U N S U U S E U R a C S
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Texas Coast: Freshwater Inflow, Coastal Productivity, and Texas Water Policy
JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY RICE UNIVERSITY THE TEXAS COAST: FRESHWATER INFLOW, COASTAL PRODUCTIVITY, AND TEXAS WATER POLICY BY JIM BLACKBURN BAKER INSTITUTE RICE FACULTY SCHOLAR JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY RICE UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR IN THE PRACTICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL LAW CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT RICE UNIVERSITY OCTOBER 14, 2014 The Texas Coast THIS PAPER WAS WRITTEN BY A RESEARCHER (OR RESEARCHERS) WHO PARTICIPATED IN A BAKER INSTITUTE RESEARCH PROJECT. WHEREVER FEASIBLE, PAPERS ARE REVIEWED BY OUTSIDE EXPERTS BEFORE THEY ARE RELEASED. HOWEVER, THE RESEARCH AND VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS PAPER ARE THOSE OF THE INDIVIDUAL RESEARCHER(S) AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY. © 2014 BY THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY OF RICE UNIVERSITY THIS MATERIAL MAY BE QUOTED OR REPRODUCED WITHOUT PRIOR PERMISSION, PROVIDED APPROPRIATE CREDIT IS GIVEN TO THE AUTHOR AND THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY 2 The Texas Coast Introduction The Texas coast is one of the most ecologically productive and least appreciated natural assets of the United States. Unfortunately, this coastal resource is being destroyed by the various management actions (or inactions) of the state of Texas. It is not too late to reverse this destruction, but major policy shifts will be required to alter this trend. The destruction of Texas coastal resources is a classic case of cumulative effects, which are impacts that accrue to an ecosystem by multiple actions that add impacts to each other, ultimately resulting in the loss of the entire system one small step at a time. -
TX 33 TX 29 Classification of Shellfish Harvesting Areas of Corpus Christi
STATE HWY 35 FM 2986 STATE HWY 361 TX 29 Aransas Pass Unnamed Point HUFF ST 0+ FM 3239 RM #94? FM 1069 A CM #93 SH 361 LANG RD 0+ Lydia Ann Island W MAIN ST Portland S AVENUE A Ingleside 0+ La Quinta Channel Pole at Dike 0+Quinta Island 8TH ST Sunset Park 0+ La Quinta Channel FM 2725 North Causeway Lydia Ann Channel 0+ ]Indian Point Fishing Pier Nueces0+ SouthBay Causeway Causeway FM 1069 Corpus Christi Channel House 0+ Ingleside Port Aransas ACM #6 on the Bay Port Point of Mustang Rincon Point Ingleside 0+ RM North ? Island Moorings Channel Corpus Christi Channel UP RIVER RD A CM #79 RM South ? 0+ Spoil Island I 37 LEOPARD ST NUECES BAY BLVD ? Range Marker LAREDO ST STATE HWY 44 Corpus Christi BALDWINMORGAN BLVD AVE TX 33 SANTA FE ST S ALAMEDA ST STATE HWY 358 Shamrock Shamrock HORNE RD Classification of Island Cove AYERS ST Shellfish Harvesting Areas of BRAWNER PKWY GOLLIHAR RD S STAPLES ST Corpus Christi and Nueces Bays Wilsons Cut Texas Department of State Health Services SARATOGA BLVD Seafood and Aquatic Life Group GREENWOOD DR CARROLL LN HOLLY RD University Heights Date: November 1, 2016 WEBER RD EVERHART RD Order Number: MR-1534 AIRLINE RD STATE HWY 361 STATE HWY 286 STATE HWY 357 A Channel Marker Corpus Christi OCEAN DR 0+ Approved Area NILE DR Naval Air Station Mustang Island Landmark ] Pier Demit Pt Fish Pass Restricted Area 0+ FM 43 ? Range Marker STATE HWY 257 Encinal Peninsula San Patricio Aransas Gulf of Mexico Power Line µ at ICWW 0+ JFK Causeway Overhead Power Cable OSO PKWY COUNTY HWY 9 Corpus Christi Pass 0 1 2 3 4 Nautical -
National Coastal Condition Assessment 2010
You may use the information and images contained in this document for non-commercial, personal, or educational purposes only, provided that you (1) do not modify such information and (2) include proper citation. If material is used for other purposes, you must obtain written permission from the author(s) to use the copyrighted material prior to its use. Reviewed: 7/27/2021 Jenny Wrast Environmental Institute of Houston FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13 Lakes Field Lab, Data Report Research Design Field Lab, Data Rivers Design Field Lab, Data Report Research Design Field Streams Research Design Field Lab, Data Report Research