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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: Santa Monica

Santa Monica, California located in Los Angeles County is a popular eco-friendly coastal destination for families, couples, tourists and Southern California beachgoers.

Did you know that the Aquarist staff at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium collects the majority of the animals we exhibit? We don’t order these animals online and we don’t run to the local store to buy a new fish or invertebrates. A Scientific Collections Permit from the California Department of Fish and Game allows us to dive and collect organisms for display at the Aquarium. But every once in a while, when we are looking for new, elusive and hard to find animals, we need to call out to our friends in the network.

Over the years, the Aquarium staff has developed very special relationships with neighboring aquaria and marine science learning facilities. This unique network helps all of us in the fight for marine conservation and the pursuit of marine science.

One special relationship is with the folks at the Catalina Island Marine Institute, CIMI. Over the years we have had the pleasure of using their facilities when we dive and collect animals in the waters surrounding Catalina. We also have helped each other by sharing animals, knowledge and support. In fact, there are current staff members at the Aquarium that used to work at CIMI and some CIMI staffers that first worked as interns at the Aquarium!

Last week, as the CIMI camps closed for the winter break, we received many new animals from Camp Fox and Camp Toyon, including sunflower sea stars, a juvenile sheephead and the rare slate pencil urchin, Eucidaris. The animals came over on the ferry, transported in coolers with battery-operated aerators. Some of these animals will become part of the Aquarium’s permanent collections, but some will live here temporarily. Our staff will care for these critters as if they were our own and once the CIMI camps reopen in January, the Aquarium staff will carefully pack up the animals in transport coolers to sail back across to Santa Catalina Island.

Most of these animals are currently being held off exhibit in quarantine to ensure they are acclimating to their new environment. We hope to exhibit some of the species after the new year, so please grab your friends and family and visit the Aquarium to see what’s new. 



You might have already heard about the awesome fish that washed up in Malibu last week. It was more than 10 feet long, shaped like a ribbon, and is a very unusual visitor to our beaches. This oarfish, which was correctly identified by an eight-year-old who came across it lying on the beach, is a very rarely seen deep sea fish.

In fact, there are only a couple of known cases in which oarfish have come ashore.They can grow up to 35 feet long and are awesome looking, with silver scales and bright red fins, and are actually thought to be the original sea serpents that appear in sailor legends. Unfortunately, they only come to shore when they are close to death, and this fish, while originally spotted live and in the water, died shortly afterwards and washed ashore.

It was sent to the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, which will conduct tests and possibly put this awesome creature on display. If you’ve been to the the Natural History Museum, you might have already seen the 14 foot oarfish in a glass case in the grand foyer. That specimen washed ashore on Catalina, but only after scientists from the Wrigley Marine Science Center got some photos of it swimming in Big Fisherman Cove.  Having such a rare creature wash up in our own backyard is exciting for everyone, but especially for the SoCal marine science community!

Read more in the LA Times.



Go Native

Native plant seekers on the Westside have a new destination, and it’s surprisingly close to home. A new nursery is available by the Veterans’ Affairs building in Westwood and the location is no coincidence. Recently, the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden teamed up with the VA of Greater Los Angeles Health Care System. The partnership enables veterans to learn first hand about the propagation, care and maintenance of California native plants as a therapy and work program. The nursery, dubbed Grow Native, is located on VA property and encompases 15 acres. The idea of the program is to help give veterans a competitive edge in the eco job market upon completion. Hours and entry for the nursery varies, so check out the nursery website for all information.

Photo: epSos.de courtesy of Flickr



If you celebrate Christmas, but mourn the environmental impacts of all those packages, paper and plastic scraps and shipped-in Douglas Firs, we have the answer for you!  There’s an awesome company called The Living Christmas Co. that rents living Christmas trees. They’ll deliver them and pick them up, all through the LA area, and you can even arrange to have the same tree year after year.  They also have an online eco-friendly holiday decor store.  What an awesome way to try to keep Christmas as earth-friendly as possible. So pick up that tofurkey, give out handmade gifts, and rent a living Christmas tree!



In an incredible vote, the LA County Board of Supervisors voted yesterday to ban the distribution of plastic bags throughout all of unincorporated LA County. This landmark ruling is an example for the state, and municipalities all over the country. Read more on Mark Gold’s blog, Spouting Off, or check out Heal the Bay’s press release.



