About The Lagoon
A Lagoon
is by nature a very shallow body of water. The Indian River Lagoon
has an average depth of only 2 1/2 feet. Many of the mangrove
islands were formed in the 1920's when the Army Corps of Engineers
first dredged the ICW to allow safe inland navigation for large
vessels. Vero Beach and the Indian River Lagoon is also the home
of the famous Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute.
Using giant dredges they would
suck the bottom soil from middle of the lagoon and simply deposit
it to either side. Eventually these deposits would sprout life
in the form of mangrove seedlings, Autrailian Pine trees, and
assorted types of palm, and palmetto shrubs. In time it has produced
a beautiful and scenic ecosystem.
Mature coastal fish like the
snook, redfish, sea trout, tarpon, various types of sharks, barracuda,
and jack cravalle migrate into the lagoon after spawning to deposit
their eggs or to simply feed. It's in this lagoon that many fish
will spend the first 3 to four years of life before reaching
maturity, thus replacing the previous stock, and then it all
happens over, and over again. As you may suspect these predatory
fish aren't the only ones to take advantage of the estuary.
The prey fish use this ecosystem
as well, mullet, threadfin herring, grunts, croakers, pinfish,
glass minnows as well as shrimp and assorted crabs. The current
estimate is that more than 4,300 types of fish and animals utilize
the lagoon at one time or another over the course of their lives.
Bottle nose dolphin, manatees and otters are just a few of the
mammals that also share this very bountiful universe.
Let's also not forget the additional
life above the water line. The sea birds; Pelicans, gulls, the
fish eating cormorants, Herons, Ibis,' mammals like; Raccoons,
Squirrels, Opossums, Bobcats, reptiles such as; Green and Brown
Anole lizards, Snakes like the Black Racer, the Banded Water
Snake, along with numerous toads and insects even alligators.
Mix all this together and what
you get is a macrocosm for all types of wildlife. Plenty of food
for the smaller prey fish to eat around the mangroves, crabs,
shrimp, and small minnows making up the majority of their diet.
In turn while they're fattening up under the protection of the
mangroves the predatory fish are feasting on them.
The lagoon system is a unique
environment a constant migration of life, and naturally death.
Now granted this is not a very scientific explanation but I'm
not a scientist I'm a fisherman, and all I know is that it's
beautiful system that nature has devised. The only natural enemy
threatening it are humans.