
Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site R153BY120NC
Wet Dune Slack
Last updated: 4/02/2025
Accessed: 04/09/2025
General information
Provisional. A provisional ecological site description has undergone quality control and quality assurance review. It contains a working state and transition model and enough information to identify the ecological site.
MLRA notes
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA): 153B–Tidewater Area
The MLRA notes section provides a brief description of the entire MLRA. This brief description of the entire MLRA is intended to provide some context about the MLRA that this ecological site is within. A more complete description of the MLRA can be found in Ag Handbook 296 (USDA-NRCS, 2022).
This MLRA stretches along the Atlantic coastline from northern Florida to southern Virginia. It features young marine terrace flats, broad flood plains and deltas, tidal marshes and estuaries, barrier sea islands, and a beach ridge system that spans the length of the MLRA. Its broad, shallow valleys with large rivers, tidal marshes, swamps, estuaries, drowned valleys, sea islands, and beaches, are all features of the Late Quaternary (USDA-NRCS, 2017). The Suffolk Scarp is the upper (western) limit of this MLRA and marks the extent of the ocean shoreline before it retreated during the Wisconsin period of glaciation. Fluctuating ocean levels, along with wave and wind activity, continue to rework sand deposits that comprise the ever-changing barrier sea islands and coastline in this MLRA. The marine terraces are younger to the east and are progressively older and higher inland to the west. The youngest marine terraces adjacent to the coast are very low lying and at high risk of inundation by extreme high tides, wind tides, storm surge, and extreme precipitation events. In addition to the risks of inundation, these low-lying terrestrial and freshwater systems are at high risk of salt water intrusion.
The MLRA is characterized by a persistent high water table. The hydraulic gradient across this MLRA is very low. Overall, elevation ranges from sea level to less than 25 feet (0 to 8 meters). Local relief is mainly about 3 feet (1 meter) or less. Most of the surface water in this MLRA is either coming into the MLRA from the piedmont and upper coastal plain, is managed by ditching, or is ponded on the surface. Surface flow channels originating within the MLRA are extremely subtle, typically blackwater, and flow generally channelizes mostly near the shoreline where tidal processes also impact flooding processes.
The dominant soil orders in this MLRA are Alfisols and Entisols. Ultisols and Histosols are important but are of lesser extent. The soils in the area are characterized by restricted drainage, a thermic temperature regime, and an aquic moisture regime. The study of subaqueous soils is of increasing importance along nearshore coastal waters.
The major soil suborders of the MLRA include: 1) Endoaqualfs, which are very deep and loamy to clayey, 2) Endoaquults, which are very deep and loamy to clayey, 3) Haplosaprists, which are extensive in North Carolina and Virginia, in the Great Dismal Swamp, and in broad upland wetlands known as pocosins, 4) Hapludults, which are in the higher areas of somewhat better drainage, 5) Psamments, 6) Sulfaquents, which are extensive throughout the brackish tidal marshes protected by the barrier and sea islands, 7) Sulfiwassents (subaqueous soils), which formed in low- to moderate-energy estuarine deposits, and 8) Umbraquults, which are very deep and loamy to clayey.
MLRA 153B has a lengthy north-south extent, and it runs parallel to the Atlantic coast. The MLRA extends from the northeastern corner of Florida to southern Virginia. Five states are intersected by the MLRA, including North Carolina (42 percent), Virginia (21 percent), South Carolina (20 percent), Georgia (14 percent), and Florida (3 percent). The MLRA extent makes up about 11,152 square miles (28,884 square kilometers).
Because of climatic differences between the northern and southern reaches of the MLRA, vegetative communities vary with latitude. Loblolly pine, red oak, and white oak are dominant in the uplands, and blackgum, sweetgum, pond pine, laurel oak, water tupelo, and bald cypress are dominant on the bottomland. Longleaf pine and slash pine were dominant historically in the southern part of the area. Understory species common to the MLRA include switchcane, inkberry, large gallberry, greenbrier, wax myrtle, and cabbage palm. Herbaceous understory species include little bluestem, and various panicgrasses.
