursions. Watch Hill, RI: Book and Tackle Shop. Sirkin, L. 1996. Eastern Long Island Geology, with Field Trips. Watch Hill, RI: Book and Tackle Shop. Sirkin, L. 1996. Western Long Island Geology, with Field Trips. Watch Hill, RI: Book and Tackle Shop. Skehan, J. W. 2008. Roadside Geology of Connecticut and Rhode Island. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press. Van Diver, B. B. 1985. Roadside Geology of New York. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press. Human history of Long Island Sound and the region Brouwer, N. J. 2014. Steamboats on Long Island Sound. Charleston, SC: Arcadia. Cantele, A. M. 2012. Connecticut: An Explorer’s Guide. 8th ed. Woodstock, VT: Countryman. Cronon, W. 2003. Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England. Rev. ed. New York: Hill and Wang. Dolan, E. 2007. Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America. New York: W. W. Norton. Galpin, V. 1989. New Haven’s Oyster Industry, 1638–1987. New Haven: New Haven Colony Historical Society. Lavin, L. 2013. Connecticut’s Indigenous Peoples: What Archaeology, History, and Oral Traditions Teach Us about Their Communities and Cultures. New Haven: Yale University Press. Virga, V., and D. R. McCain. 2011. Connecticut: Mapping the Nutmeg State through History. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot. Weigold, M. E. 2015. Peconic Bay: Four Centuries of History on Long Island’s North and South Forks. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. Insects Borror, D., and R. White. 1970. A Field Guide to the Insects of North America North of Mexico. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Dunkle, S. 2000. Dragonflies through Binoculars: A Field Guide to Dragonflies of North America. New York: Oxford University Press. Klots, A. 1951. A Field Guide to the Butterflies of North America, East of the Great Plains. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Mammals and other land animals Conant, R. 1958. A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of the United States East of the 100th Meridian. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. DeGraaf, R. M., and M. Yamasaki. 2001. New England Wildlife: Habitat, Natural History, and Distribution. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. Kays, R., and D. Wilson. 2002. Mammals of North America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Marine algae Taylor, S., and M. Villalard. 1972. Seaweeds of the Connecticut Shore: A Wader’s Guide. Bulletin 18. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Van Patten, M. S. 2006. Seaweeds of Long Island Sound. Bulletin 39. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 380 9/7/16 10:13 PM BIBLIOGRAPHY 381 Marine environments Bertness, M. D. 2007. Atlantic Shorelines: Natural History and Ecology. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Day, C. H. 1987. Life on Intertidal Rocks: A Guide to Marine Life of the Rocky North Atlantic Coast. Rochester, NY: Nature Study Guild. Newell, G., and R. Newell. 1973. Marine Plankton: A Practical Guide. London: Hutchinson Educational. Waldman, J. 2013. Hearbeats in the Muck: The History, Sea Life, and Environment of New York Harbor. Rev. ed. Bronx, NY: Fordham University Press. Watling, L., J. Fegley, and J. Moring. 2003. Life between the Tides: Marine Plants and Animals of the Northeast. Gardiner, ME: Tilbury House. Zim, H. S., and L. Ingle. 1989. Seashore Life: A Guide to Animals and Plants along the Beach. New York: St. Martin’s. Marine invertebrates and shells Abbott, R. 1968. Seashells of North America. New York: Golden. Bachand, R. 1994. Coastal Atlantic Sea Creatures: A Natural History. Norwalk, CT: Sea Sports. Gosner, K. 1978. A Field Guide to the Atlantic Seashore from the Bay of Fundy to Cape Hatteras. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Kurlansky, M. 2006. The Big Oyster: History on the Half Shell. New York: Random House. Mienkoth, N. 1981. The National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Seashore Creatures. New York: Knopf. Morris, P. 1975. A Field Guide to Shells of the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and the West Indies. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Marine mammals and turtles Boschung, H., et al. 1986. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Fishes, Whales, and Dolphins. New York: Knopf. Katona, S., V. Rough, and D. Richardson. 1993. A Field Guide to Whales, Porpoises, and Seals from Cape Cod to Newfoundland. 