Birders have recorded nearly 100 species of birds at Pine Ridge Park in Washington state, as I reported in a recent diary (www.dailykos.com/...), but over 180 have been documented at Edmonds Marsh, a few miles southwest along Puget Sound. In fact the Marsh is really an estuary that has been largely cut off from the sea by the railroad and other developments. It is about the same size as Pine Ridge Park, but there are over 20 additional forested and wetland acres to the south, the site of a past fuel holding and transfer facility and which has been in the process of cleanup for years. The estuary once encompassed over 100 acres and was a source of many resources used by local Native Americans www.sierraclub.org/...). The 22 acres left are now a park and wildlife refuge in Edmonds, Washington, a city of about 40,000 north of Seattle, and they serve as a test of the question- “can a wild estuary be maintained and retain its character and wildlife within an urban setting?”
I moved to the area in 2015 and was almost immediately involved in the struggle to retain, enhance and expand the Marsh by first establishing proper buffer areas, even if they overlapped with current developments. We had excellent leadership and I volunteered to become the chairperson of the science committee within the Save Our Marsh group. My colleagues on the committee and I developed data bases that our group used to eventually convinced the city council that we needed at least 100 ft. buffers. After this we dissolved the committee and I have become less active. Now the group is pushing for adding the old bulk fuel terminal to the park and to use it to restore access for salmon to the creeks.
Having outlined the history of the area and what citizens have done to save it, I can now discuss its function, the biota it contains and why it should be saved.
An estuary is a complex system. In the upper part the water is completely fresh and is fed into the Marsh by two creeks- Shellabarger and Willow Creeks. Ideally in mid-estuary the freshwater joins incoming sea water to form a brackish portion of the Marsh. As the Marsh empties into Puget Sound the water should gradually becomes more saline as the tide brings saltwater back into the area. Unfortunately the Edmonds Marsh Estuary is connected to the sea through a long pipe that has a tide gate in it which prevents saltwater from entering the estuary in late fall and winter. The tide gate is closed because of winter high tides during heavy rain that can flood the area. Because of the lack of consistent tidal water cattails and giant reeds have invaded the area. The ultimate plan is to connect the creek system directly to the Sound openly and to allow a normal rhythm of sea ebb and flow.
The base of an estuarine food pyramid is formed by the microorganisms — algae, including diatoms, as well as cyanobacteria and zooplankton. Green vascular plants are important in the next level as these produce the food basis for the insects, reptiles, mammals and birds that frequent the Marsh. The trees, shrubs and herbaceous plants also provide shelter and nesting material and of course photosynthetic organisms like algae and vascular plants produce oxygen and sequester carbon dioxide.
Unfortunately, as in just about all ecosystems in the U.S., the Marsh is subject to invasion from introduced organisms, accidental or deliberate, and this has altered the ecological systems. Among these are Purple Loosestrife, Bittersweet Nightshade, Giant Reed, and some other vascular plants, along with Eastern Gray Squirrels, Eastern Cottontails, Bullfrogs, European Starlings, House Sparrows, Cross Spiders, Red Soldier Beetles, and Zebra Spiders. Some of these are probably not especially damaging, but they do change the character of the Marsh.
The Marsh is a small, but important component of the ecosystems surrounding Puget Sound, many of which have already been lost to human activity. As such it is one of the areas needed for the eventual recovery of the Sound and indeed the whole Salish Sea. If we humans want to protect the environment, even during the likely future changes in climate that will challenge us, we will first have to learn to live with it even in our cities. The services rendered by even such a small area are invaluable to both our physical and mental health and a hedge against extinction not only of a marvelous biota, but perhaps eventually of ourselves.
Following is a series of my photographs made in the Marsh and at the adjacent Willow Creek Hatchery (salmon), mostly of only some of the rather extensive biota. Another local photographer, Bill Anderson, has a number of photos of Marsh wildlife at www.sierraclub.org/… along with a few other photographers.