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As land area of wetlands has declined over the years, so has their effectiveness. Beginning in the 1930s, levees built along the Mississippi River to ward off flooding curtailed flow of fresh water into estuaries, killing off plants unable to live year-round in salt water. That accelerated erosion and converted former wetlands into open water. The river previously deposited layers of new mud to replenish the marshes. Now, the levees prevent that. Yet another setback: Canals were dredged to benefit shippers and the oil and gas industry, allowing still more salt water to intrude. Perhaps the most notorious such project was the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, a 76-mile-long channel carved through marshes in the early 1960s to create a shipping shortcut between the Gulf and New Orleans. The Army Corps of Engineers closed the waterway to navigation after it provided a pathway to the city for the Hurricane Katrina storm surge in 2005. Piloting his 24-foot fishing boat this week near the settlement of Shell Beach, Ed "Mopey" Schaumburg gestured toward open waters that were thriving marshlands before the channel was built. "It was the most devastating man-made disaster that ever happened to the ecological system in this part of Louisiana," Schaumburg said. Charlie Thomason, a 39-year-old charter boat operator in Hopedale, said he feared the oil spill would finally doom the marshlands. "Once it gets into that porous sediment you'll never get it out," Thomason said while buying fuel at Robert Campo's family marina in Shell Beach. "It may take a long time, but it'll kill everything
-- the grass, the plankton, the shrimp, the little organisms everything feeds on. As a business owner, my life's in limbo right now."
State and federal agencies are trying to replace some of what has been lost, rebuilding barrier islands, beaches and marshlands. About $1.7 billion has been committed to the initiative over the next four years. But they have a long way to go, and if the oil pollution is severe enough it could overwhelm their efforts and leave the wetlands less able to cope with vicious storms. Starting with Katrina in 2005, a series of hurricanes has swept away 340 square miles. "When the marshlands are not being mutilated by man, they're pretty resilient," said LaSalle, the Mississippi ecologist. "A healthy marsh can tolerate a hurricane; it's natural. But an oil spill is not natural, and the marshes have never seen oil at this level. We just have to hope they can shut this thing off quickly."
[Associated
Press;
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