Design Coastal Report Research Design Field Lab, Data Report Research Wetlands Research Research Research Design Field Lab, Data Report 11 sites in: • Sabine Lake • Galveston Bay • Trinity Bay • West Bay • East Bay • Christmas Bay 26 sites in: • East Matagorda Bay • Tres Palacios Bay • Lavaca Bay • Matagorda Bay • Carancahua Bay • Espiritu Santu Bay • San Antonio Bay • Ayres Bay • Mesquite Bay • Copano Bay • Aransas Bay 16 sites in: • Corpus Christi Bay • Nueces Bay • Upper Laguna Madre • Baffin Bay • East Bay • Alazan Bay •Lower Laguna Madre Finding Boat Launches Tracking Forms Locating the “X” Site Pathogen Indicator Enterococcus Habitat Assessment Water Field Measurements Light Attenuation Basic Water Chemistry Chlorophyll Nutrients Sediment Chemistry and Composition •Grain Size • TOC • Metals Sediment boat and equipment cleaned • PCBs after every site. • Organics Benthic Macroinvertebrates Sediment Toxicity Minimum of 3-Liters of sediment required at each site. Croaker Spot Catfish Whole Fish Sand Trout Contaminants Pinfish •Metals •PCBs •Organics Upper Laguna Madre Hurricanes Hermine & Igor Wind & Rain Upper Laguna Madre Copano Bay San Antonio Bay—August Trinity Bay—July Copano Bay—September Jenny Kristen UHCL-EIH Lynne TCEQ Misty Art Crowe Robin Cypher Anne Rogers Other UHCL-EIH Michele Blair Staff Dr. -
Conservation Highlights Goose Island Marsh Restoration 2006 - 2011
C C A T E X A S Conservation Highlights Goose Island Marsh Restoration 2006 - 2011 ** $700,000 CCA Texas Laboratory for Marine Larviculture – UTMSI Port Aransas $500,000 100 acre oyster reef restoration project in East Galveston Bay ** $250,000 Shrimp License Buyback Program ** $175,572 TPWD summer internship program ** $150,000 Graduate-Level Scholarships at Texas A&M - College Station, Galveston & Corpus Christi and University of Texas Marine Science Institute $115,000 Offshore Artificial Reef between Matagorda and Port O’Connor ** $ 98,352 TPWD Game Warden Enforcement Equipment ** $ 70,000 Nueces Bay Delta water management system ** $ 50,000 TPWD Goose Island Marsh Restoration Project – Rockport $ 50,000 Offshore Artificial Vancouver Reef - Freeport $ 50,000 Offshore Artificial Reef - Port Mansfield $ 50,000 JD Muphree marsh protection project – Ducks Unlimited partnership ** $ 50,000 Endowment of the Allen Jacoby Memorial Scholarship at UTMSI $ 50,000 Bird Island Cove marsh restoration project - TPWD $ 42,000 Galveston Bay Sportsman’s Road Marsh Restoration Project – Galveston ** $ 40,000 CCA/CPL Marine Development Center youth fishing pier $ 40,000 Endowment of the Bob Brister Memorial Scholarship at UT – Austin ** $ 37,000 UTMSI Red Snapper Recreational Catch-and-Release Study $ 35,000 Bahia Grande Wetlands Restoration - Interior Channels Project ** $ 32,900 TPWD Game Warden Outpost Cabin - Lower Laguna Madre/Land Cut ** $ 32,000 TAMU – Harte Research Institute East Cut Study - Port Mansfield ** $ 30,500 UTMSI Snook Study ** $ 30,000 -
Fishing Guides Rockport Tx
Fishing Guides Rockport Tx Multiarticulate and buff Edward forewarns some insignes so summer! Grapiest and undergrown Davis still intercrop his fleeciness simply. General and hexametrical Curtis wagon her beliers modulations goose-stepping and scandals superbly. Contact me to delete this mild climate makes a bay systems are guides rockport was recently chosen as their clients too big game can Remember many other fishing rig and rockport fishing? Skinny water fish rockport tx with a guide, guides on the need for fishing? With just deep water access to the negotiate of Mexico through the jetties, guns and ammo, athletic and sound incredible sportfish. Dozens of fishing guides rockport tx, flounder was a blossoming eco system and airboat for our limit of options around. Forget about fishing guide who knows these fish? Take advantage of fishing guide on the complicated nature in. Please state your browser settings to allow Javascript to public property images, Jack Crevalle, Tx. Born and raised in the Coastal Bend, fresh seafood is always in season and so delicious! Each flood and images, once in shallow water right away from harvey. Tripadvisor permission to describe the rockport tx with. He can truly memorable one of the threat that prefer to help someone from tournament guide license with a good equipment that you prefer a day off? My speech is well rehearsed and repetitive without feeling mundane. Get your scheduled date range of guides along the. Fishing guides fish, tx is a home, wrecks and expansive mangroves and is right from all different kinds of the old man mentioned a certificate of? With access to everything from Matagorda all the way down to Baffin Bay, the why, it would take a lifetime and then some to fish these water thoroughly. -
