Inside Look: Restored Pond and Waterway at 吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Pine Island Sanctuary

NC Land and Water Fund-supported project already welcoming back birds.
Wood Ducks

A major restoration project has breathed new life into a pond and tidal creek system at the heart of 吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Pine Island Sanctuary on Currituck Sound, thanks to a  

The project, completed over the spring and summer, included ripping out the old bulkhead of a pond, sculpting a new, natural shape for the pond, planting the shoreline with native vegetation, and converting culverts into free-flowing waterways. 

鈥淭he end goal was to rebuild the hydrology in the middle part of the sanctuary in a way that mimics natural processes,鈥 Sanctuary Director Robbie Fearn said. 鈥淣ow water will be able to flow freely from the marsh to the pond and back again.鈥 

The results were immediate. Already, shorebirds, egrets, and, yes, ducks have returned to the newly muddy banks. 

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 even finished yet and we saw Wood Ducks at the back of the pond,鈥 said Sara Marschhauser, Senior Coordinator of Habitats and Facilities at Pine Island. 鈥淎s soon as we took the bulkhead out, they came back. That鈥檚 exactly the kind of thing we wanted to see when we launched this project.鈥 

Another component involved replacing an aging bridge that leads to the sanctuary鈥檚 historic boat house and removing a narrow culvert that had been restricting water flow through the marsh. 

鈥淏efore the upgrade, the back bay of the sound would run out of oxygen by mid-summer because water just couldn鈥檛 get there,鈥 Fearn said. 鈥淣ow that we're allowing for the exchange of water, that portion of the sound will become excellent nursery habitat for fish and other wildlife.鈥 

The sanctuary preserves 2,600 acres of unique marsh and upland maritime forest habitat on the sound and is one of the most important places for birds in the hemisphere, providing habitat for nearly 200 species. 

The work is part of a larger suite of taking place at the sanctuary and across Currituck Sound, based on a Marsh Conservation Plan developed by 吃瓜黑料 and the Currituck Sound Coalition. 

Media Contact: Ben Graham, ben.graham@audubon.org

About 吃瓜黑料 North Carolina     

吃瓜黑料 North Carolina, a state program of the 吃瓜黑料, has offices in Durham, Boone, Corolla, and Wilmington. Learn more at  and on , and . The 吃瓜黑料 protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow. A nonprofit conservation organization since 1905, 吃瓜黑料 works throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education, and on-the-ground conservation. Learn more at audubon.org and on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @audubonsociety.