4th ed. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. Kinze, C. 2001. Marine Mammals of the North Atlantic. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Leatherwood, S., and R. Reeves. 1983. The Sierra Club Handbook of Whales and Dolphins. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. Perrine, D. 2003. Sea Turtles of the World. Stillwater, MN: Voyageur. Reeves, R., B. Stewart, P. Clapham, and J. Powell. 2002. Guide to Marine Mammals of the World. New York: Knopf. Reeves, R., B. Stewart, and S. Leatherwood. 1992. The Sierra Club Handbook of Seals and Sirenians. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. Riedman, M. 1990. The Pinnipeds: Seals, Sea Lions, and Walruses. Berkeley: University of California Press. Safina, C. 2006. Voyage of the Turtle: In Pursuit of the Earth’s Last Dinosaur. New York: Henry Holt. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 381 9/7/16 10:13 PM 382 BIBLIOGRAPHY Salt marshes Dreyer, G. D., and W. A. Niering. 1995. Tidal Marshes of Long Island Sound: Ecology, History, and Restoration. Bulletin 34. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Olmstead, N., ed. 1974. Tidal Marsh Invertebrates of Connecticut. Bulletin 20. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Roberts, M. F. 1971. Tidal Marshes of Connecticut: A Primer of Wetland Plants. Reprint Series 1. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Teal, J., and M. Teal. 1969. Life and Death of the Salt Marsh. New York: Ballantine Books. Warren, R. S., J. Barrett, and M. Van Patten. 2009. Salt Marsh Plants of Long Island Sound. Bulletin 40. New London: Connecticut Arboretum. Weis, J. S., and C. A. Butler. 2009. Salt Marshes: A Natural and Unnatural History. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Trees, plants, and wildflowers Brockman, C., and R. Marrilees. 2001. Trees of North America: A Guide to Field Identification. New York: Golden. Brown, L. 1979. Grasses: An Identification Guide. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Cobb, B., E. Farnsworth, and C. Lowe. 2005. A Field Guide to the Ferns and Their Related Families. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Del Tredici, P. 2010. Wild Urban Plants of the Northeast: A Field Guide. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Dreyer, G. D., and C. Jones, et al. 2014. Native and Naturalized Vascular Plants of Connecticut Checklist. New Haven: Connecticut Botanical Society. Little, E. 1980. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Trees: Eastern Region. New York: Knopf. Martin, A. C. 1972. Weeds. New York: St. Martin’s. Peterson, R. T., and M. McKenny. 1968. A Field Guide to the Wildflowers of Northeastern and North-Central North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Shuttleworth, F. S., and H. S. Zim. 1967. Non-Flowering Plants. New York: St. Martin’s. Sibley, D. A. 2009. The Sibley Guide to Trees. New York: Knopf. Silberhorn, G. M. 1999. Common Plants of the Mid-Atlantic Coast: A Field Guide. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Stuckey, I., and L. Gould. 2000. Coastal Plants from Cape Cod to Cape Canaveral. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Tiner, R. W. 2009. A Field Guide to Tidal Wetland Plants of the Northeastern United States and Neighboring Canada: Vegetation of Beaches, Tidal Flats, Rocky Shores, Marshes, Swamps, and Coastal Ponds. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 382 9/7/16 10:13 PM BIBLIOGRAPHY 383 Sheffield Island, in the Norwalk Islands off Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 383 9/7/16 10:13 PM 384 United States Coast Guard Barque Eagle, New London Harbor, Connecticut. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 384 9/7/16 10:13 PM 385 Illustration Credits All photography, artwork, diagrams, and maps are by the author, unless otherwise noted with a page credit and this listing. Additional photography credits Images used by permission. All images are copyright 2016, by each source listed here. All rights reserved. J. Brett Bennington, Hofstra University: 42–43, Long Island digital elevation map; Patrick Comins: 304, Greenwich Point salt marsh; Frank Gallo: 109, Horseshoe Crab photos, 264, Milford Point mussel beds; Brian Gratwicke: 112, 247, Grass Shrimp, 156, Sandbar Shark, Wikimedia; Hans Hillewaert: 165, Moon Jellies, Wikimedia; Library of Congress: 79, New Haven Railroad, 1850s; Map Resources: 6–7, 34–35, map incorporates