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Padre Island National SeashoreSunrise over the Gulf of Mexico
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Padre Island National Seashore
Natural Features & Ecosystems
 
An aerial view of the island taken in September, 2000, looking south with the Gulf of Mexico to the left
NPS photo
An aerial view of the island taken in September, 2000, looking south, with the Gulf of Mexico to the left
The National Seashore is mostly prairie/grasslands with ephemeral marshes and ponds bordered on the east by the Gulf of Mexico and on the west by the Laguna Madre. The highest elevation is approximately fifty feet. The National Seashore is 70 miles long with 65.5 miles of Gulf beach. Most of the seashore is accessible only by four-wheel-drive vehicle.

The Gulf beach is composed of white sand and is less than a hundred feet wide, Much of it is firmly packed, except for a stretch of about forty miles which becomes increasingly soft towards the center and is composed to a large degree of shells.

Bordering the beach is a narrow dune ridge running throughout the park and almost the length of the entire island. Sometimes natural or unnatural forces create breaches in the dune ridge and sand blows through creating "blowout" dunes, which may drift across the island at the rate of as much as 35 feet per year until they become vegetated. Sometimes dune fields form covering many acres.

West of the dune ridge are the grasslands and marshes.

Few trees exist on the island. Those that do are mostly mesquite, live oak, or willow.

On the western shore of the island are extensive mudflats.
Interpretive Programs
Interpretive Programs
Learn more about this subject at one of the park's interpretive programs.
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Did You Know?
Metal detecting is prohibited at Padre Island National Seashore as well as at all other units of the National Park Service?
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Last Updated: August 20, 2006 at 12:28 EST