Mobile Bay jubilee

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A Jubilee event at Weeks Bay National Estuary Research Reserve [1] showing the macroorganic density typical of the event.  Pictured here are crabs, flounder, stingray, and an eel.
A Jubilee event at Weeks Bay National Estuary Research Reserve [1] showing the macroorganic density typical of the event. Pictured here are crabs, flounder, stingray, and an eel.

Jubilee is the name used locally for a natural phenomenon that occurs sporadically on the shores of Mobile Bay, Alabama. During a jubilee many species of crab and shrimp, as well as flounder, eels, and other demersal fish will leave deeper waters and congregate—in large numbers and very high density—in a specific, shallower coastal area of the bay.[1] A jubilee is a celebrated event in Mobile Bay, and it attracts large crowds, many drawn by the promise of abundant and easy-to-catch seafood.[2]

Although jubilees have been reported in other regions, Mobile Bay is the only body of water where the regular appearance of this phenomenon has been documented.[3]

Contents

[edit] Descriptions

Civil War-era map of Mobile Bay
Civil War-era map of Mobile Bay

The Mobile Bay jubilee typically takes place at least annually, and sometimes several times per year; years without a jubilee have been recorded, but they are exceedingly rare. Many accounts of the jubilee exist, the oldest dating back to the 1860s.[2]

The size, scope, and duration of the jubilee can vary greatly. Sometimes a 15 mile stretch of coast representing most of the eastern shore can be affected,[3] and at other times the extent can be limited to as little as 500 feet of coastline.[1] Most jubilees happen in the pre-dawn hours.

The large volume of crustacean and fish that a jubilee can produce is hard to overstate; author Archie Carr comments that "[a]t a good jubilee you can quickly fill a washtub with shrimp. You can gig a hundred flounders and fill the back of your pickup truck a foot deep in crabs."[4]

In addition to the sheer mass of the animals present, harvesting them is made considerably easier by the effect that the oxygen deprivation has on the animals. Their behavior has been described as "depressed and moribund"[2], or "unnatural"[4]; crabs are observed "climbing tree stumps to escape the water" and flounder "slither up the banks."[1]

[edit] Causes

It was not until 1960 that the phenomenon was explored in-depth by marine biologist Harold Loesch for the journal Ecology. Locals and laymen had based some earlier attempts to explain the animals' strange behaviors on the interaction of salt- and fresh water during the incoming tide.[5]

A Landsat image of Mobile Bay facing north-northeast
A Landsat image of Mobile Bay facing north-northeast

After researching the oral histories and journalistic records of past jubilees, measuring physical and meteorologic conditions, and taking biological and chemical measurements, Loesch concluded that accumulated organic material on the bay floor could, under a certain set of conditions, result in a rapid depletion of oxygen (hypoxia) in parts of the bay, driving fish to the surface in a desperate attempt to seek out oxygenated water.[1].

Another, more comprehensive study by Edwin B. May in 1973, as well as smaller studies by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and the NOAA confirmed many of Loesch's hypotheses.[2][6] If wind direction, surface temperature, salinity, and tidal variation interact in ways that allow or promote a jubilee, the situation can develop rather quickly. May sums up the mechanism of action thusly:

Except during jubilees the water inside the 2 meter contour along the eastern shore is well oxygenated. This shallow water extends several hundred meters offshore. During jubilees fishes present there are trapped between the shore and an advancing water mass low in dissolved oxygen; the water at the surface and very close to shore usually has enough oxygen to support them for the short duration of most jubilees.[2]

Edwin B. May

[edit] History

While the occurrence of jubiliees in Mobile Bay predates European settlement in the region,[2] it is unknown exactly when or how these events came to be known by this name. The first recorded printed use of the term "jubilee" in this context was in the Mobile Daily Register (now the Mobile Press-Register) on July 29, 1912:[2]

...Hundreds of live sea crabs and fish... completely covered the beach at Point Clear and Zundels Sunday morning. A fisherman of experience in explaining the unusual occurrence stated that it was a "jubilee"... People who saw the wild scramble of fish and crabs on the sandy beach say they won't soon forget the sight.[5]