Connecticut Relief Map CT-USA-942239, ©Map Resources; NASA Earth Observatory: 27, Barnes Ice Cap, 55, Gulf Stream, 58, Storm Nemo; NOAA Photo Library: 28–29, Ice field, 137, Longfin Inshore Squid, 142, Atlantic Moonfish, 146, Diatom-Asterionellopsis, Diatom-Chaetoceros, Diatom-Thalassionema, Diatom-Odontella, 147, amphipod, copepod, crab larva, larval shrimp, larval squid; Michael Marsland: 86, New Haven aerial, 113, Common Sea Star, 328, Lighthouse Point aerial; Wikipedia: 71, Homan 1716 map of New England, 143, Cownose Ray, Juan Aguere, 143, Sandbar Shark, Brian Gratwicke. Images used under license from Dollar Photo Club Copyrights held in each photographer’s name, Dollar Photo Club, 2016. 4, Bronx-Whitestone Bridge, mandritoiu; 28–29, Glacier face, ALCE; 28–29, Taiga forest, Alex Yago; 28–29, Tundra, YuliaB; 34, Tundra, nouskrabs; 34–35, Ice lake, bbsferrari; Sugar Kelp, mochanchan;122, Greater Yellowlegs, kreefax; 123, American Wigeon, Jim Shane; 123, Bufflehead, Erni; 123, Blue-Winged Teal, Steve Byland; 123, Green-Winged Teal, Erni; 124, Brant, Marco Barone; 124, Common Goldeneye, feathercollector; 124, Greater Scaup, Karen Popovich; 124, Lesser Scaup, Steve Byland; 128–129, Harbor Seals, randimal; 142, Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins, kaiwren; 142, Longfin Inshore Squid photos, lilithlita; 142, Sergeant Major, kuzeayo; 142, Spotfin Butterflyfish, DJ; 143, Green Sea Turtle, pipehorse; 143, Beluga, Luna Vandoorne; 148, Atlantic Sea Nettle, Gino Santa Maria; 149, Beroe Comb Jelly, Evan Travels; 151, Portuguese Man o’ War, top, MSNN; 151, Atlantic Sea Nettle, helgidinson; 160, Northern Gannet, Carbonbrain; 161, Long-Tailed Duck in flight, Steve Byland; 191, Wineberry, Hilda Weges; 200, Horseshoe Crab, Kevin Knuth; 200, Moon Jelly, Eddie Kidd; 200, Lion’s Mane Jelly, Mandy Rogers; 234, American Holly, Sirena Designs; 235, Black Field Cricket, lnzyx; 235, Eastern Hognosed Snake, Vibe Images; 236, Raccoon, Geoff Kuchera; 236, Striped Skunk, Jimmy; 236, Meadow Vole, creativenature; 236, Eastern Cottontail, Wild Geese; 236, Red Fox, Pim Leijen; 236, White-Tailed Deer, Gerald Kraus; 237, Red-Tailed Hawk, proedding; 237, Song Sparrow, Steve Byland; 256, Black-Crowned Night-Heron, Brian E. Kushner; 284, Snapping Turtle, lightningboldt ; 286, Greater Yellowlegs, Glenn Young; 287, Blue-Winged Teal, Steve Byland; 287, Gadwal, Steve Oehlenschlager; 287, Clapper Rail, pstclair; 290, Greenhead Fly, Roman Ivaschenko; 291, American Dog Tick, photobee; 299, Eastern Cottontail, randimal; 320, Great Horned Owl, Megan Lorenz; 322, Long-Eared Owl, lukicarbol; 332, Robin, Rachelle Vance; 332, Downy Woodpecker, Gregg Williams; 333, White-Tailed Deer, Charles Brutlag; 334, White-Tailed Deer, Nicolase Lowe; 334, Raccoon, hkuchera; 334, White- LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 385 9/7/16 10:13 PM 386 ILLUSTRATION CREDITS Footed Mouse, DMM Photography Art; 334, Eastern Chipmunk, elharo; 334, Gray Squirrel, Orhan Çam; 334, American Red Squirrel, Anterovium; 335, Northern Flying Squirrel, Tony Campbell; 335, Red Fox, dannytax; 335, Eastern Coyote, Josef Pittner; 335, Eastern Cottontail, mandritoiu; 335, Woodchuck, Mario Beauregard; 335, Long-Tailed Weasel, hakoar. Images used under license from Shutterstock.com Copyrights held in each photographer’s name, Shutterstock.com, 2016. 5, Hell Gate, mandritoiu; 83, Northern Lobster, Giuseppe Lancia; 84, Merritt Parkway in 1930s, Everett Historical; 124, Surf Scoter, M. Carter; 124, White-Winged Scoter, Paul Reeves Photography; 130, Gray Seal, Mark Bridger; 130, Harbor Seal, Wim Claes; 133, Blue Crab, Kim Nguyen; 133, Horseshoe Crab, Ethan Daniels; 143, Sand Tiger Shark, Ralf Hirsch; 149, Longfin Inshore Squid, Jiang Zhongyan; 150, Cannonball Jelly, left, ymgerman; 150, Cannonball Jelly, right, Sky2015; 150, Lion’s Mane Jelly, left, Greg Amptman; 150, Lion’s Mane Jelly, right, Konstantin Novikov; 151, Portuguese Man o’ War, bottom, sciencepics; 151, Northern Comb Jelly, John Wollwerth; 161, Long-Tailed Duck, Nature’s Moments UK; 161, White-Winged Scoter, Paul Reeves Photography; 161, Surf Scoter, M. Carter; 161, Greater Scaup, Cosmin Manci; 161, Red-Breasted Merganser, Ian Maton; 201, wolf spider, Anatolij; 229, Lone Star Tick, Melinda Fawver; 229, Black-Legged Tick, Sarah2; 231, British Soldier Lichen, Jenny Webber; 235, Seaside Grasshopper, Blackday; 235, Virginia Opossum, Lisa Hagan; 291, Lone Star Tick, Melinda Fawver; 291, Black-Legged Tick, Sarah2; 317, Spicebush, KPG Payless2; 332, Eastern Towhee, Charles Brutlag; 332, Common Yellowthroat, Paul Reeves Photography. