Home ScienceBird Study Our Brazilian Expedition – Going to the heart of the Mangrove and Beach Ecosystem 3

Our Brazilian Expedition – Going to the heart of the Mangrove and Beach Ecosystem 3

by Larry Niles
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It took us long into the night to reach our next port.  We went from the relatively populated area of Braganca to the dark heart of this coastal region of Viseu.   In three trucks, we caravanned through a maze of remnant tropical rainforests, cattle pasture, and impenetrable second-growth woodland.  Along the rain-slicked red clay road, small and desperate-looking towns popped out of nowhere always looking like the past was a better day. The road cut through countless mangrove forests that define this region.  We reached Viseu too late to do anything but find a place to stay the night.

 

 

A bridge across the many rivers from Braganca to Visiu, Brazil. Photo by Christophe Buiden

A bridge across the many rivers from Braganca to Visiu, Brazil. Photo by Christophe Buiden

 

 

By noon the next day, we boarded a Lancha boat named Garota Viseu, (Viseu Girl). Local shipwrights craft these two-decker boats of about 50 feet in length, primarily to carry cargo and people from port to port.  Today it will carry us into one of the most remote estuaries in the 250-mile coastline of this enormous mangrove and beach landscape.  Our captain, 78-year-old Benedicto with one crew regularly navigates the coffee- colored Gurupi, a long river that cuts deep into the tropical coastline that will take us to our destination.

 

 

A nearly completed boat in a ship yard in Viseu

A nearly completed boat in a ship yard in Viseu

 

 

Bene took his craft down the Gurupi all the way to within sight of the wind-tossed Atlantic Ocean.  The trade winds blow regularly here, usually near gale levels.  But then he turned into a small channel directly into the steamy mangrove forest.  At first the path was wide, lined with a dense tangle of mangrove on either side.  Whimbrels, scarlet ibis, semipalmated sandpipers clung to tangles of roots as the high tide flooded the soft mud.

 

 

Captain Benedicto piloting his Lacho boat

Captain Benedicto piloting his Lacho boat, the Garota Viseu

 

Then he took the boat in a channel so narrow, the crew had to duck the whipsaw of mangrove branches.  We slowly snaked our way through a tunnel of green until we reached another wide channel.  Within a few minutes, we entered another narrow channel ultimately reaching the next bay.  Here we felt the full force of the stiff winds and deep rolling swell of the Atlantic.  An hour later we weighed anchor at the small community of Apiu Salvadore.

 

 

The Garota Viseu weaves its way through the narrow mangrove passage. Stephanie Feigin, Danille Paluto, Christophe Buiden and Yann Rochepault watch from the top deck of the boat

The Garota Viseu weaves its way through the narrow mangrove passage. Stephanie Feigin, Danille
Paluto, Christophe Buiden and Yann Rochepault watch from the top deck of the boat

 

Few people from the outside world come to this community of about 50 ramshackle huts and cabins and about a 150 people. As the boat neared the shore with most of the team standing on the roof of the boat,  scattered groups of the town’s people stood on the sandy bluffs overlooking the harbor as though we just landed from space.  Ultimately we found them welcoming but wary.  Little good comes from the outside to these communities.

 

 

 

 

Over the next two days, we plied our craft of field biology.  We needed to find small boats to take teams to the various shorebird habitats previously determined on our maps.   Running about 20 feet in length, they use 10-20  horse power engines meant for something like a lawn tractor, but instead of driving a blade, they power a long shaft that ends in an 8-inch propeller.  The skipper can lift the engine and propeller according to the water’s depth.  They suited our needs perfectly.

 

 

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We fielded 5 teams, three in boats while Mandy, David Santos, Carmem and I surveyed Lombo Branco Island, about 2 miles from the Apiu Salvador.   The sea shapes this island into a crescent shape, the inside protected from the restless waves.  Nestled within, one could see in miniature, the whole ecological system that creates resources for shorebirds.

At the heart of the island grows a grows a small and stunted mangrove forest and an apicum, or wetland that only floods during lunar tides or spring tides. These are the highest of the monthly cycle of tides but only occur on the full and new moon.  Every day the tide moves in and out of this small system.  Twice a month the tide floods the apicum for several days at a time.

 

wet mud of

Fiddler Crabs display and feed on an intertidal mud flat called a Crab Flat.  It flood only for short period because it is relatively high in eleavation.

 

 

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A newly flooded wetland that  floods every day but for longer periods than crab flats.  These wetlands were located on Lombo Branco Island.

 

We arrived on the day of a waxing moon, near full.  The very high-high tides reached well within the small drainage, flooding habitats not flooded in a few weeks.  Shorebirds carpeted the wet mud, searching for all the invertebrate life that flourish in this habitat.  But the productivity only starts there.   Here the tidal flow is gentle because the island shields it from the wind tossed Atlantic from all sides except the leeward quarter of the island.  This gentle tidal flow flushes sediments from the mangrove swamp, the nutrients of the apicum and the normal productivity of a sediment-rich sandy substrate, forming the base layer of a productive food chain that nurtures small clams and other invertebrates – all prey for shorebirds.

We found whimbrels, semipalmated sandpipers, ruddy turnstones, short-billed dowitchers, black belly plovers, willets, semi-palmated plovers, sanderlings and collared plovers.  In the lower reaches, we found 337 knots, a glorious find that will help our mapping model enormously.

 

 

Red knots, sanderlings, short billed dowitchers and other shorebird forage in the inter-tidal estuary of Morro Branco

Red knots, sanderlings, short-billed dowitchers and other shorebird forage closer to the mouth of the sam inter-tidal estuary closer on Morro Branco.  Here the tidal area is unflooded for short periods but productive for marine invertebarate like clams and worms.

 

 

The following day we surveyed a second island, Coroa Criminosa.  Why the sinister name we cannot say, but it supported a very similar esturary giving us another successful day.  When the tide went out the small island of about 6 kilometers grew to over 20 kilometers.  Intertidal sands flats spread out of sight in nearly all directions.

 

Mandy standing on the extensive sand flat of Core Criminosa Island

Mandy standing on the extensive sand flat of Core Criminosa Island

 

 

We left the island that night and arrived in Viseu just before dark.  Once again we suffered the sway of the Atlantic.  After weaving our way back through the mangrove and up the Gurupi River landed too late to go on.  We were thankful for the modest rooms with showers, a good meal and beer!

 

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1 comment

Liefdeskruiden 06/24/2020 - 12:45 pm

What a very impressive story. Thanks for sharing.

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