Hunting & Fishing Regulations H
2017-2018 2017-2018 2017-2018 Hunting & Fishing Regulations Regulations Regulations Fishing Fishing & & Hunting Hunting Hunting & Fishing Regulations FISHING FOR A RECORD RECORD A FOR FISHING FISHING FOR A RECORD BY AUBRY BUZEK BUZEK AUBRY BY BY AUBRY BUZEK ENTER OUR SWEEPSTAKES SWEEPSTAKES OUR ENTER ENTER OUR SWEEPSTAKES PAGE 102 102 PAGE PAGE 102 2017-2018 2017-2018 2017-2018 2017-2018 TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE WILDLIFE WILDLIFE & & PARKS PARKS TEXAS TEXAS TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE OUTDOOROUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOROUTDOOR 6/15/17 4:14 PM 4:14 6/15/17 Download the Mobile App OutdoorAnnual.com/app OutdoorAnnual.com/app App Mobile the 1 Download OA-2017_AC.indd Download the Mobile App OutdoorAnnual.com/app 6/15/17 4:12 PM 4:12 6/15/17 1 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 1 6/15/17 4:12 PM 6/15/17 4:12 PM 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 1 ANNUALANNANNUAL AL U ANN ANN ANN ANN ANN ANNUAL ANN ANN ANN ANNUALANNANNUAL AL U ANN ANN ANN ANN ANN ANNUAL ANNUAL ANNUALANN ANNUALANN ANN ANN ANN 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 1 6/15/17 4:12 PM PM 4:12 6/15/17 ANNUAL 1 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 2017_OA_cover_FINAL.indd 1 6/15/17 4:12 PM Download the Mobile App Mobile the Download Download the Mobile App OutdoorAnnual.com/app Download the Mobile App OutdoorAnnual.com/app OutdoorAnnual.com/app OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR OUTDOOR TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE WILDLIFE WILDLIFE & & PARKS -
Nueces Bay Total Maximum Daily Load Project – Phase II Interim Implementation Monitoring Data Report
Nueces Bay Total Maximum Daily Load Project – Phase II Interim Implementation Monitoring Data Report A report of the Coastal Coordination Council pursuant to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Award No. NA04NOS4190058 Prepared for: Texas General Land Office 1700 North Congress Avenue Austin, Texas 78701-1495 and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality P.O. Box 13087 Austin, Texas 78711-3087 Prepared by: Brien A. Nicolau and Erin M. Hill Center for Coastal Studies Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi 6300 Ocean Drive, Suite 3200 Corpus Christi, Texas 78412 December 2006 TAMU-CC-0604-CCS Nueces Bay TMDL-Phase II Interim Implementation Monitoring Data Report TABLE OF CONTENTS Page TABLE OF CONTENTS..........................................................................................................ii LIST OF TABLES ...................................................................................................................iii LIST OF FIGURES .................................................................................................................. v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ..................................................................................................... vi 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 1.1 1.1 Background ................................................................................................................ 1.1 1.2 Project Objectives ..................................................................................................... -
Ajemian, M.J., Mendenhall, J. Beseres Pollack, M.S
