clear dot
estuaries.gov banner blue space
       Home | Contact Us | EspaƱol  
spacer
      
Advanced Search Search
blue space
An Estuary Is...   |    Interactions   |    Estuarine Dynamics   |    Life in an Estuary   |    Estuaries & You   |    Studying Estuaries   |    Our Estuaries
Overview   |    High School   |    Middle School   |    Tutorials   |    Teacher Training   |    Lessons & Activities
Meet an Expert   |    Take a Quiz   |    Fun & Games   |    "Muddy" Opportunities   |    Glossary
Volunteer   |    National Estuaries Day   |    News   |    Make a Difference
Species Factsheets   |    Publications   |    Educators Directory   |    Presentations   |    Visualizations   |    Log On
 
green background background background background green background


       

Creatures of Brackish Water

In the Barataria-Terrebonne estuary waters range in saltiness from the ocean all the way to nearly fresh. Meet a scientist who studies the creatures that thrive in the low-salt environments.

Region: Southeast/Gulf

State: Louisiana

Grade Level: Middle School & High

Clip Length: 7:27 Minutes

Video Size: 59.8 MB

Video Shoot Year: 2003

Credit: EPA Barataria-Terrebonne NEP
     
select
select

Video Thumbnail
  Plants (Circle of Life)
Video Thumbnail
  Estuaries: Defining Our Terms
Video Thumbnail
  Estuary Super Grass
Video Thumbnail
  Armand Bayou Close-Up
Video Thumbnail
  Black Skimmers
Video Thumbnail
  Tillamook Estuary Overview
Video Thumbnail
  Menhaden Facts
Video Thumbnail
  Estuary Basics (Marsh Plants)
Video Thumbnail
  Night in the Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Plankton Parade
Video Thumbnail
  New Jersey Terrapin Close-up
Video Thumbnail
  Kakaagon-Bad River Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Horseshoe Crabs
Video Thumbnail
  Crabs of the Tillamook Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Totally Turtles
Video Thumbnail
  Fish Creek Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Red Drum Data
Video Thumbnail
  Tillamook Eelgrass
Video Thumbnail
  Studying the Sora Rail
Video Thumbnail
  Whittlesey Creek Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Estuary Scavenger Hunt
Video Thumbnail
  Tillamook Birds
Video Thumbnail
  Collecting Creatures in the Charlotte Harbor
Video Thumbnail
  Sioux and Onion River Estuaries
Video Thumbnail
  Larger Animals of the Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Tillamook Fishes
Video Thumbnail
  Oysters of the Charlotte Harbor Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Apostle Islands Estuaries
Video Thumbnail
  Urban Estuaries: Salmon on the Decline
Video Thumbnail
  Salmon Underwater
Video Thumbnail
  Mangrove Maniacs
Video Thumbnail
  Rasberry River
Video Thumbnail
  Urban Estuaries: Counting Critters
Video Thumbnail
  Fish, Animals with Backbones
Video Thumbnail
  Mangrove Q&A
Video Thumbnail
  Sand River Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  More About The Marsh
Video Thumbnail
  Crab Facts with Dr. Nora
Video Thumbnail
  Carnivorous Plants
Video Thumbnail
  Lost Creek Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Tale of Two Estuaries
Video Thumbnail
  All About Waquoit Bay Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  American Alligator
Video Thumbnail
  Bark River Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Salmon Habitat
Video Thumbnail
  What Lives in the Bay?
Video Thumbnail
  Birds of the Barataria-Terrebonne
Video Thumbnail
  Flag and Cranberry Estuaries
Video Thumbnail
  Catching Salmon
Video Thumbnail
  Waquoit Eelgrass
Video Thumbnail
  Creatures of Brackish Water
Video Thumbnail
  Saint Louis River Estuary
Video Thumbnail
  Counting Crabs
Video Thumbnail
  Bivalve Romance
Video Thumbnail
  Texas Alligators Q&A
Video Thumbnail
  Wisconsin's Freshwater Estuaries
Video Thumbnail
  Cornucopia of Crabs
Video Thumbnail
  Totally Terrapins

 

wave
NERRS Logo
NOAA | National Ocean Service | Web Site Owner: Ocean and Coastal Resource Management | nerrs.noaa.gov
About | Site Map | Acknowledgements | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | How to Use This Site | Webmaster
NOAA Logo
line