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 386 9/7/16 10:13 PM 387 Herring Gull, Wildwood State Park, Wading River, Long Island, New York. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 387 9/7/16 10:13 PM 388 Twin Island, Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City. LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 388 9/7/16 10:13 PM 389 Index Page numbers in bold italics indicate images. Ailanthus (tree of heaven), 307, 311 Striped Bass, 100, 113, 115 Alewife, 113, 117 Basswood (American Linden), 307, 316 algae, marine Bayberry, Northern, 225, 232, 288, 299, 313 algae on rocky shores, 248–249 beaches, 166–237 Green Fleece algae, 103, 201, 246, 252, 276 animals, 186–187 Gut Weed algae, 101, 102, 245 beach profiles, 177, 179 Irish Moss algae, 101, 103, 247, 253 beach sand in Long Island Sound, 175 Knotted Wrack algae, 101, 103, 201, 246, 252 birds, 192–199, 204–221 Rockweed algae, 101, 103, 201, 246, 251, 276 lower beach, 181 Rusty Rock algae, 255 sediments, sorting, 177 Stone Hair algae, 102, 245 types of, 173, 174, 175 subtidal zone, 100–101 Whipweed (algae), 247, 253 value as storm buffers, 168 Bearberry, 225, 230, 306 amphipod (plankton), 147 Bindweed, Field, 312 amphipods, 104 Bittersweet, Asiatic, 307, 311 Anthropocene Age, 95–97 Blackbird, Red-Winged, 322, 323 Appalachian Mountains, 25 Blackfish (see also Tautog), 114 Apple, Common, 316, 320 Block, Adriaen Aspen, Quaking, 225, 307, 314 asters explorations in region, 70–71 ship Onrust, 71 Late Purple Aster, 319 Blood Ark (clam), 203 Perennial Saltmarsh, 277 Blueberry, Highbush, 234, 313 Saltmarsh Aster, 268, 277, 289 Bluefish, 99, 113, 115, 125, 136 White Wood Aster, 319 Bluff Point State Park and Coastal Reserve, Groton, CT, 15, 47, 304, 308–309, 349, 350–351 Atlantic Migration Flyway, 337 automobiles and coastal development, 84–85 Azalea, Pink, 318 Barn Island Wildlife Management Area, Stonington, CT, 258, 352–353 barnacles boat shell (Common Slipper Shell), 203 Bonito, Atlantic, 119 Brant (goose), 113, 124, 134, 196, 204–205, 239 breakwaters, 176 Bridgeport–Port Jefferson Ferry, 17 Bronx–Whitestone Bridge, 4 Little Gray Barnacle, 242–243 Broom Crowberry, 225, 231 Northern Rock Barnacle, 242, 244 Bufflehead (duck), 120, 123 bass Black Sea Bass, 113, 114 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 389 bunker (fish, see also Menhaden, Atlantic), 113, 115 9/7/16 10:14 PM 390 INDEX Butterfish, American, 113, 144 Connecticut Butterfly, Monarch, 228, 229, 352 bedrock geology, 48–49 Butterflyfish, Spotfin, 142 coastline geology, 46–51 park descriptions, 337–353 Cactus, Eastern Prickly Pear, 190, 225, 228, 362 carbon dioxide, atmospheric, 97 Cardinal, Northern, 326 Catbird, Gray, 323, 325 Catbrier, 191, 307, 310 Caumsett State Park Historic Reserve, Lloyd Harbor, Long Island, 42, 305, 354, 362–365 Fresh Pond, 363 rivers and human settlement patterns, 50 Connecticut Audubon Coastal Center at Milford Point, CT, 339 Connecticut River, 1, 22 copepod (plankton), 147 cormorant Double-Crested Cormorant, 120, 156–157, 257 Great Cormorant, 120, 156–157 glacial boulders on beach, 20–21 Coyote, Eastern, 335 restored grasslands, 364–365 crabs shoreline cliffs, 44–45 Asian Shore Crab, 108, 109 Central Basin, 12–13, 16, 301 Blue Crab, 106, 108, 110, 133, 270, 281 Chaffinch Island Park, Guilford, CT, 12, 24, 342–343, 344 Chinese Mitten Crab, 109 Charles Wheeler Salt Marsh, Milford, CT, 339 Cherry, Black, 225, 233, 288, 299, 306, 314 Chickadee, Black-Capped, 324 Chipmunk, Eastern, 334 Chlordane pesticide, 94 Civil War, effect on whaling industry, 75 clams, Atlantic Jackknife Clam, 104, 105, 203 Atlantic Surf Clam, 104, 105, 202 Blood Ark, 203 Northern Quahog, 105, 132, 133, 203 Soft-Shell Clam, 104, 203 climate change in the Sound, 95–97, 164–165 Clotbur, Beach, 186, 188 coastal plain, 26 Cod, Atlantic, 119 Codium algae (Green Fleece), 103 comb jellies (ctenophores) Beroe Comb Jelly, 148, 149 Leidy’s Comb Jelly, 148 Northern Comb Jelly, 151 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 390 crab larva, in plankton, 147 Green Crab, 106–107, 108, 253, 281 Hermit Crab, Flat-Clawed, 112 Hermit Crab, Long-Clawed, 112 Horseshoe Crab (not a true crab), 109, 110, 187, 200, 339 Jonah Crab, 138, 140 Lady Crab, 106, 108 Marsh Crab (Purple Marsh Crab), 281 Marsh Fiddler Crab, 110, 281 Mud Fiddler Crab, 281, 289 