Sabine Lake Explained

Sabine Lake
Location:Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast
Inflow:Neches River, Sabine River
Length:140NaN0
Width:70NaN0
Area:45320acres
Depth:100NaN0
Max-Depth:400NaN0
Elevation:0feet
Islands:Pleasure Island
Cities:Port Arthur, Texas
Coords:29.875°N -93.8475°W
Oceans:Gulf of Mexico
Countries:United States
Pushpin Map:Louisiana#Texas#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Sabine Lake in Louisiana and Texas, USA.

Sabine Lake is a bay on the Gulf coasts of Texas and Louisiana, located approximately 90miles east of Houston and 160miles west of Baton Rouge, adjoining the city of Port Arthur. The lake is formed by the confluence of the Neches and Sabine Rivers and connects to the Gulf of Mexico through Sabine Pass. It forms part of the Texas–Louisiana border, falling within Jefferson and Orange Counties in Texas and Cameron Parish, Louisiana.

Sabine Lake is one of seven major estuaries along the Gulf Coast of Texas. Much of the Louisiana shore is protected by the Sabine National Wildlife Refuge. There is a long history of human habitation around the lake, including Native American settlement dating back at least 1,500 years, European exploration in the eighteenth century, and the growth of Port Arthur in the twentieth century. Today the lake serves as part of the Sabine–Neches Waterway and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and is a center for the shipping and petrochemical industries.

History

Archaeological evidence indicates that Native American groups from the Marksville culture were present near the shores of Sabine Lake by . Burial mounds that may have belonged to the Karankawa have been uncovered near the north shore at what is now Port Neches, but by the time of European arrival in the eighteenth century the region was inhabited by the Atakapa. English explorers led by George Gauld mapped the lake in 1777; Spanish explorers under Antonio Gil Y'Barbo visited the lake the same year, and an expedition under José Antonio de Evia mapped the lake in 1785 as part of a survey of the Texas coast. In the early 1800s Sabine Lake was used to ship slaves and other contraband into the region by smugglers including the pirate Jean Lafitte. The waterway was also used to move timber and cotton out from the interior.[1]

With the 1801 Treaty of Aranjuez the lake became part of the border between French Louisiana and Spanish Texas.[1] After the Louisiana Purchase Sabine Lake formed part of the United States' border with Spanish Texas, then Mexican Texas, and finally the Republic of Texas.[1] During the Republic period the American and Texan customs agencies came into significant conflict over the taxation of shipping on the lake, but with the Texas annexation Sabine Lake instead became part of the border between the U.S. states of Louisiana and Texas. The lake's shores were only intermittently settled and abandoned in the mid-to-late 1800s, and the 1886 Indianola hurricane destroyed the only significant settlements nearby at Sabine Pass and Johnson Bayou.[1]

The inlet at Sabine Pass was dredged and deepened in 1880 to ease access to the lake for shipping. In 1895 Port Arthur was founded, and the southwestern edge of the lake was channelized from Sabine Pass to Port Arthur in 1899, forming the Port Arthur Canal.[2] The discovery of petroleum under Spindletop in 1901 began the Texas oil boom and caused rapid economic growth in nearby Beaumont, prompting interest in expanding the region's canal system.[3] By 1908 Sabine Lake's channel was extended northward to the mouths of the Neches and Sabine Rivers to improve shipping access to the ports of Beaumont and Orange, forming the Sabine–Neches Canal;[2] the region's combined channel system is known as the Sabine–Neches Waterway.[4] The material dredged up in the canalization was formed into Pleasure Island, an artificial barrier island along the majority of the western shore that shelters Port Arthur and the waterway.[5] Most of the Louisiana shore was protected within the Sabine National Wildlife Refuge in 1937.[6] In the early twentieth century the lake and its shipping channel were incorporated into a wider network of canals running from New Orleans to Galveston Bay; after World War II this network grew into the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway.[3]

Features

Sabine Lake is located on the Gulf Coastal Plain at the Texas–Louisiana border. The natural portions of the lake have a mean low-water depth of at most around 10feet, though the ship channels have been dredged to a depth of more than 40feet.[7] The eastern (Louisiana) shore has little human development, and the majority is protected within the Sabine National Wildlife Refuge;[6] the western (Texas) shore is heavily urbanized, with the city of Port Arthur and significant shipping and petrochemical infrastructure along the shore.[7] Pleasure Island parallels the western shore for 18miles, separating the Port Arthur Canal and Sabine–Neches Canal from the main body of the lake.[8] The Martin Luther King Bridge spans the Sabine–Neches Canal to link Port Arthur to Pleasure Island,[9] and the Sabine Causeway connects the island to the Louisiana shore across the southern tip of the lake.[10] Water exchange with the Gulf of Mexico occurs at Sabine Pass.[11]

