The State We're In
Boosting coastal marshes
By Alison Mitchell, Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation
For thousands of years, before climate change started accelerating, New Jersey’s coastal marshes slowly regenerated through a harmonious process that deposited sediment from adjoining waters and kept the marshes elevated. But now, these natural areas are vanishing. Rapidly rising sea levels and erosion are causing marshes to drown, with open water replacing once lush stretches of Spartina grass and shimmering, shallow waterways.
Tidal wetlands are the lifeblood of New Jersey’s coastal ecosystems, serving as breeding grounds for over 75 percent of the state’s fisheries species, including crabs and shellfish. The shallow waters are rich in nutrients and home to an abundance of plant and animal species, including rare and endangered plants, amphibians, reptiles, and birds.
Scientists have known for years that marsh loss poses serious risks to both people and natural resources. Marshes absorb storm surge and floodwaters, shelter fish and birds, and store carbon.
When they are submerged, their root systems collapse and shorelines wash away.
Fortunately, a partial solution has emerged: elevating the marsh surface by spreading dredged sediment. Dredging – the practice of excavating mud, sand, and sediment from the bottom of waterways to make room for bigger ships or expanded ports – is usually cast as a villain in environmental stories, and for good reason. The practice disrupts ecosystems, stirs up contaminants, and destroys sensitive habitats.
But given the lack of ready alternatives, it doesn’t look like dredging is going away any time soon. Hence the growing push to turn the spoils – the mucky byproduct of dredging – into a tool for restoring and elevating marshes.
Historically, dredged material has been dumped into “confined disposal facilities” or trucked off to be spread in places far from the water. One example is Tuckahoe Turf Farm in Estell Manor City, in the Pine Barrens, where marine dredge spoils have been applied to farmland. This practice makes no sense from an ecological standpoint (the salt content alone is problematic), and it permanently removes what can be valuable sediment from the coastal system.
“We’re watching these marshes collapse in real time,” says Fred Akers, operations manager of the Great Egg Harbor Watershed Association. “We can either keep hauling this dredge material away to landfills or the Pine Barrens or we can use it to rebuild what we’re losing.”
Instead of discarding the dredge spoil, advocates are working with agencies like the NJ Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) and the NJ Department of Transportation (NJDOT) to reuse dredged material for marsh restoration, ideally placing it right back where erosion is taking its toll. It’s neither simple nor inexpensive. It requires engineering, permitting, careful planning, and community buy-in.
In 2022, NJDOT dredged 59,000 cubic yards of sediment from Patcong Creek in Great Egg Harbor at a cost of up to $5 million. That material ended up on land at the former B.L. England power plant site in Beesley’s Point – just one of many missed opportunities for marsh restoration. “If we’d had the right project teed up, that material could have gone right onto a degraded marsh,” says Akers.
But the possibility is clear and compelling. One promising example in this shift towards keeping dredged material in the marine system can be found at Tuckahoe Island, a piece of state-owned marshland that’s rapidly eroding. Akers and his team flagged the problem to NJDEP’s Fish and Wildlife team, and when they also identified nearby dredging needs on the Tuckahoe River, things started to click. NJDOT agreed to fund the project. It was a win-win…or at least, a better compromise.
This new strategy doesn’t make dredging “green,” but if we’re spending millions to dig up material anyway, why not use it to save the marshes we’re losing? And with the pressure of sea-level rise increasing each year, the clock is ticking for these critical habitats and storm shields. If we let them drown, we all lose.
Letting valuable sediment go to waste when it could help keep our marshes and coastlines afloat doesn’t make sense. “The time for a change in our thinking is now,” says Akers.
To learn more about the Great Egg Harbor Watershed Association and support efforts to save Tuckahoe Island, please visit https://www.gehwa.org/.
To learn more about how you can help preserve New Jersey’s natural resources, visit the New Jersey Conservation Foundation at www.njconservation.org or reach out to us at info@njconservation.org.
About the Authors
Alison Mitchell
Executive Director
Michele S. Byers
Executive Director, 1999-2021
John S. Watson, Jr.
Co-Executive Director, 2022-2024
Tom Gilbert
Co-Executive Director, 2022-2023
View their full bios here.
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