A Second Life for Subway Cars : Habitat Restoration in the Atlantic Ocean

in #nature7 years ago

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Dumping Subway Cars in the Ocean... ?


When you first hear that hundreds of retired subway cars are being dumped along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, you'd probably think that some foul play is involved. But in this case, these old New York City subway cars are actually getting a second chance on the ocean floor - helping to revive habitats and restore damaged ecosystems.

This "dumping for good" practice is surprisingly widely adopted and largely under reported. It's a unique recycling strategy that helps to solve multiple problems simultaneously. First, it's tough to find a home for retired subway cars. These huge 18-ton hunks of metal pose a storage problem. They are huge voids, are costly to recycle and take up a lot of space wherever they end up (usually a junk yard). Second, the Atlantic Coast has suffered from dramatic habitat loss over the last century. A mix of pollution and coastal activity have destroyed a once thriving environment. Underwater soil erosion has left barren sandy fields with little topography. Subway cars act as surprisingly attractive surfaces for new reef culture to latch onto.

"They (subway cars) are three dimensional, and provide thousands and thousands of square feet of hard surface for invertebrates to live on, some of which, such as blue mussels, could not live on the sand bottom that is naturally there. When you compare the amount of food available on this reef to the natural amount, there is 400 times as much food per square foot as the sand bottom." - Jeffrey Tinsman (Artificial reef program manager at the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control)

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Photographs (including thumbnail) by Stephen Mallon. (Source.)

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Photographs by Rich Galiano. (Source.)

A Shelter for New Habitat


You could say that these subway cars are providing a vehicle for new life on the ocean floor ;) Or something along those lines.

These subway cars are clearly impacting the habitats in a positive way. At a surprising pace, they are allowing aquatic flora and fauna to return. I'm still very curious about the long-term effect of eroded metals on this ecosystem. But for the moment, this seems to be a productive medium.

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Photograph of "a subway car after 5 years underwater" by Stephen Mallon. (Source.)

Not All Junk is Created Equal...


Not all junk will do good for the ocean floor! When you see subway cars, that doesn't mean anything with surface area will be a productive addition for a struggling habitat.

Here's one horrifying example... In 1972, a staggering 700,000 rubber tires were dumped on top of the Osbourne Reef outside of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. By 1974, A total of 2 million tires became part of a aquatic restoration project that went horribly wrong. The coral and local flora didn't take to the rubbery / slippery surface of the tires. What began as a project with good intentions ended up causing a nightmare of a restoration project that is still active 45 years later.

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Artificial reef fail. The "tire reef" in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. (Source.)

The bottom line : our coastal ecosystems are fragile, important and worth protecting. Discovering ways of utilizing abandoned material / resources can be a productive way to reinvigorate lost habitat. Surely, subway cars are not the only (certainly not the best) solution. Going forward, I will be curious to see what creates the best and most sustainable impact.

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thank you..i thought they can be recycled.shared on twitter!

Thanks so much for your interest and support :)

i love news like that. am an online eco-volunteer ;)

Super cool! Following you to learn more :)

oh..i haven't posted anything of that nature. our group is in Facebook :)

@immarojas :) I was sitting here thinking the same thing . This stuff should of been recycled . It is messed up what they put in our oceans :)

they can be made as reefs i can see that, but i have seen cargo containers being made as homes. i actually want one you know, those tiny living stuff!

I fully agree , I have been a big fan on "" Reduce , Reuse , Recycle "' I believe I got that right lol If you can reuse something for a different purpose than why not ::))))

yeah me too! less spending the better, if they can be reused, why not!

yeah, it's great that stuff like that can be recycled and reused for such a terrific purpose!

Reused to something more beautiful..not just to humanity.

This was fascinating, I remember having read about a similar process where a company was using recycled materials to create a mixture with which they would fill a mold. The molds were modeled after existing reef structures found in nature.

Yeah! There are a lot of really neat forms and concrete structures used for artificial reefs around the globe. A lot of those forms were derived from patterns discovered in nature (as you say). Lots to be learned from our underwater neighbors :)

Well, one thing's for sure; dumping is definitely not a sustainable solution.

Ideally not! I'm curious about the long-term impacts here... but at least for the moment these subway cars appear to be doing some good.

good. thank you

Thank you @rizkiavonna

Interesting. I see no harm in it. Looks like fun for the sea life. Funny it's a "sub" way car. Maybe it found its true home as a "subway" car.

Putting new meaning to the "sub" for sure ;)

HA HA. Picture it. 5000 years from now a new group of researchers from a new civilization finds all these subway cars at the bottom of the ocean and tries to figure out how they got there? Were they some kind boats that sank? Was there a city there at one time? Did they come from outer space?

great post really! Not so sure if it's good or not still really nice to read! upvoted and followed :) Have a look at my new blog, I think this one will be an enrichment to the steemit community and maybe you make your own post about your #introduceyourhometown

Thanks for the kind words @redtravels :)

I can't believe they dump all that in the ocean. They should recycle them.

For the tires - Absolutely, that was horrible and irresponsible. It seemed that they did very little research on how marine life would react / attach to the rubbery material. For the subway cars, I believe they stripped out as much material as they could (while maintaining structural integrity)... And so long as they provide for healthy habitat, this might actually be better than traditional recycling methods. Just a thought.

interesting

Why not use them to shelter homeless people? Could be a good solution.

That's an interesting solution, though I feel like the cost of transporting these things (they each weigh 18 tons) and retrofitting them as a home might end up costing more than building a shelter from scratch. It's a great concept though, perhaps it's been done before. (I'll do some research)

Yes that's true. However, the cost to transport them to a barge and then take them out to deeper waters must cost a lot too. Also there would be the cost of the asbestos removal.

That is interesting. I would have not expected that. I am however wondering how could you predict anything will go well :)

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