70. Jamaica Bay (Gateway National Recreation Area) Jamaica Bay is a 10,000 acre wildlife refuge that straddles the boundary
between Brooklyn and Queens (Figure 187). The refuge encompasses a diverse
ecosystem of salt marshes and wetlands, tidal creeks, beaches and islands
isolated within the shallow bay. The turbid waters of the bay are rich
in algae and zooplankton, providing the base of the food web for invertebrates,
brooding and feeding grounds for an abundant variety of fish. The salt
marsh islands that cover much of the bay is a major feeding and resting
point for migratory birds along the Atlantic Coast. This large tract of
land and sea supports a large fishing community, and serves as a major
multi-purpose recreational site for the metropolitan area.
Jamaica Bay's history includes a succession "improvements."
Until the late 1800s Jamaica Bay was essentially a wilderness area, serving
a prosperous shellfish and fishing industry. In 1878, the Secretary of
War along with the city government of New York petitioned to establish
the bay as a major seaport. As a result, a major landscape modification
project began. Broad channels were dug; the dredging spoils were used
to fill in marsh areas and to create raised lands for dockage and piers.
A large amount of marshland vanished in the construction of Floyd Bennett
Field and Idlewyld (now John F. Kennedy International Airport). The Marine
Parkway Bridge which connected Flatbush Avenue to the Rockaways was completed
in 1937, hastening the development of the barrier island. Along the north
shore of the bay, large tracts of wetlands and salt marshes were filled
in to make space for subdivisions. Large landfills and sewage sludge disposal
sites took away additional marshland and progressively contributed to
the decline of the bay, both in extent and ecosystem quality. Efforts to preserve the bay were ineffective until 1938 when Mayor Fiorello
La Guardia and Parks Commissioner Robert Moses collaborated on efforts
to protect it. In 1948 the lands were transferred to the New York City
Department of Parks. Still, construction and "improvement" projects
continued. Under Robert Moses' plan, the Belt Parkway was built around
the north shore of the bay. Thinking that freshwater environments better
served the wildlife, two great impoundments were constructed as part of
a plan that ran the combined A and S train line across Jamaica Bay. Unfortunately,
it wasn't until the 1960s that the true ecological value of the salt marshes
was realized. However, by then the original extent of the Jamaica Bay
salt marsh and surrounding freshwater wetlands had diminished from around
25,000 acres to about 13,000 acres. Although great strides have been made
to protect the bay it is still under constant threat. Of perhaps greatest
concern is the ever increasing influx of freshwater from treated wastewater
and urban runoff that eventually enters the bay from numerous sources.
Freshwater should also be considered a "pollutant" to the salt
marsh habitat, in that marine and brackish water organisms have a low
end tolerance level, beyond which they cannot survive or out-compete with
freshwater plant species. Mosquitos also favor freshwater. For instance,
the tall reed grass that lines much of the Belt Parkway is not a native
species! Before the massive volume of treated waste water began to flood
portions of the bay, relatively little freshwater naturally entered the
estuary, especially during the late summer and fall.
However, the bay is being saved "indirectly" by other means.
First, sea level is rising. This is quite evident in beach areas along
the shore of the bay where erosion is exposing multiple levels of marsh
peat layers (Figure 188). These layers indicate that sea level has risen
as much as a meter within 100 years, however this measure is relative,
and doesn't account for the compaction of the underlying sediments. Secondly,
the dredging of the channels (deemed as so harmful in the past) are actually
providing more efficient marine water flushing of the bay. This is especially
important considering the amount of progradation of Breezy Point, and
the obstruction created by the landfill created for Floyd Bennett Field.
Had it not been for the construction of the groins and jetty at Breezy
Point, and the episodic dredging of the shipping channel through Rockaway
Inlet, Jamaica Bay as a saltwater marshland might perhaps be "dead"
already! The heavy buildup of the Rockaway barrier island is perhaps a recipe
for disaster in the event of a hurricane. Coastal residents and city planners
should take a look northward at islands in Jamaica Bay. These islands
are, in part, a reflection of the natural geologic processes associated
with the evolution of barrier islands and lagoons. The sand that forms
the core of these islands was originally derived from the outwash the
Wisconsin glacier. A much larger "ancestral" Jamaica Bay is
recorded by the presence of the Gardeners Clay throughout portions of
the south shore of Long Island, including the region of modern Jamaica
Bay. As the Wisconsin glacier melted, sea level competed with isostatic
rebound, creating an uneven record of marine transgression and regression
throughout the New York region in Late Pleistocene and Holocene times.
The islands in Jamaica Bay are likely reminders of devastating coastal
storms that ripped through the barrier island, creating inlets with large
tidal deltas. Longshore drift, storm event erosion and deposition, and
the twice-a-day scour of tides are the natural processes that closed these
inlets and created new ones. These islands are preseved stabilizing overgrowth
of the salt marshes around their shores and the maritime shrub forests
in the upland areas. Jamaica Bay became part of Gateway National Recreation Area in 1974.
Most of the area includes inaccessible wildlife habitat and is off limits
except for educational and research purposes. Primary access points and
educational resource sites include the Jamaica Bay Visitor Center on Cross
Bay Boulevard, the Park Headquarters and Visitor Center at Floyd Bennett
Field, and a new environmental education facility in Marine Park, Brooklyn.
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