Red-Jointed Fiddler, 278, 281, 289 Rock Crab, 138, 139, 140 Spider Crab, 107, 108, 138 Creeper, Brown, 322 Cunner, 114, 140 cyanobacteria, on shoreline rocks, 240, 241, 244 Deer, White-Tailed, 236, 333, 334 Dewberry (wild raspberries), 307, 311 dogfish Smooth Dogfish, 113, 138, 152 9/7/16 10:14 PM INDEX Spiny Dogfish, 113, 116, 138, 152 391 Common Eider, 159 Dogwood, Flowering, 317, 320 erosion of headlands by waves, 170 Dolphin, Atlantic Bottlenose, 142, 163, 164 estuary, 1, 4 Dove, Mourning, 332 dragonflies Falcon, Peregrine, 257 Black Saddlebags Dragonfly, 229 Falkner Island, 13, 14, 70, 125, 195 Common Green Darner Dragonfly, 229 Federal Clean Water Act of 1972, 92 dragonfly migration, 228–229 ferry, Bridgeport–Port Jefferson Ferry, 12, 17 Seaside Dragonlet, 235 ferry, New London–Orient Point, 15, 160 drowned coastline rivers in Connecticut, 46–48 duck American Black Duck, 120, 123, 284 fetch distances in the Sound, 2 Fishers Island, 135 on Eastern Basin map, 15 flounder Blue-Winged Teal, 120, 287 Summer Flounder (Fluke), 113, 116, 129 Gadwall, 284, 287 Windowpane (flounder), 116, 152 Green-Winged Teal, 120 Winter Flounder, 113, 116, 152, 165 Harlequin Duck, 345 fluke (see Flounder, Summer) Long-Tailed Duck, 158, 161, 374 Fly, Greenhead, 290 Mallard, 120, 123, 287 foredunes, 235 dunes, 222–237 dune animals, 227–228, 235 dune communities, 225–226 forests, coastal, 305–335, 307 mammals, 333 Fox, Red, 228, 236, 333, 335 dune plants, 224–235 Dunlin (shorebird), 176, 220–221, 339 Gadwall (duck), 284, 287 Dusty Miller, 186, 190 Gannet, Northern, 159, 160 Gardiners Island, 52 Eagle, Bald, 120 Earth Star fungus, 226 East River, 4 Eastern Basin, defined, 14–15, 17 Eel, American, 118, 139 eelgrass map, 15 geese Brant, 113, 124, 132, 134, 196, 204–205, 239 Canada Goose, 204–205 geology general geology, 25–51 communities, 129, 132–135 Geranium, Wild, 318 die-off in the 1930s, 134–135 ghost gear (discarded fishing tackle), 95, 96 meadows, 113 glacial boulders, 50–51 egrets glacial episodes, 26–29 Great Egret, 113, 237, 286, 352, 376 glacial erratics, 50–51 Snowy Egret, 113, 122, 237, 286 Glacial Lake Connecticut, 30–31 eider (duck) LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 391 map, 34–35, 36 9/7/16 10:14 PM 392 INDEX Glassworts, 273, 276, Hackberry, 316 Gold Star Bridge, 23 Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison, CT, Goldeneye, Common (duck), 120, 124 13, 14, 345, 346–347 Goldenrod (mixed species), 319 salt marsh, 264–265 Goldenrod, Seaside, 186, 187, 188, 277 Harbor Hill Moraine, 30 Goosefoot, Red, 184, 186, 189 Hartford Basin, 25 Grackle, Common, 237 hawk Grape, Fox (wild grape), 307, 310 Broad-Winged Hawk, 329 Grass Shrimp, 104 Red-Shouldered Hawk, 329 grasses Red-Tailed Hawk, 237, 329, 360 American Beach grass, 184, 188, 225 Sharp-Shinned Hawk, 322, 327, 330 Blackgrass, 230, hawk-watching, fall, 323–329 Deer-Tongue Grass, 317, 321 Heather, Beach, 225, 231 Foxtail Grass, 318, 321 Hell Gate, 5 Orchard Grass, 318, 321 Hempstead Sill, 5 Saltmarsh Cordgrass, 268, 269, 270–271, 274, herons 288–289 Black-Crowned Night-Heron, 256, 257, 285 Saltwater Cordgrass, 185, 187, 188, 272 Great Blue Heron, 113, 122, 218–219, 286 Spike Grass, 289 Green Heron, 296 Switchgrass, 225, 230, 313, 321 Grasshopper, Seaside, 228, 235 Great Gull Island, 13, 158, 170, 195 grebe Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron, 285 herring Atlantic Herring, 117, 127, 152 Blueback Herring, 113, 117, 152 Horned Grebe, 113 Holly, American, 234, 307, 315 Pied-Billed Grebe, 120, 122 Honeysuckle, Japanese, 191, 307, 311, 320 Green Fleece algae, 103, 201, 246, 252, 276 Greenwich Point, 10, 302 groins, 176 Groundsel Tree, 225, 233, 276, 288, 313, 320 Gulf Stream, 53, 55 gulls, 206–215, 156 Bonaparte’s Gull, 214–215 Great Black-Backed Gull, 96, 192, 206–207 Herring Gull, 121, 158, 192, 208–209, 374, 387 Laughing Gull, 192, 212–213 nesting in Connecticut, 193 Ring-Billed Gull, 121, 192, 210–211 Gut Weed algae, 101, 102, 245 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 392 Horseshoe Crab Sanctuary at Milford Point, 110–111, 339 Housatonic River, 1, 339 hurricanes, 56–57 historic tracks through New England, 59 Irene (2011), 168 Sandy (2012), 168 Hypoxia, 16 ibis Glossy Ibis, 113, 287 Ice Age, 27 Indigo, Wild Yellow, 230 Interstate Highway System, 85 9/7/16 10:14 PM INDEX intertidal zone, rocky shores, 240–241 Irish Moss algae, 101, 103, 247, 253 393 lionfish Red Lionfish, 152, 153 isopods, 104 Lloyd