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Environment & Energy

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hatrack

(65,291 posts)
Thu Jun 11, 2026, 06:33 PM 18 hrs ago

"Effectively Irreversible" Change Makes Biscayne Bay Much More Like Open Ocean Than In Recent Past - More Acidic, Saline [View all]

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In the shadow of Miami’s skyline, in water churned daily by boats and jet skis, juvenile great hammerhead sharks—a critically endangered species—spend the first two years of their lives. A few miles from downtown, researchers recently pulled a 12-foot critically endangered sawfish from the same shallows. The species has been dying off in alarming numbers across South Florida’s waters since 2024, in an event scientists suspect was set in motion by record ocean heat. The bay teems with life most of the city never registers: more than 30 endangered or imperiled species and over 100 that matter to commercial and recreational fishing. Yet when researchers surveyed more than 1,000 Miami-Dade residents, most rated the bay as “moderately healthy,” even as its water quality had measurably declined and a government assessment warned the estuary had reached “a tipping point.”

It is also changing in ways almost no one can see.Over the past two decades, the bay has grown warmer, saltier and more acidic, according to a new University of Miami study that analyzed 20 years of monthly water quality readings. The shifts are real but gradual—too slow for even the divers, anglers and scientists who spend their lives on the water to see directly. “Since I have been here, the bay has been salty,” said Ana Zangroniz, a Florida Sea Grant agent who has worked on the bay since 2017, describing change so incremental it goes unnoticed.

What the eye misses, the data captures: a bay sliding steadily from an estuary to something closer to the open ocean, a transition the study’s authors say sea-level rise has made effectively irreversible. The bay’s fish are already registering the shift. Joseph Serafy, a NOAA research fishery biologist who has tracked Biscayne Bay fish communities for two decades, has watched the catch change as the water grows saltier. Snook, seatrout and mullet—species that thrive where fresh and salt water mix—have declined, he said, while fish that tolerate a wide range of salinity, like gray snapper and grunts, hold on. It is the signature of a bay tilting away from its estuarine past: As the brackish conditions vanish, so do the creatures built for them.

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But the slow climb in averages is not what worries Serafy most. It masks a more dangerous trend of sharper, more frequent extremes. Cold snaps, heat waves, stretches of hypersalinity and sudden crashes in oxygen do the real damage, and a warmer, saltier baseline makes each spike more punishing, according to Serafy. The summer of 2023 showed what that looks like. A marine heat wave drove water temperatures off South Florida to levels never before recorded, including a reading of 101 degrees Fahrenheit in shallow Manatee Bay that may have been the hottest seawater ever measured. The region’s coral reef was bleached from end to end. Warm water holds less oxygen; so does salty water. When both climb at once and seagrass dies back, fish can suffocate, the mechanism behind die-offs that Manatee Bay had seen before.

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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/11062026/miami-biscayne-bay-sea-level-rise-threatens-sharks-and-aquifer/

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