Recycled Glass: A New Defense Against Coastal Erosion

Jude Coleman 2025-09-12 15:00:00

In the 1960s, saltwater intrusion in a southeast⁤ Louisiana swamp killed the trees and plants that lived there.Now ⁤restored ⁢with freshwater, the swamp has become the perfect place for revegetation projects ⁢— particularly as healthy swamps⁤ can serve as⁤ a speed bump to ⁤slow hurricanes.

That’s ⁢one reason why the open⁢ water of Bayou‍ Bienvenue, once home ‌to cypress and tupelo trees, now hosts an island‌ of native trees, grasses — and recycled glass. The artificial island is helping researchers ​understand a ‍new⁤ approach to‌ coastal restoration.

Created by a team of scientists and⁣ a glass⁢ recycling company, the‌ roughly ⁤10-meter-diameter island is made from ‍a mix of glass ground into sand ‍and Mississippi River sediment. A second island next to​ it, also dotted with plants, is made fully from sediment. The team wants to know if there​ are any differences in how the plants grow to ⁢figure out if the ‌glass sand mixture could ​be a viable material for restoring ⁢coastal ecosystems.

As sea levels rise and coasts⁢ erode, “all ​coastal areas are going to deal with issues,”‍ says Sunshine Van Bael, ⁤a community ecologist at Tulane University in New Orleans who is studying the islands. “We need our trees and ​our swamp ​marshes to protect⁤ us.”

Sea level‍ rise and erosion sweep⁤ away sediment and ‍inundate plants along the coast. The ecosystems there,such as wetlands,salt marshes and mangrove ‍forests,act as ‌a buffer between ⁣storms and areas further inland. To restore these damaged‍ ecosystems, ecologists frequently enough ‍rely⁣ on⁤ sediments dredged ⁣nearby. But⁣ there’s a ⁢limited amount available, and dredging can disturb⁤ surrounding habitats.

By using‍ glass sand instead,restoration​ projects can reduce the amount ⁣of dredged sediment required and chip away at another problem: millions of metric tons ⁢of⁤ glass end‍ up in landfills each year instead of getting recycled.

That’s⁣ where Glass Half Full, a Louisiana-based glass recycling company that supplied the glass for​ the Bayou⁣ bienvenue⁣ island, ‍is working to fill the​ gap. When the company started in 2020, ⁢there were “virtually no glass recycling facilities in ​the state,” ‍says co-founder Franziska⁣ Trautmann.

She and co-founder Max Steitz⁣ wanted to know if ground glass could be useful in coastal restoration,so they partnered with scientists at Tulane University. Now, the company has donated⁣ its glass sand to various research projects comparing ​plant growth ‍in glass versus sediment. the studies, published throughout​ the year ⁢in Restoration Ecology,​ hold good news:⁤ In greenhouse settings, ​plants grown ⁣in ‌a mix ‌of glass sand and sediment⁤ seem to have the same survival rates as those ‌grown in only natural substrates.

In one study, Van Bael‍ and colleagues looked at wetland plants such as grasses and trees.‍ In ⁢a greenhouse, they grew the⁢ plants ‍in five-gallon buckets filled with ⁣either ⁣Mississippi river muck, glass sand or an even​ mix of the two, with the glass ground to different sizes. the plants grown ⁣in‍ a coarse⁢ grind glass-sediment⁤ mix fared​ just as well‌ as those grown in⁢ only sediment.

the findings‌ mirror another groups’ study,which found that two salt marsh grasses native to Mississippi grow equally well in either⁤ a ‍fifty-fifty mix of glass sand and ‍fill soil or just‍ fill soil. One plant, saltmeadow hay (Sporobolus pumilus), ⁣ even grew successfully in⁤ a mix with 75 percent glass sand.

“They found success across⁤ a range of plants … so ​it does seem to hold a lot ‍of promise,” says Christine Whitcraft, ⁣a wetland ecologist at⁢ California State University, Long Beach, who was not involved with any of ⁤this work.

Other⁢ studies found positive results with sand ⁢dune plants and mangroves.‌ but more work is needed, Whitcraft says, including small-scale projects⁣ outside⁤ the greenhouse.

Work from a group at the University of the Virgin Islands in Charlotte Amalie suggests that mangroves’ success in⁣ glass sand might be speciesspecific, for example, while Van Bael reports that mangrove roots are less robust in the glass sand mix compared to dredged sediment. Location-specific ‍studies are necessary to determine the optimal grind size and ratio for different coastlines,‌ Whitcraft⁣ says, but the ⁢method ​is⁢ probably ‌adaptable to ⁢other areas, ⁤such ⁤as ⁢the U.S. West Coast.

for now, Van Bael and colleagues will monitor the islands in Bayou Bienvenue for the next‍ five years — with two more islands in the works.

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