Archive for the ‘sea life’ Category

Agencies and Public Cooperate to Protect Resources in MPAs

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Some FFMR volunteers have recently been trained to monitor and report activity within the Montara State Marine Reserve of which FMR is a part. (See page 11 of our December 2011 newsletter for more about our local monitors.) They and other citizens all along the California coast have signed up to help protect the Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) that have been established over the past few years. Observing through binoculars, the monitors will track and report activities such as fishing, setting crab pots, and other illegal harvesting.

Enforcing the no-take law falls to the extremely understaffed California Department of Fish and Game. The department has just one large vessel plying the waters along the Central and Northern California coast, and fewer wardens per capita than any other coastal state. Poachers take advantage of wardens being spread so thin; recently crab traps were set within the boundaries of Montara State Marine Reserve. The low fines meted out by judges for poaching, set against the current price of crab, makes the gamble worth taking for some fishermen. Read more about the challenge of protecting MPAs in this San Jose Mercury News article.

Climate Change Effects at FMR

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011
Sunset from Seal Cove Beach

Sunset from Seal Cove Beach

Retired FMR Supervising Ranger Bob Breen is one of the experts interviewed in a short news segment about climate change impacts in the bay area. Bob walks the beach at FMR as he talks with Doug McConnell about the changes he has already seen as the water warms and the sweeping changes he expects to witness as the trend continues.

View the video by clicking this link.

The segment first aired on December 9, 2011.

Researchers Study Jellies to Understand Global Ocean Changes

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Marine habitats around the world are undergoing changes caused by a variety of sources ranging from natural disasters to agricultural runoff. Marine creatures are being exposed to such changes in sea water as temperature, salinity, and nutrient load.

Jellies seem to be finding these changes beneficial. They are thriving. Jelly populations are exploding around the world, with swarms of the stinging creatures making headlines for shutting down nuclear power plants in Japan, Scotland, and Israel. Some individual jellies have grown to sizes that once were the domain of B list science fiction movies, shredding commercial fishing nets into which they blunder.

Researchers are now studying sea nettles off the New Jersey coast in hopes of understanding the driving factors behind these population explosions.