Estuaries, mangroves & saltmarsh
The smelliest, most maligned ground on the coast is the one that feeds all the rest.
- Recognise it
- Muddy tidal flats where the rivers meet the sea, flooded and drained twice a day. Dark trees breathing through a thousand upright pencil-roots are mangrove; the grey-green succulent carpet baking above the tideline is saltmarsh; the green meadow in the clear shallows is seagrass. If it is mud you can smell before you see it, you are there.
- Why it's here
- A single variable sorts the whole place into bands: how often the salt water reaches. Each plant lives at the tidal height where it can just stand the salt and the soaking, so the estuary is the great land gradient compressed into a few hundred metres and driven by the tide.
- Who lives here
- Grey mangroves sweat salt from their leaves; leaf-eating crabs shred the leaf-fall that feeds the prawns and fish; soldier crabs march the open mud in pale-blue armies. Migratory godwits refuel here after flying non-stop from the Arctic.
- Where to see it
- Walk the elevated boardwalk at the Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary, Bli Bli, or paddle the sheltered Pumicestone Passage.