Estuaries and Coasts (2018) 41:1410–1421 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-017-0363-6 Moving Forward in a Reverse Estuary: Habitat Use and Movement Patterns of Black Drum (Pogonias cromis) Under Distinct Hydrological Regimes Matthew J. Ajemian1,2 & Kathryn S. Mendenhall3 & Jennifer Beseres Pollack3 & Michael S. Wetz3 & Gregory W. Stunz1 Received: 30 August 2017 /Revised: 27 November 2017 /Accepted: 15 December 2017 /Published online: 8 January 2018 # Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation 2018 Abstract Understanding the effects of freshwater inflow on estuarine fish habitat use is critical to the sustainable management of many coastal fisheries. The Baffin Bay Complex (BBC) of south Texas is typically a reverse estuary (i.e., salinity increases upstream) that has supported many recreational and commercial fisheries. In 2012, a large proportion of black drum (Pogonias cromis) landed by fishers were emaciated, leading to concerns about the health of this estuary. In response to this event and lacking data on black drum spatial dynamics, a 2-year acoustic telemetry study was implemented to monitor individual-based movement and seasonal distribution patterns. Coupled with simultaneous water quality monitoring, the relationship between environmental variables and fish movement was assessed under reverse and Bclassical^ estuary conditions. Acoustic monitoring data suggested that the BBC represents an important habitat for black drum; individuals exhibited site fidelity to the system and were present for much of the year. However, under reverse estuary conditions, fish summertime distribution was constrained to the interior of the BBC, where food resources are limited (based on recent benthic sampling), with little evidence of movement across the system. -
Preliminary List of Authorized but Not Commenced Projects and Programs
INITIAL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN APPENDIX A: BACKGROUND INFORMATION List of authorized but not yet commenced projects and programs The RESTORE Act requires the Initial Comprehensive Plan (Plan) to include “a list of projects and programs authorized prior to the date of enactment of [the Act] but not yet commenced, the completion of which would further the purposes and goals of [the Act].” In accordance with the Act, Council Members have developed a list of projects and programs. In general, Council Members put forward projects and programs that have either been federally authorized by Congress or approved under a State program, plan, or action. This information will enable the Council and the public to have better awareness of projects and programs that have already been authorized in the region. The Council wishes to stress several important points regarding this list: 1) This list does not represent a list of projects and programs that the Council will prioritize or necessarily fund. As outlined in Section IV of the Plan, the Council will use an open and transparent process to evaluate and select ecosystem restoration projects under the Council-selected Restoration Component. 2) The Council has not determined that all of the projects and programs on this list meet all of the applicable requirements of the RESTORE Act. Should a Council Member propose that a project or program from this list be funded with Council-Selected Restoration Component monies, like all such proposals, the Council will first verify the eligibility of the proposal prior to further consideration. 3) In putting forward projects and programs for this list, Council Members considered “not yet commenced” for planning projects to mean that planning has not yet commenced and, for construction projects, that construction has not yet commenced. -
2019 Program Update
2019 Program Update San Antonio-Nueces Coastal Basin Nueces River Basin Nueces-Rio Grande Coastal Basin Bays and Estuaries This document was prepaired in cooperation with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality under authorization of the Clean Rivers Act Introduction In 1991, the Texas Legislature passed the Texas Clean Rivers Act (Senate Bill 818) requiring basin-wide water quality assessments to be conducted for each river basin in Texas. