Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site R151XY012LA
Saline Firm Marsh
55-64
Last updated: 3/24/2025
Accessed: 05/06/2026
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Major Land Resource Area or ecological site by name and/or ID.
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): 151X–Gulf Coast Marsh
Major land resource area (MLRA)151, Gulf Coast Marsh, is in Louisiana (95 percent), Texas (4 percent), and Mississippi (1 percent). It makes up about 8,495 square miles (22,015 square kilometers). The towns of Gretna, Chalmette, and Marrero, Louisiana, and the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, are in the eastern part of this MLRA. The town of Port Arthur, Texas, is in the western part. Interstate 10 and U.S. Highway 90 cross the area. The New Orleans Naval Air Station is in this MLRA. Fort Jackson, overlooking the mouth of the Mississippi River, and the Jean Lafitte National Historic Park and Preserve are in the MLRA. A number of national wildlife refuges and State parks occur throughout this area. MLRA 151 is a very complex ecosystem with active deltaic development and subsidence with extreme anthropogenic impact by man with construction of flood protection levees and channelization occurring on the eastern portion of the MLRA. The Western portion of the MLRA is more stable in that portions of the landscape is protected naturally by the Chenier's, although there is Anthropogenic affects of the interior due to channelization for navigation.
Classification relationships
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA) and Land Resource Unit (LRU) (USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service, 2006)
The Natural Communities of Louisiana - (Louisiana Natural Heritage Program - Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries)Ecological site concept
These areas are on low Gulf of America coastal saline marshes at elevations of 1 foot or less. Slopes range from 0 to 0.2 percent. The soils formed in clayey alluvium at or near sea level and are firm enough to support grazing by large herbivours. These areas flood very frequently and frequently with salt water during high tides. This plant community is dominated by marshhay cordgrass, smooth cordgrass, gulf cordgrass, bushy sea-oxeye, seashore saltgrass, spiny aster, shoregrass, sedges, and rushes. Average depth of water at high tide ranges from 2 to 12 inches and water salinity varies from 12 to 50 ppt, but may become fresher during periods of high rainfall.
Associated sites
R151XY002LA Saline Marsh 55-64 PZ
Saline Marsh is more Fluid than the Saline Firm Marsh Site, similar plant communities.
R151XY010LA Sandy Chenier 55-64 PZ
The Sandy Chenier Site is generally the next step above the Saline Firm Marsh Site.
R151XY011LA Saline Sandy Ridge 55-64 PZ
The Saline Sandy Ridge Site is generally the next step above the Saline Firm Marsh Site.
R151XY677TX Saline Fluid Marsh 42+ PZ
Saline Fluid Marsh is more Fluid than the Saline Firm Marsh Site, similar plant communities.
Similar sites
R151XY005LA Brackish Firm Mineral Marsh 55-64 PZ
The Brackish Firm Marsh Site is similar in landscape position but the salinity range of the Saline Firm Site is higher, therefore the species composition and production will be less.
R151XY006LA Clayey Chenier Brackish Marsh 55-64 PZ
The Clayey Chenier Brackish Marsh Site is similar in landscape position but the salinity range of the Saline Firm Site is higher, therefore the species composition and production will be less.
Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree Not specified
Shrub Not specified
Herbaceous Not specified