Galveston Island Marsh Restoration Program
Galveston Island Marsh Restoration Program
Since 1999, we’ve partnered with the Texas General Land Office and the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department to design and construct numerous saltwater marsh habitat restoration and protection projects along the northern (bay-side) shoreline of Galveston Island. Marsh construction techniques have evolved over the years from terraces built using marsh excavators, to individual hydraulically placed marsh mounds, to mounds within fragmented marsh, and finally coalescing mounds. These changing designs were implemented to replicate natural marsh platforms with a significant marsh edge component (which is a highly productive area within a marsh) and to build the habitat as cost-effectively as possible. Various methods of shoreline protection have also been utilised to protect new and existing marsh habitat. These include geotextile and rock breakwaters, as well as sacrificial sand “feeder ridges.”
The partnership between all the project stakeholders has resulted in new, innovative methods for marsh creation and hundreds of acres of restored habitat including:
- Galveston Island State Park (1999, 110 acres marsh)
- Delehide Cove Marsh Restoration (2003, 50 acres marsh)
- Starvation Cove Marsh Restoration (2005, 60 acres marsh)
- West Bay Marsh Restoration (2011, 328 acres marsh)
- Bird Island Cove Marsh Restoration (2015, 70 acres marsh)
- Bayside Marsh / Gang’s Bayou (2017, 200 acres marsh)
- Galveston Island State Park, Carancahua Cove (2017, 74 acres marsh)
- Galveston Island State Park, Dana Cove Breakwaters (2021, protection to 100 acres of marsh)
- Galveston Island State Park, Dana Cove (ongoing, 20 acres marsh)