Major wildlife species include alligator, black bear, white-tailed deer, fox, raccoon, opossum, otter, muskrat, rabbit, mink, squirrel, quail, and mourning dove. The red wolf, an endangered species, is being reintroduced in several parts of the MLRA. The nearshore estuaries of the Chesapeake Bay, the Albemarle-Pamlico estuary systems, and Atlantic Ocean provide habitat for diverse populations of terrestrial and aquatic animal species. The subaquatic vegetation in these coastal lagoon areas provides critical habitat and cover for many shellfish and juvenile finfish. The estuaries host numerous migratory waterfowl and wading birds throughout the year and are an integral part of the Atlantic Flyway.
(USDA-NRCS, 2022)
LRU notes
Currently, Ecological Site Descriptions (ESDs) for MLRA 153B cover the full north-south range of the MLRA. However, climate variation across the north-south extent warrants the development of Land Resource Unit (LRU) classifications to support more precise Ecological Site Descriptions.
Classification relationships
MLRA 153B has overlap with two level III EPA ecoregion concepts: 63) the Middle Atlantic Coastal Plain and 75) the Southern Coastal Plain. Under ecoregions 63 and 75 are a number of lower level (IV) concepts, of which several apply to MLRA 153B. These include: 63b) Chesapeake-Pamlico Lowlands and Tidal Marshes, 63c) Swamps and Peatlands, 63d) Virginia Barrier Islands and Coastal Islands, 63f) Delmarva Uplands), 63g) Carolinian Barrier Islands and Coastal Marshes, and 75j) Sea Islands/Coastal Marsh. (U.S. EPA, 2013)
MLRA 153B overlaps a portion of the US Forest Service Outer Coastal Plain Mixed Forest province (232). The MLRA roughly corresponds to the easternmost portions of the Atlantic Coastal Flatwoods (232C) and the southeastern portion of the Northern Atlantic Coastal Flatwoods (232I) sections. In combination with MLRA 153A, these two MLRAs correspond very closely to the full extent of Sections 232C and 232I. (Cleland et al., 2007)
Based on the USGS physiographic classification system, most of MLRA 153B is in the Sea Island section of the Coastal Plain province, in the Atlantic Plain division. The northern quarter is in the Embayed section of the same province and division. The embayed barrier islands extend from the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia to north of Charleston, South Carolina (Fenneman et al., 1946). The portion in North Carolina is referred to as the Outer Banks. Large bodies of brackish water, such as Pamlico and Albemarle Sounds, are on the inland side of the barrier islands. The sea islands extend from north of Charleston, South Carolina, to Jacksonville, Florida.
The reference community for this particular site is approximately aligned with Maritime Wet Grassland (Schafale and Weakely, 1990) and Coastal Interdune Swale (FNAI, 2010).
Ecological site concept
This site represents poorly drained hydric soils on swales within coastal strand dune swale complex landforms. The soils are dominantly sandy and have a surface horizon of muck 1 cm (0.5 inch) or more thick. Subsurface mineral soil horizons are low chroma, and this site typically meets hydric soil indicator s12, which applies specifically in the swale portion of dune-and- swale complexes of barrier islands. S12 indicates a layer of muck 1 cm (0.5 inch) or more thick with a Munsell color value of 3 or less and chroma of 2 or less and starting at a depth ≤15 cm (6 inches) from the soil surface.
This site predominantly supports a wet dune grasses vegetation community.
Associated sites
R153BY110NC |
Coastal Strand, Beaches, and Dunes Wet dune slack is a component of the coastal strand landscape and can be distinguished by soil moisture. |
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R153BY130NC |
Tidal Marsh on Mineral Soil Tidal marsh is typically associated with and lower on the landscape than the coastal strand and beach landscapes. |
R153BY140NC |
Tidal Marsh on Organic Soil Tidal marsh is typically associated with and lower on the landscape than the coastal strand and beach landscapes. |
Similar sites
R153BY110NC |
Coastal Strand, Beaches, and Dunes Wet dune slack is a component of the coastal strand landscape and can be distinguished by soil moisture. |
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Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
Not specified |
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Shrub |
(1) Morella cerifera |
Herbaceous |
(1) Spartina patens |
Click on box and path labels to scroll to the respective text.
T1A | - | Disturbance |
---|---|---|
T1B | - | Urban development |
T2A | - | Undisturbed succession. |
T2B | - | Urban development |