Mobile Daily Register, July 29, 1912

This was not, however, the first time the newspaper had covered the phenomenon; in his research, oceanographer Edwin B. May found several dozen mentions of similar events, the earliest dated back to July 17, 1867 and alludes to the fact that the phenomenon was known to have happened earlier [2]:

EXCITEMENT AMONG THE FISH—Yesterday all the fish in the bay seemed to be making for the Eastern shore. Large numbers of crabs, flounders and other fish were found at the water's edge, and taken in out of the wet. They were counted by the bushel. Annually this phenomenon occurs with the fish along the Eastern shore. They all appear to forsake the deep water, and swim and cluster in immense numbers to the shore.[7]

Mobile Daily Register, July 17, 1867

In an oral account from 1960 a local fishing captian named Frank Phillips stated that he had observed jubilee events for the previous 60 years, indicating that "[N]either [the] frequency nor intensity... had changed". He also stated that his father had also seen jubilee events "...during all his life."[1]

On this map, common Jubilee locations are indicated with red arrows; less-frequent locations are indicated with yellow arrows. download link
On this map, common Jubilee locations are indicated with red arrows; less-frequent locations are indicated with yellow arrows. download link

[edit] Favorable Conditions, Locations, and Frequency

Loesch studied jubilee events spanning 11 years, from 1946 - 1956, hoping to find patterns in the jubilee occurance. From this data he was able to conclude several things.

[edit] Month

Month Jubilees
June 8
July 3
Aug 21
Sept 5

Over the 11-year period studied, the 37 jubilees all occurred between the months of June and September, more frequently in August than all other months combined.[1]

[edit] Location

Jubilees are most common on the upper eastern shore of the bay, from Point Clear to slightly north of Daphne, but they also occur with less frequency south of Point Clear to Mullet Point, and on the Bay's western shore at Deer River and Dog River Point.

[edit] Time of Day

Most jubilees occur in the hours immediately preceding dawn.

[edit] Wind, Rain and Tide

There is disagreement as to what, if any, effect local rainfall can have on the jubilee. Almost all jubilees occur with an incoming tide, and an easterly wind.

[edit] Folk Consensus

Loesch lists five observations that he reported as having a strong concurrence among witnesses of several jubilees:

  1. Jubilees occur only in summer.
  2. They usually occur in early morning hours, i.e., before sunrise.
  3. The wind on the day previous and during the jubilee is from some easterly direction. If wind direction changes, the jubilee will cease.
  4. There is a rising tide during a jubilee; a change to falling will stop the jubilee.
  5. There are 2 water masses meeting, with the saltier water invading during a jubilee.

[edit] Jubilee in Local Culture

The length of coast that serves as the most popular jubilee grounds is densely populated.[1] When a jubilee is spotted people living near the shore will often ring bells and call out to alert their neighbors so that everyone can rush down to the water with washtubs, gigs and nets, and gather a bountiful -- and easily reaped -- harvest of seafood.[6] As jubilees only happen on warm summer nights, often in the early pre-dawn hours, the event takes on the aspect of a joyous community beach party, with lights shining into the Bay water.[3]

[edit] See also

"David Rencher's - Jubilee - Photos"

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Loesch, H. 1960. Sporadic Mass Shoreward Migrations of Demersal fish and Crustaceans in Mobile Bay, Alabama. Ecology. Volume 41:292-298
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h May, E.B. 1973. Extensive oxygen depletion in Mobile Bay, Alabama. Limnology and Oceanography 18:353-366.
  3. ^ a b c "Jubilee - City of Fairhope" (description of event), City of Fairhope, Alabama, 2005, webpage: COFairhopeCom-Jubilee.
  4. ^ a b Carr, Archie. A Naturalist in Florida: A Celebration of Eden. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994. pp. 22-28
  5. ^ a b "Mobile Daily Register Newspaper, July 29, 1912. Mobile, Alabama
  6. ^ a b "NOAA's National Ocean Service: Estuaries - Dissolved Oxygen" (jubilee), NOAA, March 24, 2005, OceanService.NOAA.gov webpage: NOAA-Jubilee.
  7. ^ "Mobile Daily Register Newspaper, July 17, 1867. Mobile, Alabama