Florida Middle Grounds Explained

Florida Middle Grounds
Location:Gulf of Mexico
Pushpin Map:Florida#USA
Country:United States
Type:reef

The Florida Middle Grounds are a reefs in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico, approximately 128km (80miles) west northwest of the West coast of Florida.[1]

Geography

These reefs consist of a series of both high and low relief limestone ledges and pinnacles that exceed 15m (49feet) in some areas. The roughly 348 NM² of this hardbottom region lies 150km (90miles) south of the panhandle coast and 160km (100miles) northwest of Tampa Bay between 28° 10' and 28° 45' N and 084°00' and 084°25' W

Geology

The ridges consist of unconsolidated marine calcareous muddy sand, about 12 meters (40 feet) thick, overlying a weathered, fossiliferous limestone of Miocene age (between 5 and 22 million years old) and capped by a carbonate rock composed primarily of the sessile vermetid gastropod Petaloconchus sp. (a marine snail that cements its tubular shell to a hard surface, such as a rock or another shell).[2] Previous to core sample studies in 2010 and 2011, the Florida Middle grounds were thought to have been formed by coral. However, new research indicates that the ridges likely formed as a series of shore-parallel sediment bars eventually capped and preserved by vermetid gastropods, or "worm snails."[3]

Flora and fauna

Today's middle ground reef ecosystem represents the northernmost scope of mid-shelf octocoral communities in North America. It is a prehistoric coral-reef complex that has bio-similarities to modern patch-reefs, and a species distribution that includes both Carolinian and Caribbean components. The fish species are markedly tropical, with stony coral, gorgonians, and sponge dominating the community that relies upon the existence of the Loop Current. Currently, there are 170 species of fish, 103 species of algae, approximately 40 sponges, 75 mollusks, 56 decapod crustaceans, 41 polychaetes, 23 echinoderms and 23 species of stony corals.[4]

Research

In 2000, a research project was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to evaluate the status of the reef.[4] This research was conducted utilizing the DeepWorker 2000 one person submersible.[5]

Recreation

The "Middle grounds shipwreck" is a popular scuba diving and fishing location. In 2004, the wreck was identified by a team of divers led by Michael C. Barnette as the tugboat Gwalia.[6] [7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Florida Middle Grounds: Habitat Area of Particular Concern . Coleman, FC . Dennis, G . Jaap, Walter . Koenig, C . Reed, S . Florida State University . 2010-12-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110712182116/http://www.bio.fsu.edu/coleman_lab/florida_middle_grounds.php . 2011-07-12 .
  2. Reich. Christopher. The Role of Vermetid Gastropods in the Development of the Florida Middle Ground, Northeast Gulf of Mexico. Journal of Coastal Research. 2012-09-12. Spring 2013. 46–57. 10.2112/SI63-005.1. 129504619 .
  3. Gibbons. Helen. New Geologic Explanation for the Florida Middle Ground in the Gulf of Mexico. Sound Waves. 2014-02-01. 2015-04-22. 2015-04-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20150420233157/http://soundwaves.usgs.gov/2014/02/research.html. live.
  4. The State of Coral Reed Ecosystems of the United States and Pacific Freely Associated States: 2002 . Center for Coastal Monitoring and Assessment . 2002 . . 2010-12-30 . 2010-06-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100610172512/http://ccma.nos.noaa.gov/ecosystems/coralreef/coral2002/welcome.html . live .
  5. Jaap, Walter C . Observations on Deep Marine Structures: Florida Middle Ground, Pulley Ridge, and Howell Hook from the DeepWorker submersible, sustainable seas expedition, 2000. . In: Hallock and French (Eds). Diving for Science...2000. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Scientific Diving Symposium. St Pete Beach, Florida. . . https://archive.today/20130415212528/http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/8963 . usurped . April 15, 2013 . 2010-12-30.
  6. News: Tomalin, Terry . Mystery solved . St. Petersburg Times . 2004-06-18 . 2010-12-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090518091859/http://uwex.us/gwalia.htm . 2009-05-18 .
  7. Barnette, Michael C. . Identity Crisis - Finding a Name for the Middlegrounds Wreck . Advanced Diver Magazine . 17 . 2010-12-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090518091639/http://uwex.us/ADMgwalia.htm . 2009-05-18 .