Point, Caumsett State Park, ii, 11, 178 Ivy, Poison, 191, 307, 310 lobster commercial lobster fishing, 82–84 Jay, Blue, 323, 324 decline in Long Island Sound, 82–83 jellyfish (see also sea jellies) 150–151 lobster landings, 79 jetties, 176 Northern Lobster, 83, 140–141 Jewelweed, 310, 321 populations in Long Island Sound, 141 Jingle Shell, Common, 203 Locust, Black, 225, 234, 312 juniper Long Island Common Juniper, 233, 299 aquifers, 42 Eastern Redcedar Juniper, 224, 298, 306, 313 formation of, 38–45 geologic map, 42–43 Kestrel, American, 331 outwash plains, 42–43 Killdeer (shorebird), 220–221 Long Island Rail Road, 22, 43, 72–73 killifish Long Island Sound Banded, 113, average depth, 3 Striped, 118, 254, 270, 280 basins of, 4 Kingfisher, Belted, 113, 121 bottom types, 138 kinglets Central Basin, 12–13 Golden-Crowned Kinglet, 322, 324 climate change in the Sound, 95–97, 164–165 Ruby-Crowned Kinglet, 322, 324 Eastern Basin, 14–15, 17 Knotted Wrack algae, 101, 103, 201, 246, 252 economic geography of, 19 Knotweed, Japanese, 307, 312 formation of, 31–38, 36–37 general geography, 1, 3, 6–7 Labrador Current, 53, 54 geology of, 25–51 Lapland Longspur (songbird), 197 habitat types, percentages, 17 Lark, Horned, 197 Industrial Age pollution, 75–78 Laurentide Ice Sheet, 27 Narrows area, 4, 10 map, 27, 28–29 lichens, 240, 241 watershed, 3 Western Basin, 5, 10–11, 16 British Soldier Lichen, 231 longshore currents on beaches, 170–171 Green Shield Lichen, 244 loon Reindeer Lichen, 231 Verrucaria Lichen, 240, 241, 238 Red-throated Loon, 113 Lyme Disease, 228 Lighthouse Point Park, 12, 341 hawk-watching, 323, 328–339 Linden, American (basswood), 307, 316 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 393 mackerel Atlantic Mackerel, 127 9/7/16 10:14 PM 394 INDEX macroalgae (seaweeds), 100–101 Mallow, Swamp Rose, 319 Narrows area of the Sound, 4, 10 Manatee, West Indian, 128–129, 131 Native Americans, 69–71 Maple, Red, 234, 315, 320 Maps, Long Island Sound and region regional tribes, 70 New Amsterdam, 71 Regional map, xii–xiii, 6–7 New Haven Railroad, 69, 73, 84 Long Island Sound, Central Basin, 12–13 New Haven Sharpie oyster boat, 80–81 Long Island Sound, Eastern Basin, 14–15 New London Long Island Sound, The Narrows area, 10 Long Island Sound, Western Basin, 10–11 Marsh Elder, 66, 225, 233, 288, 306, 313, 320 Mean Spring High Water mark (tides), MSHW, 66 Meigs Point, 14, 345 moraine, 30, 32–33 Menhaden, Atlantic (bunker), 113, 117, 127, 144, 152 merganser (duck) Common Merganser, Hooded Merganser, 125, Red-Breasted Merganser, 135, 161 Merritt Parkway, 49, 84 Methoprene pesticide, and lobsters, 83 Milford Point Sanctuary, 12, 224, 339 Horseshoe Crab Sanctuary, 110–111 Milkweed, Common, 317 Minnow, Sheepshead, 254, 280 Mirex pesticide, 94 Mockingbird, Northern, 326 Moonfish, Atlantic, 142 moraines, 30–31 map of major moraines, 32–33 Roanoke Point–Orient Point Moraine, 140 Morgan, Charles W., whaleship, 68, 77 Mouse, White-Footed Deer, 334 Mummichog, Common, 280 mussels Blue Mussel, 202, 242, 249, 250, 251 Ribbed Mussel, 202, 273 Mystic Seaport Museum, 50, 68, LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 394 bridges, 22–23 harbor, 22–23, 384 nitrogen and hypoxia, 90–92 pollution from sewage, 86–92 nor’easter storms, 2, 54–55, 57, 58 Norwalk, 53 Norwalk Islands, 383 nuthatches Red-Breasted Nuthatch, 324 White-Breasted Nuthatch, 324 oak Bear Oak, 231, 310 Black Oak, 233, 315, 320 Eastern White Oak, 315, 320 Northern Red Oak, 315, 320 Olive, Autumn, 232, 312, 320 Onrust, Adriaen Block’s ship, 71 Opossum, Virginia, 229, 235, 333 orach Marsh Orach, 277 Seabeach Orach, 190 Orient Point, 14, 15, 33, 35, 43 Orient Point–Fishers Island Moraine, 19 Osprey, 237, 294, 366 bio-concentration of pollutants, 93 feeding in subtidal zones, 101, 120 populations and DDT pollution, 95 owls Eastern Screech Owl, 327 9/7/16 10:14 PM INDEX Great Horned Owl, 320 atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), 97 Long-Eared Owl, 322 automobiles, 84–85 Northern Saw-Whet Owl, 323 bio-concentration of pollutants, 92, 93 Snowy Owl, 199 fishing gear, discarded, 94–95, 96 395 Oyster Drill, 177, 187, 252 impervious surfaces and urban areas, 86 Oystercatcher, American, 216–217 marine trash, 94–95 oysters nitrogen loads on Long Island Sound, 87 Eastern Oyster, 78, 81, 105, 106, 203 PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls, 92 current oyster harvests, 82 pet wastes, 85 oyster industry, 78–82, 80–81 sewage and nitrogen, 