Bringing the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor

The National Aquarium, located in the heart of the nation’s largest estuary, is bringing back estuarine landscapes to Baltimore City.

This blog was written by Charmaine Dahlenburg, Manager of the National Aquarium’s Chesapeake Bay Program. Photo © PAUL BURK

Estuaries are necessary for the health of people and the planet. They capture and filter stormwater runoff, reduce effects of flooding, prevent shoreline erosion and provide habitat for fish, birds, mammals and invertebrates. As our coastal populations continue to grow, the ecosystem services provided by estuaries will be even more important. Finding ways to balance working wetlands with our human community needs is critical to protecting wildlife and understanding how we interact with nature.

The National Aquarium , located in the heart of the nation’s largest estuary, is bringing back estuarine landscapes to Baltimore City through our Waterfront Campus, a plan to introduce a variety of habitats, including floating wetlands and oyster reefs, to a 2.7-acre channel that sits between the Aquarium’s Pier 3 and 4 buildings. Our work celebrates Baltimore’s post-industrial Inner Harbor alongside the Power Plant, a well-known landmark now housing eateries and offices in what was once a coal-fired plant where harbor water cooled condensers. We are creating environments where urban wildlife can thrive while also providing a connection to the communities that share this space.

Illustration. National Aquarium's Waterfront Campus Plan.
Renderings of aspects of National Aquarium’s Waterfront Campus Plan | September 5, 2017. © Ayers Saint Gross

In August 2017, the National Aquarium launched a uniquely-engineered floating wetland prototype that functions like a natural wetland, providing important micro-habitats vital to many of the Chesapeake Bay’s estuarine organisms. Designed to rest at a predetermined elevation in the water column, the island supports a variety of habitat conditions above and below the water’s surface. A channel between wetland areas, equipped with airlifts to keep water cooled and moving, mimics a small tidal canal. Part of the wetland’s innovation is its aeration component, complete with four diffusers designed to mix the upper portion of the water column and limit the formation of harmful algal blooms.

This prototype is the first step in evaluating how modified habitats perform in urban settings. As part of the performance evaluation, we track the survival rate of native grasses, monitor continuous water quality around the island and study its surrounding biodiversity. Estuaries are teeming with life, even in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. Since its launch, the Aquarium has documented two successful nesting mallard ducks, seven fish species occupying the small tidal canal and island perimeter, a juvenile black-crowned night heron, two reptiles (Northern water snake and red-eared slider), various crustaceans (blue crabs, mud crabs and shrimp) and a muskrat! The Aquarium also works with local scientists studying biofilms and implementing a DNA barcoding study. This island is a place for citizen science, one of many where we use iNaturalist as a tool to engage the public in collaborative learning about urban biodiversity.

Projects like the National Aquarium’s floating wetland help species get a foothold in post-industrial urban estuarian waterfronts. Unfortunately, due to […]

More about wetlands, ecosystems and remediation:

Study: Edible Crabs Won’t Cope With Effects of Climate Change on Seawater

Water and wetlands

Can a Wetland Help a Farm? Ask These Family Farmers

Coastal wetlands can significantly reduce property damage due to hurricanes

Beekeeping preserves wetlands in Algeria

Explore the Largest Coastal Restoration Project Completed In Louisiana’s History

Summary
Bringing the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor
Article Name
Bringing the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor
Description
The National Aquarium launched an engineered floating wetland that functions like a natural one, providing micro-habitats vital to many estuarine organisms.
Author
Publisher Name
Ocean Conservancy
Publisher Logo