Google AI
The Times Australia

Times Media Advertising

A forgotten mangrove forest around remote inland lagoons in Mexico's Yucatan tells a story of rising seas

  • Written by: Sula E Vanderplank, Adjunct Professor, San Diego State University
A forgotten mangrove forest around remote inland lagoons in Mexico's Yucatan tells a story of rising seas

The San Pedro River winds from rainforests in Guatemala through the Yucatan Peninsula in eastern Mexico. There, this peaceful river widens into a series of slow-flowing lakes. Along a remote 50-mile (80-kilometer) stretch, thousands of red mangroves – trees commonly found along tropical coastlines – line the river’s banks and gentle waterfalls.

Unlike mangroves elsewhere, these trees grow in freshwater. This means that many other species can grow with them: orchids, bromeliads and other air and land plants that cannot tolerate the saline conditions where red mangroves are normally found. It’s a magical garden, and also a scientific puzzle: How did these mangroves come to be growing some 125 miles (200 kilometers) inland, 85 to 120 feet (25 to 37 meters) above sea level, in an entirely freshwater ecosystem?

I am part of a multidisciplinary team of researchers from Mexico and the U.S. that sought to answer this question by comparing these trees to other mangroves across the broader Yucatan Peninsula region. We also analyzed sediment cores[1] from the San Pedro River terraces, which showed strong indications that the sediments had been created in coastal areas.

We found that the mangroves of the river have been separated from coastal mangroves for around 120,000 years[2]. This coincides with the Last Interglacial[3] – a warm period between ice ages, about 125,000 years ago, when glaciers and polar ice caps melted almost entirely.

During that time, the Earth was even warmer than at present and sea levels were 20 to 30 feet (6 to 9 meters) higher. These mangroves’ ancestors were coastal trees that were left isolated as the planet cooled during the Wisconsin Glaciation[4] – the last era when glaciers expanded across North America. As the glaciers spread, sea levels fell, exposing more land around them. Now, this unique forest, a footprint of the past, is at risk of deforestation and development that could prevent scientists from studying it for more insights into Earth’s climate history.

Fish swim among mangrove roots
Fish and other aquatic life in the San Pedro Martir River in Tabasco, Mexico, amid submerged red mangrove roots. Octavio Aburto, CC BY-ND[5]

Mangroves and fresh water

The red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle)[6] is an iconic tree that is enormously important to commercial and artisanal fisheries around the world. Juvenile fish shelter among mangroves’ tangled roots, feeding and growing until they are large enough to avoid predators.

Our study focused on two inland lagoons created by giant cenotes[7] – natural sinkholes in the Yucatan’s limestone bedrock – near the Caribbean coast. Red mangroves reproduce via seeds that germinate while they are still attached to mother plants[8], then drop onto a bank or into the water, where they float away and establish themselves on adjacent banks. This adaptation enables mangroves to spread along coastlines, even though saltwater is toxic to most seeds and makes germination very difficult.

We were fascinated to know how the San Pedro mangroves got there. Their seedlings couldn’t float upstream for so many miles, and the forest on the banks was large and well-established, which made it seem highly unlikely that an animal or human could have brought the seeds inland. To our knowledge, the San Pedro River mangroves are unique in existing so far from the coast.

Isolation and fragmentation

One way to determine where plants may have come from is to see whether they are genetically related to colonies of similar plants elsewhere in a region. So we conducted a genetic investigation that looked for single-nucleotide polymorphisms[9], or “snips” – differences in a single DNA building block between one plant and another.

We found that the closest relatives to the San Pedro River’s isolated mangroves were mangroves at the Terminos Lagoon[10] on the Yucatan’s western coast, along the Gulf of Mexico. Mangroves from both river communities also were closely related to other coastal populations on the Gulf of Mexico. However, they were very distinct from other freshwater inland mangrove populations in cenotes on the Yucatan’s eastern coast along the Caribbean, and those populations are distinct in turn from other coastal mangroves.

We cored the largest mangrove trees at three sites, extracting pencil-shaped samples from their trunks that showed their growth rings, to get a sense of how long these trees lived – about 100 years – and how many generations of trees had lived there. Then we multiplied that figure by a mean genetic mutation rate[11] to estimate how old the San Pedro mangroves were when they diverged genetically from other mangroves, and how long ago that divergence occurred.

We calculated that the San Pedro River and Terminos Lagoon mangrove populations separated genetically approximately 100,000 years ago. This supports our hypothesis that the San Pedro River mangroves are a relict from the last interglacial, some 120,000 years ago.

Our data also suggests that something drastically reduced the size of the isolated inland population of San Pedro River mangroves. This created what scientists call a genetic or population bottleneck[12], meaning that its gene pool became much smaller. As a result, the current population has a more unique genetic signature than mangroves elsewhere. Amazingly, this change was caused by just 30 feet (9 meters) of change in sea level.

Climate change is raising global sea levels in two ways: water expands as it warms, and ice sheets and glaciers on land are melting.