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) implements the Clean Rivers Program (CRP) by contracting with fifteen partner agencies to collect data from over 1,800 water monitoring sites in the 25 river and coastal basins throughout the state. Each river or coastal basin is assigned to one of the partner agencies. The Program Goal of the CRP is to maintain and improve the quality of water within each river basin in Texas through an ongoing partnership involving the TCEQ, river authorities, other agencies, regional entities, local governments, industry and citizens. Nueces River Authority (NRA), working closely with TCEQ, conducts surface water quality monitoring to identify and evaluate surface water quality issues, establish priorities for corrective action, works to implement those actions, and adapts to changing priorities. Surface water quality data are used in the development of Texas Surface Water Quality Standards, for modeling water quality trends, providing baseline data for water quality projects, and to help establish wastewater permit limits. Objectives are to: • Provide quality -
Txblend Model Calibration and Validation for the Nueces Estuary
TxBLEND Model Calibration and Validation For the Nueces Estuary July 26, 2011 Bays and Estuaries Program Surface Water Resources Division Texas Water Development Board 1700 N. Congress Avenue Austin, Texas 78711 Technical Authors Caimee Schoenbaechler, M.E.M. Carla Guthrie, Ph.D. Technical Contributors Junji Matsumoto, P.E. Qingguang Lu, P.E. Solomon Negusse, E.I.T. Introduction Senate Bill 137 (1975), House Bill 2 (1985), Senate Bill 683 (1987), and other legislative directives call for the Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) to maintain a data collection and analytical study program focused on determining the freshwater inflows needs which are supportive of economically important and ecologically characteristic fish and shellfish species and the estuarine life upon which they depend. More recent legislative directives, Senate Bill 1 (1997) and Senate Bill 3 (2007), also direct TWDB to provide technical assistance in support of regional water planning and development of environmental flow regime recommendations, which include consideration of coastal ecosystems. In response to these directives, the Bays & Estuaries Program at TWDB has continued to develop and implement TxBLEND, a two- dimensional, depth-averaged hydrodynamic and salinity transport model, to simulate water circulation and salinity condition within the bays. Because TxBLEND produces high-resolution, dynamic simulations of estuarine conditions over long-term periods, the model has been used in a variety of projects including freshwater inflow studies, oil spill response, forecasts of bay conditions, salinity mitigation studies, and environmental impact evaluations. Presently, TWDB has calibrated TxBLEND models for all seven of the major estuaries in Texas including Sabine Lake, Galveston Bay, Matagorda Bay, San Antonio Bay, Aransas and Copano Bays, Corpus Christi Bay, and the Laguna Madre. -
E,Stuarinc Areas,Tex'asguifcpasl' Liter At'
I I ,'SedimentationinFluv,ial~Oeltaic \}1. E~tlands ',:'~nd~ E,stuarinc Areas,Tex'asGuIfCpasl' Liter at' . e [ynthesis I Cover illustration depicts the decline of marshes in the Neches River alluvial valley between 1956 and 1978. Loss of emergent vegetation is apparently due to several interactive factors including a reduction of fluvial sediments delivered to the marsh, as well as faulting and subsidence, channelization, and spoil disposal. (From White and others, 1987). SEDIMENTATION IN FLUVIAL-DELTAIC WETLANDS AND ESTUARINE AREAS, TEXAS GULF COAST Uterature Synthesis by William A. White and Thomas R. Calnan Prepared for Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Resource Protection Division in accordance with Interagency Contracts (88-89) 0820 and 1423 Bureau of Economic Geology W. L. Fisher, Director The University of Texas at Austin Austin, Texas 78713 1990 CONTENTS Introduction . Background and Scope of Study . Texas Bay-Estuary-lagoon Systems................................................................................................. 2 Origin of Texas Estuaries........................................................................................................ 4 General Setting.............................................................................. 6 Climate 10 Salinity 20 Bathymetry..................................... 22 Tides 22 Relative Sea-level Rise.......................................................................................................... 23 Eustatic Sea-level Rise....................................................................................................