Galveston IslandInterpretive Guide |
Interpretive Guide of Galveston Island State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.
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STEWARDSHIP
Each habitat supports a diverse array of life. Beaches are
so much more than just sand and water. They support
and depend on a vast community of plants and animals.
The park’s lagoons, bay, and salt marshes serve critical
functions in the life cycles of many ocean species. Maintaining this ecological diversity depends on what we do.
INTERPRETIVE GUIDE
GALVESTON
ISLAND
How Can You Help? Explore the park, learn what
makes it unique and important, and tell others about
your discoveries. Post about your visit on social media.
You can join a beach cleanup, volunteer to guide others,
or plant native species in the park.
STATE PARK
YOUR VISIT TO GALVESTON ISLAND
GALVESTON ISLAND STATE PARK
HELP US protect the plants and animals that live here.
Plan your activities to minimize your impact on the environment. Stay on designated footpaths. Remove all trash
before you leave.
FEATURES 2,000 ACRES OF
VISIT other coastal parks such as Goose Island, Sea Rim,
and Mustang Island state parks. Your visits will help us
preserve the natural resources of the Texas coastline.
JOIN US for interpretative programs presented year-round
throughout the park. Check with the office or nature center
for information and program schedules.
AN
UPPER
GULF
COAST
BARRIER ISLAND ECOSYSTEM.
BARRIER ISLANDS MOVE AND
CHANGE CONSTANTLY THROUGH
THE ACTION OF WAVES, W I N D S
AND TIDES. BECAUSE BARRIER
DISCOVER the natural wonders of Galveston Island State
Park by hiking our trails on the land or paddling our trails
on the water.
ISLANDS LIKE GALVESTON SERVE
Galveston Island State Park
14901 FM 3005, Galveston, Texas 77554
(409) 737-1222 • www.tpwd.texas.gov/galveston/
LAND AND OCEAN, THEY SUPPORT
AS TRANSITION ZONES BETWEEN
A VARIETY OF DISTINCT
HABITATS, INCLUDING BEACHES,
PRAIRIES AND WETLANDS.
© 2023 TPWD. PWD BR P4504-042G (7/23)
TPWD receives funds from DHS and USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin (including limited English
proficiency), disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, visit tpwd.texas.
gov/nondiscrimination or call (512) 389-4800 for information on filing a complaint. To obtain information in an alternative format, contact TPWD on a Text
Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915, by Relay Texas at 7-1-1, (800) 735-2989, or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you speak a language other
than English and need assistance, email lep@tpwd.texas.gov. You can also contact Department of the Interior Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and Civil
Rights, 1849 C Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20240, and/or U.S. Department of Homeland Security Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL),
Mail Stop #0190 2707, Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave., S.E. Washington, D.C. 20528.
This publication can be found at tpwd.texas.gov/park-pubs
G A L V E S T O N
I S L A N D
S T A T E
P A R K
THE ISLAND’S PAST
Coastal Prairies define the land lying between the
P
eople came to Galveston Island for its natural resources.
Han Akokisa and Karankawa people hunted and fished
on Galveston Island for generations before European
explorers discovered the island in the sixteenth century.
Spaniard Cabeza de Vaca found himself shipwrecked on
Galveston Island in 1528. His journals provide our earliest
record of the native people who lived on the island at the
time. In 1817, pirate Jean Lafitte built outposts on Galveston
Island. At the end of its flight from the Mexican army in
1836, the first government of the Republic of Texas found
refuge on Galveston Island.
Later in the nineteenth century, Galveston became increasingly important as a port and entry point for immigrants
from many countries. In 1890 land speculators tried but
failed to develop what is now Galveston Island State Park
into a town site: South Galveston. The prominent Stewart
family then acquired the land that is now the park and used
it for ranching and as a gathering place for the politically
powerful during the first half of the twentieth century.
GILCREASE MUSEUM
How Can You Help? Please don’t pocket the past. If you
find any artifacts at the park, leave them where you found
them and tell a ranger. You can also help preserve the legacy
of the park by staying in one of the restored, historic residences once used by the Stewart family and their guests.
Willet
Beaches and Dunes change constantly. Wind
and water continually reshape the island’s shores. At
Galveston Island State Park, plants and animals that live
on the beach and dunes must be well adapted to survive
the harsh conditions created by these changes.
Beach life includes the Laughing Gulls, Piping Plovers,
Sanderlings, and Willets that eagerly feed along the
shoreline. Sargassum seaweed plays a key role in building
and maintaining the dunes while sustaining other plants
and animals that breathe life into the beach every day.
Panicum, Morning Glory, and Primrose plants decorate
the beach while helping to stabilize the dunes. The dunes,
in turn, shield the rest of the island from wind and waves.
How Can You Help? To protect the beach, give space to
nesting shorebirds, stay out of the dunes, and pick up litter.
If you bring it with you, please take it with you. If it’s not
litter, then leave it for the beach.
Sargassum seaweed
beach and dunes and the bay. Once coastal prairie habitat
dominated the Galveston Island landscape, dotted only
occasionally with small groves of Live Oak called “mottes.”
The native grasses that prairie animals depend on have largely
disappeared under the assault of past ranching practices,
human development, and invasive plants that carpet much of
the island now. Today less than 1% of Texas coastal prairies
remain, making them one of the most endangered habitats.
Behind the dunes, wind and water carve out small depressions
in the earth called “swales.” These swales collect rainwater
and provide a source of fresh water for the birds, coyotes,
opossums, rabbits, and snakes that make their home in the
Galveston Island coastal prairie.
How Can You Help? You can help restore and protect the
prairies by staying on the trails while birding or hiking at
the park and share your experiences and photos with others.
If you live nearby, plant native prairie grasses in your yard
or talk to a ranger about helping with habitat restoration
here at the park.
White Ibis over
a prairie wetland
Sandhill Cranes
in the prairie
Great Blue Heron
Salt Marsh Wetlands lie beyond the prairie’s
edge, on the bay side of the island, and form a transition
zone where land gradually gives way to water. In this
murky world, many fish and other marine animals begin
their lives. Spotted Seatrout, Red Drum, Flounder, Blue
Crab, and Shrimp all depend on the shallow waters and
tangles of seagrasses for refuge. Great Blue Herons,
Snowy Egrets, and Roseate Spoonbills gather in the salt
marshes to feed on the fish and crustaceans.
Wetlands are critical to protecting the environment by
filtering impurities from the water and absorbing excess
water from storms. They also offer park visitors opportunities for sunset views, fishing, crabbing, and ten miles of
paddling trails at Galveston Island State Park.
How Can You Help? The park has built new wetlands
and a rock breakwater to protect them. You can protect
these by obeying boat wake regulations. Staying on
designated hiking trails also helps preserve habitat and
control erosion. To protect submerged seagrass beds, lift
your engine and let your boat drift or move it solely by a
pole or trolling motor.