What else does this unique forest hold?

Our discovery raises an obvious question: Which other species have been isolated in this unique ecosystem for the past 125,000 years? Are there insects? Fungi? We hope scientists who study other types of organisms will explore this area and look for more relicts.

But this special place is at risk. The region was systematically deforested in the 1970s[13] as part of a development plan, but the banks of the San Pedro River escaped the bulldozers because the terrain was challenging. New threats loom today, such as a proposed 950-mile (1,529 km) train route[14] that would carry thousands of visitors to Mayan archaeological sites.

[Over 115,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today[15].]

Mayan river systems contain a wealth of cultural[16] and biological[17] riches. Now, we also know that the story of extreme climate change and sea level rise during the Pleistocene is recorded in the DNA of these plants.

They show how dramatically climate change could alter coastal ecosystems along the Gulf of Mexico and many other shorelines if nations do not take urgent action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change. My colleagues and I believe the San Pedro River deserves protection as a testament to both resilience and adaptation in a changing climate.

References

  1. ^ sediment cores (web.whoi.edu)
  2. ^ around 120,000 years (doi.org)
  3. ^ Last Interglacial (www.ncdc.noaa.gov)
  4. ^ Wisconsin Glaciation (wgnhs.wisc.edu)
  5. ^ CC BY-ND (creativecommons.org)
  6. ^ red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) (environment.bm)
  7. ^ cenotes (www.xenotes.com)
  8. ^ still attached to mother plants (www.amnh.org)
  9. ^ single-nucleotide polymorphisms (www.nature.com)
  10. ^ Terminos Lagoon (earthobservatory.nasa.gov)
  11. ^ mean genetic mutation rate (dx.doi.org)
  12. ^ genetic or population bottleneck (evolution.berkeley.edu)
  13. ^ systematically deforested in the 1970s (citeseerx.ist.psu.edu)
  14. ^ proposed 950-mile (1,529 km) train route (www.wsj.com)
  15. ^ Sign up today (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ cultural (editions.lib.umn.edu)
  17. ^ biological (insider.si.edu)

Read more https://theconversation.com/a-forgotten-mangrove-forest-around-remote-inland-lagoons-in-mexicos-yucatan-tells-a-story-of-rising-seas-169428

Times Magazine

Why Australian Enterprises Are Rethinking Their Core Communication Technologies

The corporate landscape in Australia has undergone a permanent structural shift over the past few ...

Road safety risk: New data reveals almost 2 in 3 Australian drivers are letting car maintenance slide as cost of living pressures bite

Australians are putting off vehicle maintenance and new research released on the eve of National R...

Woodroffe footy club BBQ legend crowned in national Bunnings search

Bunnings has found its latest community hero, naming Brent Tanner from Darwin Buffaloes Football C...

VoltX Energy expands into Victoria & ACT to meet surging home battery demand

Leading Australian energy solutions provider VoltX Energy and premier sponsor of the NRL Manly Wa...

Victorian Drivers To Receive 20% Rego Rebate From June 1 In Major Cost-Of-Living Measure

Victorian motorists will begin receiving significant registration savings from June 1 as the Allan...

How Australian Businesses Are Using AI To Cut Costs And Improve Efficiency

Artificial intelligence was once viewed by many small business owners as something futuristic, exp...

Quickest Way of Getting Rid of Your Old Cars in Brisbane?

If you are done searching for a practical solution for quickly getting rid of your old car, this w...

The Human Supplement Craze Has Officially Gone to the Dogs (Literally)

Australians’ appetite for supplements is no longer limited to their own vitamin cabinets. New reta...

AI Guilt: It’s Real — But it is irrational

Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming one of the most powerful tools ever made available to ...

The Times Features

The Kennedy Center and the Trump Name: A Battle Over Hi…

The removal of Donald Trump's name from part of Washington's famed Kennedy Center has become far m...

The Times Guide to Sydney's Beaches

Winter may still have a grip on Sydney, but anyone who has lived in Australia's largest city knows...

How Australia's Childcare Crisis Is Taking a Toll …

Australian mums and dads are increasingly anxious, exhausted, and distrustful of Australia’s childca...

The Economics of a Cup of Coffee: Is Your Daily Cappucc…

For many Australians, a morning coffee is no longer a luxury. It is a ritual. A quick stop at the ...

The Recovery Mindset: Why Some Business Owners Prosper …

Every crisis creates two groups of people. The first group focuses on what has been lost. The se...

Two Modern Twists on the Iconic Martini Recipe: Your Gu…

Few cocktails have achieved the cultural status of the martini. A fixture of cocktail culture for ...

Infant Formula: Does Paying More Buy a Better Start for…

A recall of infant formula in the United States has once again put infant feeding products under t...

The Business of Becoming a Doctor

For many Australians, doctors appear at the end of a long journey. Patients book an appointment, w...

A good night's sleep - Mattresses are not all the …

A good night’s sleep is no accident. Most Australians spend more than a third of their lives in be...