In an interesting twist, Los Angeles County is the new statewide leader on breaking Californians’ 19-billion-a-year addiction to single-use shopping bags. The Board of Supervisors voted 3-1 today to ban plastic and paper bags in unincorporated areas of the county and allow grocery stores, drug stores and convenience stores to charge a dime for green paper bags. The ordinance is the farthest-reaching bag ban ordinance in California and should result in a 600 million-bag-a-year reduction in the county.

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We all deserve to swim in clean water. But everyone needs clean drinking water too. In many parts of the world, clean water is an absolute luxury, and the lack of clean water leads to disease and death. But here in California, there are towns where the over-use of nitrate fertilizers has led to contaminated water supplies. Literally, people’s faucets are pouring out water that is absolutely undrinkable because of the high levels of nitrates.  Read more about it in the LA Times.



Last weekend the Plastic Pollution Coalition hosted a TEDx event in Santa Monica on the Not So Great Pacific Garbage Patch. The gathering was well attended by celebrities (Jackson Browne, Ben Lear, Daphne Zuniga and Ed Begley Jr.), explorers (Dr. Sylvia Earle, Charlie Moore, Fabien Cousteau and David De Rothschild) and numerous other environmental leaders fighting against the scourge of plastic pollution. The well-produced evening beamed via webcast globally and included a blend of dramatic footage from plastic contaminated gyres (including a short film from the 5 Gyres expeditions from Marcus Ericsen and Anna Cummins), performances from Lear, Browne and others, and solutions-oriented talks from such Heal the Bay friends as Long Beach Vice Mayor Suja Lowenthal, Lisa Boyle and Leslie Tamminen.

Attendees also saw the unveiling of an ad campaign from Leo Burnett that asks people to become citizens of the Crapola Islands (also known as the Pacific Garbage Patch) – the only nation we want to disappear. Two speakers presented potential solutions that won’t have a positive impact on the global marine debris crisis. Patrick Kenney of Green Harvest Technologies spoke about a green future with bioplastics. Although there are many eco-advantages to bioplastics, especially in areas with effective composting programs, solving the plastic pollution problems in our oceans is not one of them.

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The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board voted 4-1 Thursday, November 4, to approve tough, new marine debris limits for Santa Monica Bay. The limits, based on 11 similar trash Total Maximum Daily Loads in the Los Angeles region, give Santa Monica Bay watershed cities, Los Angeles County and land management agencies like State Parks, eight years to reduce the amount of trash going into the Bay to zero. Compliance  can be met by installing full capture mechanisms like trash screens and inserts or other state-approved devices.  All devices must be adequately designed, operated and maintained to meet state requirements. Full adherence is mandated within eight years.

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Today’s post is from Seth Lawrence, aquarist at Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium. Seth recently got an unexpected opportunity to dive following an equipment accident. He was astonished by what he found lurking right in our backyard, below the Santa Monica Pier.

As part of my job, I spent a recent morning out in the beautiful water at Bluff Cove in Palos Verdes, free diving to collect kelp for our Aquarium exhibits. There was nothing I would rather do than get back into the water, I thought, as we headed back to the Aquarium.  It happened to be my lucky day, because when we returned, we learned that a group of students on a field trip that morning had lost a Van Dorn bottle, a piece of our equipment used to collect water samples, off the end of the Pier. The collecting device (retailing at about $300) consists of a clear tube with removable caps at both ends. The line used to lower it snapped while the students were trying to collect water off the end of the Pier. Whoops!

Staff members Jose Bacallao, Nick Fash and I had a general idea of where it had sunk, but due to current and swell action, it could have been anywhere. I was excited about diving under the Santa Monica Pier, as it was my first time. As we suited up and entered the water I envisioned finding the Van Dorn and lost treasures. I was sure people dropped things off the Pier accidentally all the time.

As we began to look for the bottle (and all the treasure I expected to find), I was horrified. Instead of animals swimming around and invertebrates clinging to the pier pilings, I saw trash, trash and more trash. I saw fish that appeared to have been caught but were not worth keeping, slashed and tossed back into the ocean as trash. We had no luck as we circled, looking for the Van Dorn that we now suspected was entangled by debris. We called the search off, hoping the swell would bring the lost equipment to the beach. I decided to take one more dive down in an area that we had already searched over and over. This time, there it was, in the barren sand. With the Van Dorn in tow we swam back to the beach talking about how, even with Heal the Bay’s presence here on the Pier, there is still an abundance of trash.

I felt deflated, but at the same time very proud to work for an organization that is making strides with the support of thousands of volunteers like you.