Sabine Lake is the smallest of the seven major estuaries along the Gulf Coast of Texas, approximately 14miles long and 7miles wide, with a surface area of 45320acres. It receives the discharge from the Neches and Sabine Rivers, along with various smaller streams and the surrounding coastal watershed. The lake's small size and high rate of freshwater inflow make it the least saline of the major Texas estuaries.[12] Its salinity was even lower prior to the twentieth century, and its upper reaches were almost entirely fresh,[13] but the extensive channelization of the lake since then has led to increased saltwater intrusion into the estuary, with salinity rising especially during periods of low freshwater inflow.[13] Increasing salinity has had a negative impact on the diversity and productivity of wetland plants in the estuary.[13]

Ecosystem

The dominant species of aquatic vegetation in Sabine Lake is Ruppia maritima.[7] Aquatic fauna include a variety of finfish and shellfish, with large populations of sport fishing species such as Atlantic croaker, spotted seatrout, southern flounder, red and black drum, sheepshead and gafftopsail catfish.[7] Other significant fish species include the bay anchovy, Gulf menhaden and spot.[7] [13] Commercial fishing in the lake produces mainly shellfish, especially blue crab and penaeid shrimp such as northern brown shrimp and Atlantic white shrimp.[7] [13] Sabine Lake is the only major Texas estuary that does not support a commercial American oyster fishery, as it lacks a suitable reef and is too polluted for legal oyster harvesting.[7]

The land around the lake includes a blend of Western Gulf coastal grasslands and coastal marsh ecosystems, together with urban land cover in Port Arthur and its suburbs on the western shore.[7] The majority of the non-urbanized shoreline is surrounded by brackish marshes,[13] with halophytes such as cordgrasses and common reeds as the dominant flora.[7] These coastal wetlands provide habitats for American alligators, Atlantic ridley sea turtles, red wolves and brown pelicans.[7] Saltwater intrusion and land subsidence resulting from human activities in the lake since the late 1800s have caused vegetation loss and erosion, and the remaining marshes are experiencing ongoing degradation as the ecosystems adjust to the altered hydrology in the estuary.[14]

Industry

The channelization of Sabine Lake has made it an important industrial waterway, one component of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and the heart of the Sabine–Neches Waterway. The three ports it links to the Gulf of Mexico (Port Arthur, Beaumont and Orange) form a major nexus for the shipping and petrochemical industries, the so-called Golden Triangle of Texas.[15] The largest industries around the lake are petroleum and natural gas extraction, petrochemical processing, shipping, and shipbuilding. Agriculture also forms a significant component of the regional economy, principally rice and soybean cultivation, livestock ranching, and commercial fishing.[7]

Notes and References

  1. The Romance of Sabine Lake, 1777–1846: Scene of Slaving, Smuggling, Steamboating, Border Conflict, and Cotton Commerce under the Texas Republic. W.T.. Block. November 1973. Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record. 9. 1. 9. https://web.archive.org/web/20200226155722/http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/40210222/romance-sabine-lake-1777-1846-scene-slaving-smuggling-steamboating-border-conflict-cotton-commerce-under-texas-republic. dead. 2020-02-26.
  2. Web site: Port Arthur, Texas. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. John W.. Storey. February 11, 2020.
  3. Web site: Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Art. Leatherwood. February 11, 2020.
  4. Web site: Sabine–Neches Waterway and Sabine Pass Ship Channel. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Robert. Wooster. February 11, 2020.
  5. Web site: History of Pleasure Island . City of Port Arthur. February 24, 2020.
  6. Web site: About the Refuge. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. February 24, 2020.
  7. Web site: Sabine–Neches Estuary: A Study of the Influence of Freshwater Inflows. July 1981. Texas Department of Water Resources. Texas Water Development Board. February 19, 2020.
  8. Web site: Pleasure Island — Port Arthur, TX. Pleasure Island, TX. February 24, 2020.
  9. Web site: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Memorial Bridge. Bridgehunter. February 25, 2020.
  10. Web site: TX82 Sabine Lake Causeway. Bridgehunter. February 25, 2020.
  11. Web site: Sabine Pass. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Robert. Wooster. February 11, 2020.
  12. Web site: Sabine–Neches Estuary. Texas Water Development Board. February 11, 2020.
  13. Web site: Freshwater Inflow Recommendation for the Sabine Lake Estuary of Texas and Louisiana. Nathan L.. Kuhn. Grace. Chen. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Texas Water Development Board. March 2005. February 24, 2020.
  14. Web site: Sabine–Neches Estuary and Lower Tidal Sabine River: A System in Transition. Jack W.. Tatum. February 20, 2009. Sabine and Neches Rivers and Sabine Lake Bay Basin and Bay Expert Science Team. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. February 25, 2020.
  15. Web site: Beaumont, Texas. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Paul E.. Isaac. February 11, 2020.