Roots of the Sea
What mangroves give the world and why we can't afford to lose them
- By Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian.com, January 28, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
You’ve discovered plenty of insects living in mangroves, and even had a couple named after you.
That was a thrill. I’m not an entomologist, so I don’t have the expertise for describing species. But I like to find things. You know, if you go to Florida, to the Everglades, people automatically think that a mangrove is going to have a lot of bugs but that they’re just going to be a few things that bite you—mosquitoes, sand flies, that sort of thing. Well, there are lots of things in there, but it takes some detective work to get them. You don’t find them until you start looking inside the plant. They’re not going to be just walking around on the leaves. Out there in the salty water, even though you get rainy seasons, it’s still a marine environment. So for organisms that need freshwater, the place they’re going to find it is inside the plant. I found that the fauna is characterized by specialists, like miners and borers that live endophytically, or inside the plant tissue. They feed on the plant, but they don’t kill it. They’re just part of the system.
You seem to enjoy your job.
It’s very exciting, to have this question that’s been there forever and you’ve been able to figure it out. It’s very gratifying to discover new things. It’s also fun to travel, to go to these places. It’s tropical, beautiful. The swamp is very exciting. I know it’s not everyone’s cup of tea, but I love it.
Are there any downsides to what you do?
It’s hard to be confronted with all of the environmental degradation going on in the mangrove system—something that I love and know how important it is. Constantly seeing it destroyed is so very difficult. I sometimes don’t want to go to places because I know what I’m going to see there. It’s very hard.
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Comments (3)
this is a very terific article! there are so much i did not know until now. If we destroy the mangroves what will happen to the coral reefs? Is there already so much mngroves that may have nitrogen, along with the other ntirogens in the water that may also kill many coral reefs.
Posted by suzan on June 24,2010 | 04:10 AM
Thanks a lot for the valuable information of the sea and ecology. Best wishes
Posted by mohamed wagih on July 18,2008 | 09:44 AM
it's sad that species that matter for the whole world are located in and owned by some, who have a right to destroy them indiscriminately. i live in India and environmentalists have been unsuccessfully trying to warn against cutting down the mangrove belts for the sake of transport and tourism etc. Then there is that haunting experience of the tsunami! these should be protected under some International law like that on endangered whales. n dwivedi
Posted by n dwivedi on June 15,2008 | 05:09 AM
well, it's a nice articles, talking about mangroves and their habitats or we can say the critical habitat, Nice work, and I have to confess lady it's very useful honestly, Let's see something new about the Coral Reefs. Mohammed
Posted by Mohammed H. Al Jahdali on March 17,2008 | 03:23 PM