86–87 oyster shack, historic, 81 stormwater runoff, 85 oysters, harvests in Long Island Sound, 79 pollution and oysters, 82 urbanization, 85–86 Poquonock River, 350–351 porpoise Pangea, 25, Harbor Porpoise, 163 Pea, Beach, 186, 190 Portuguese Man o’ War, 151 Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City, 8–9, 16, 356–361, 358–359 Quinnipiac River, 1 Hunter Island salt marsh, 266–267, 357, 361 Kazimiroff Nature Trail, 357 Twin Island, 358–359, 388 Periwinkle, Common, 98, 203, 243, 245, 255 Phragmites (see Reed, Common), 230, 298, 277, 300, 312 pines Japanese Black Pine, 314 Pitch Pine, 233, 316 plankton, 144–148 Rabbit, Eastern Cottontail, 229, 236, 297, 335 Raccoon, 228, 236, 334 Race, the, 1, 3, 18, 19, 31 map, 15 Race Rock Light, 18, 19 Rail, Capper, 287 Redstart, American, front page v, 322 Reed, Common (Phragmites), 230, 298, 277, 300, 312 crab and squid larva, in plankton, 147 Resmethrin pesticide, and lobsters, 83 diatoms, 146 river deltas, Connecticut, 48–49 phytoplankton, 145 Roanoke Point Moraine, 16, 30 zooplankton, 145–149, 147 plovers (shorebird) map of, 32–33, 42–43 Robin, American, 332 Black-Bellied Plover, 220–221 Rockweed algae, 101, 103, 201, 246, 251, 276 Piping Plover, 185, 198, 340, 366 Rocky Neck State Park, East Lyme, CT, 14, 292–293, 348 Semipalmated Plover, 220–221 Plum, Beach, 232, 288, 299, 314 Plum Island, 15 pollution LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 395 rocky shores, 239–251 vertical zonation, 240–241 Ronkonkoma Moraine, 30 9/7/16 10:14 PM 396 INDEX rose Multiflora, Rose, 307, 312 Pasture Rose, 319 Wrinkled (Salt Spray) Rose, 186, 232, 319 Rusty Rock algae, 255 salinity of Long Island Sound, 66–67 salinity ranges, 67 salmon Atlantic Salmon, 74, 152 salt marshes, 259–303 birds, 291–296 crabs, 281 definition of, 263 energy conversion, 261–262 erosion, 301, 302 fish, 279, 280, 282 in Long Island Sound area, 262–263 lower marsh, 269 origins of Long Island Sound marshes, 264–268 productivity of salt marshes, 260, 261, 262 and river delta sediments, 48–49 salt marsh die-off, 279 structure of a typical salt marsh, 270–271 tides, 289 upper marsh, 268 winter, 268 zonation of salt marshes, 268–269, salt panne, 269, 272, 273, 296–297 salt spray damage to plants, 223 Saltwort, Common, 186, 188, 225 sand, movement in wind, 173 Sand Lance, 113, 118, 144 sand shadows around beach plants, 223 sandbars and sand spits, 171, 172, 180–181 Sandbur, 190 Sanderling (shorebird), 194, 196, 220–221 sandpipers Least Sandpiper, 192–193, 220–221 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 396 Purple Sandpiper, 256 Semipalmated Sandpiper, 195, 220–221 Sandy, superstorm (hurricane) hanges to Sandy Point Sanctuary, 168, 169 Sandy Point Bird Sanctuary, West Haven, 6, 12, 19, 79, 88, 259, 340 Sassafras, 234, 307, 315, 320 scallops Atlantic Bay Scallop, 132, 133, 134, 202 scarps, marine (shoreline cliffs), 168–170, 171 Scaups (ducks) Greater Scaup, 120, 124, 161 Lesser Scaup, 120, 124 Scoters (ducks), 159 Surf Scoter, 120, 124, 159, 161 White-Winged Scoter, 120, 124, 159, 161 Sculpin, Longhorn, 118, 139 Scup (Northern Porgy), 114, 140, 165 sea anemones, 255 Sea Blight, Erect, 276 Sea Cucumber, 112 sea jellies (jellyfish) Atlantic Sea Nettle, 148, 149, 151, 200 Beroe Comb Jelly (ctenophore), 148, 149 Canonball Jelly, 150 Lion’s Mane Jelly, 149, 150, 192, 200 Moon Jelly, 148, 151, 200 Portuguese Man O’ War (not a true sea jelly), 151 Sea Walnut (ctenophore), 148 Sea Lavender, 277 Sea Lettuce, 102, 201, 246, 252, 276 sea level rise and Long Island Sound, 57–58 scenarios for future, 60 Sea Raven (fish), 118, 139 sea star (starfish) Common Sea Star, 112, 107, 113, 133, 145, 247 seahorse 9/7/16 10:14 PM INDEX Lined Seahorse, 132, 133 seals Smooth Serviceberry (shadbush), 234, 307, 316 snails Gray Seal, 127, 128, 130 Common Periwinkle, 203 Harp Seal, 128, 131 Eastern Mudsnail, 203, 247 Hooded Seal, 128, 131 Northern Moon Snail, 177, 187, 202 Harbor Seal, 126, 128, 130 Salt Marsh snail, 278 Searobin, Northern, 118, 138 Snake, Eastern Hognose, 229, 235 Searocket, 186, 189 Snow Bunting (songbird), 197 seaweeds sparrows types of, 100–101 Nelson’s Sparrow, 295 Sedge, Umbrella, 316, 321 Saltmarsh Sparrow, 295 Sergeant Major (fish), 142 Seaside Sparrow, 295 shad Song Sparrow, 237, 295, 322, 325 American Shad, 113, 117, 152 Swamp Sparrow, 295 Hickory Shad, 117 White-Crowned Sparrow, 325 White-Throated Sparrow, 325 Shadbush (Smooth Serviceberry), 234, 307, 316, 320 Spicebush, 317 sharks