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Mangroves in Georgia?


NC_Palms

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According to Wikipedia, black mangrove (Avicennia germinans) is found in coastal Georgia but outside of that, I have never found solid proof of its existence in the state. So is anyone familiar with native, naturally occurring populations of this species in Georiga? 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avicennia_germinans

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Zone 8a/8b Greenville, NC 

Zone 9a/9b Bluffton, SC

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I would believe it, as this is the most cold hardy of the three Florida native mangrove species.  Even red mangrove is found in North Florida, usually as small, shrubby individuals.

The first map depicts the FL Counties in which red mangrove is vouchered and the second map, where black mangrove has been vouchered.  Based on this, it is certainly plausible that black mangrove could be found in coastal GA.

Also, according to Wiki, black mangrove is common in coastal Texas and Florida and ranges as far north as Southern Louisiana and Coastal Georgia.

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Edited by palmsOrl
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I've never seen them. The 'Golden Isles' in Georgia are called that because of their spartina grass marsh; no mangroves are there. 

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Westchase | 9b 10a  ◆  Nokomis | 10a  ◆  St. Petersburg | 10a 10b 

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According to iNaturalist, the northernmost recorded black mangrove is growing at the Timucuan Ecological Preserve in North Florida, which I think is less than 40 miles from the southern end of Cumberland Island, GA. 

https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/21182729

Zone 8a/8b Greenville, NC 

Zone 9a/9b Bluffton, SC

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  • 1 month later...

I do a lot of fishing on the Satilla and have been to Jekyll and Saint Simone a thousand times. Unless it’s in some of the ponds on the islands, I have t seen any in SE Georgia. But, then again, the rivers and marshes of Georgia are expansive; the Georgia coast supplies the Atlantic with a lot of fresh water, and the marshes and swamps that are on the coast of Georgia cover the largest area of any other state along the Atlantic. So it’s possible.  

Edited by Jcalvin
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  • 10 months later...

"Chapman thinks warming could push the uppermost range of mangroves into Georgia within a decade. Pointing to evidence that “hurricanes push mangroves northward,” she said recent storms mean individual mangroves may already be taking root even further north on Florida’s coastline."

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/protectors-of-the-coast-what-the-northward-march-of-mangroves-means-for-fishing-flooding-and-carbon

 

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