Spider, Wolf, 181, 201, 228, 290 Dogfish, Smooth, 113, 138, 152 splash zone, rocky shores, 240, 241 Dogfish, Spiny, 113, 116, 138, 152 Sponge Dusky Shark, 119 Sand Tiger Shark, 119, 139, 143 Sandbar Shark, 142–143 Sheffield Island, Norwalk Islands, CT, 383 397 Boring Sponge, 200 Red Beard Sponge, 187, 200 Spurge, Seaside, 186, 189 squid shells, common beach shells, 202–203 larval squid, in plankton, 147 Sherwood Island State Park, Westport, CT, 11, 338 Longfin Inshore Squid, 137, 142, 144, 149 shrimp Squirrels Burrowing Mantis Shrimp, 138 American Red Squirrel, 334 Grass Shrimp, 247 Gray Squirrel, 334 larval shrimp in plankton, 147 Northern Flying Squirrel, 335 Silverside, Atlantic, 113, 118, 129, 133, 270 steamships, on Long Island Sound, 72–73 skate Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge Barndoor Skate, 139 Milford Point, 166, 182–183 Little Skate, 139 Stickleback, Three-Spined, 270, 280 Winter Skate, 139 Stone Hair algae, 102, 245 Skimmer, Black, 126, 127, 216–217 Stratford Point Sanctuary, 12 Skunk, Striped, 229, 236 subtidal zone (shallow water areas), 99–135 Slipper Shell, Atlantic, 105, 176, 177, 187, 201, 203, 247 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 397 invertebrates, 104 Sugar Kelp, 101, 103 9/7/16 10:14 PM 398 INDEX sumac spring tides defined, 61, 63 Shining (Winged) Sumac, 225, 232, 299, 314, 354 tidal ranges in Long Island Sound, 64 Smooth Sumac, 321 vertical zonation, 65 Staghorn Sumac, 232, 299, 314 Sunken Meadow State Park, Kings Park, Long Island, 366–369 Sunken Meadow Creek, 167, 367 Swallowwort, Black, 191, 311, 321 Swan, Mute, 113, 122, 134, 287 Switchgrass, 225, 230 Tautog (Blackfish), 113, 114, 129, 133, 140, 152 teals (ducks) Blue-Winged Teal, 120, 123 Green-Winged Teal, 120, 123 terns, 121, 125, 158, 193–194 timing of tides, lunar day, 61 zonation and marine environments, 64–65 Toad, Fowler’s, 229, 235 Towhee, Eastern, 332 turtles Diamond-Back terrapin, 282–283 Green Sea Turtle, 143, 153, 154, 155 Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle, 153, 154, 155 Leatherback Sea Turtle, 153, 154–156, 155 Loggerhead Sea Turtle, 153, 154, 155 Snapping turtle, 283, 284 urbanization of the Long Island Sound region, 84–86 Black Tern, 126 Caspian Tern, 125, 127 Viburnum, Mapleleaf, 317 Common Tern, 125, 126, 158, 216–217 Vireo, Red-Eyed, 322 Forster’s Tern, 126 Virginia Creeper, 191, 307, 310 Least Tern, 126, 185, 216–217 Vole, Meadow (mouse), 229, 236, 303 Roseate Tern, 125, 126, 216–217 vultures Royal Tern, 127 Terrapin, Diamond-Back, 282–283 Black Vulture, 330, 331 Turkey Vulture, 330, 331 Thames River, 1, 22–23 The Race, 1, 3, 18, 19, 31 map, 15 Thimble Islands, 13, 238 ticks warblers Yellow-Rumped Warbler, 306 Yellow Warbler, 322 wave fetch, 2 American Dog Tick, 291 Waxwing, Cedar, 323, 332 Black-Legged tick (deer tick), 228, 229, 291 Weakfish, 115 Lone Star Tick, 228, 229, 291 Weasel, Long-Tailed, 335 tidal rivers, 46–48 weather tide pools, 252–253, 254, 255 average monthly regional temperatures, 56 tides, 61–65 regional weather patterns, 53–57 effect of moon and sun, 63 Western Basin, 5, 10–11 neap tides defined, 61, 63 whales, 160, 162–163 resonant tidal basins, 62 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 398 Beluga, 143 9/7/16 10:14 PM INDEX Fin Whale, 162–163 Humpback Whale, 74, 76–77, 162–163, 164 ice sheet, 31 moraines of, 30, 32–33 Long-Finned Pilot Whale, 162 Woodchuck (ground hog), 335 Minke Whale, 163 Woodpecker, Downy, 332 Right Whale, 74, 76–77, 162–163 worm Sperm Whale, 75, 76–77 Bamboo Worm, 112, 138 whaling ports, 74–75, 76–77 Blood Worm, 104, 112, 138 whelks Clam Worm, 104, 112, 138 Channeled Whelk, 105, 106, 202 Knobbed Whelk, 105, 107, 202 399 Cone Worm, 112, 138 Feather Duster Worm, 112 Whipweed (algae), 247, 253 wrack lines on beaches, 177–178, 181 Wigeon, American, 120, 123, 132, 284 wrens Widgeon Grass, 132 Carolina Wren, 326 Wildwood State Park, Wading River, Long Island, NY, 13, 33, 370–375 House Wren, 326 Marsh Wren, 295 American Beech Forest, 370 Roanoke Point Moraine, 370, 372–373 Willet, 111, 218–219, 286 wind patterns in the region, 2, 53–54 onshore and offshore winds, 175–176 Windowpane (flounder), 116 Yarrow, 190, 318 yellowlegs (shorebird) Greater Yellowlegs, 111, 113, 122, 218–219, 286 Lesser Yellowlegs, 113, 122, 218–219, 286 Yellowthroat, Common, 322, 332 Wineberry, 191, 307, 311 Winter Storm Nemo, Feb. 2013, 58 Wisconsinan Glacial Episode, 27–47, 49 LONG ISLAND SOUND BOOK.indb 399 9/7/16 10:14 PM