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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: Marine Protected Areas

Thousands of tiny golden fish dart out of the way as I kick through the kelp forest — it’s amazing that they’re already learning to swim from predators at an early age. As I round the edge of a large rocky reef fringing Santa Cruz Island, I am enveloped yet again in a cloud of tiny marine animals and larvae — these ones looking more like itsy-bitsy lobster babies. Up above me, I see dozens of juvenile blue rockfish, only a few inches in length, floating amidst the strands of giant kelp. I’ve never experienced a dive like this before. It must be baby season in the kelp forest, and I’ve dove into their nursery.

Although the sheer amount of baby fish and crustaceans is impressive enough, one of my favorite animals zooms into view. With long whiskers, big black eyes, and a spotted coat, a curious harbor seal begins to play a little peek-a-boo with me in the kelp. Seeing large predators, like harbor seals, is a good indicator of a healthy ecosystem. A large school of mackerel divides and darts away from the deft predator. I’m always excited (and a bit nervous) when I see large schools of fish suddenly change direction, and a dark shadow passes over me. It usually means a predator such as a shark or marine mammal is in pursuit of its prey. I float coolly in the giant kelp forest, watching the harbor seal hunt, weaving its way around and through the school of fish.

What I experienced underwater is in a marine reserve at our local Channel Islands — a marine protected area (MPA) where all marine life can thrive, free from fishing or harvest. The marine reserves at the Channel Islands have been in place for fewer than 10 years, but the ecosystems are already so much healthier! Along the Los Angeles shoreline, we also have brand-new MPAs in Malibu and Palos Verdes, which were established on Jan. 1, 2012. Given a little time, perhaps our local MPAs could flourish like those at the nearby Channel Islands. These areas have been designated along key stretches of coast to help marine life recover and restore our fisheries. Yet, the majority of the Southern California coast is still open to fishing.

To support our local MPAs, USC Sea Grant and Resources Legacy Fund Foundation have generously funded Heal the Bay’s MPA Watch citizen science monitoring program, which allows volunteers to survey human uses within and outside of MPAs in Los Angeles. This summer, Heal the Bay’s interns, volunteers, and staff worked together to analyze and write our first MPA Watch Data Analysis & Results Report. Our 27-page report includes data from 554 surveys in Malibu and Palos Verdes spanning 17 months in 2011 and 2012. We found that the most common coastal uses in the study areas are non-consumptive activities — 99% of the coastal uses surveyed to date are non-consumptive recreational activities. Unfortunately, in both Malibu’s and Palos Verdes’ MPAs, some active consumptive activities are present in 2012, the majority of which is shore-based rod/reel fishing (80+ individuals). Although this is a small percentage of the overall ocean uses in these areas, these findings highlight the importance of education and outreach about the new MPAs to the shore-angling community.

Tracking human uses in these new MPAs is important as the data can be used with ecological surveys to help give a more complete picture of ecosystem health, as well as inform education and enforcement actions. Like the Channel Islands MPAs, I look forward to the marine life and ecosystems in our local coastal MPAs in Malibu and in Palos Verdes will also begin to thrive and to seed areas outside of the MPAs.

–Dana Roeber Murray

Heal the Bay Marine & Coastal Scientist

Want to help survey new Marine Protected Areas? Join MPA Watch.

Contact Dana Murray for more information.




It’s a tough job to stroll along two of the most remarkable beach areas in California, but someone’s got to do it. Why not you?

On July 24 and 28, Heal the Bay is training volunteers to help monitor marine protected areas (MPAs) in Malibu and Palos Verdes. Volunteers collect observational data on coastal uses in MPAs; data which is then used by the California Department of Fish & Game to help with management and compliance. Essentially we want to find out how people are using this newly-established statewide network of MPAs.

“Our volunteer citizen scientists come from varied backgrounds – from social workers to students – but all our volunteers have one thing in common: a passion for the sea,” says Dana Roeber Murray, Heal the Bay’s coastal scientist. Dana started the MPA Watch program in early 2011 to train local citizens on MPA monitoring and has trained over 70 volunteers to date.

“It took years of collaboration with scientists, fishermen, government, and other non-profits to see these protected areas enacted,” Dana says. “We worked hard up and down the state to make it happen. So it’s been very gratifying to see the public embracing MPAs and volunteering their time to help monitor their effectiveness.”

MPA Watch volunteers commit to attending one classroom and one field training to become citizen scientists, then go on to survey the coast at least four times a month. For more information, check out our MPA Watch FAQs or contact contact Dana.

Trainings are only offered a few times a year, so reserve your spot and sign up now.



June 12, 2012 — Most teenagers don’t even know what a Marine Protected Area (MPA) even is. Then there’s Zola Berger-Schmitz, who at age 13 earned a prestigious Heal the Bay Super Healer award for her tireless work to help establish MPAs off the California coast.

Now 15, Zola was recently honored for her environmental achievements by Action For Nature, receiving the group’s Young Eco-Hero Award for “speaking out for her generation.”

“Zola was very involved advocating for MPAs here in Southern California,” says Sarah Sikich, Heal the Bay’s Coastal Resources Director. “She even drove up to Monterey to testify at a Fish and Game Commission hearing on her spring break and showed a video about kids supporting MPAs that she produced.”

More recently, Sarah notes, Zola helped gather student support for the L.A. City single-use plastic bag ban. “She’s been a great volunteer, and is extremely driven for such a young age.”

Action For Nature’s 2012 International Young Eco-Hero Award recognizes young people 8 to 16 years old for their accomplishments to “preserve and protect the Earth upon which all life depends.” See the full list of honorees.

You can also support Heal the Bay’s work to protect marine life: Join an MPA Watch training.

Donate now to sustain this crucial conservation program.

Donate to Heal the Bay




California created another group of ocean protection zones on Wednesday, putting the finishing touches on a vast network of protected areas that dot the sea from Mexico to the Oregon border.

The Fish & Game Commission voted unanimously to approve the new zones off the state’s far north coast from Point Arena in Mendocino County to the Oregon border, where fishing is restricted or banned outright in areas.

“We are poised to return California’s marine resources to the sustainable abundance we all once enjoyed,” said Richard Rogers, a commission member from Santa Barbara, choking up as he cast his vote after more than seven years of work on the project.

The vote was an outgrowth of the 1999 Marine Life Protection Act, which called for a system of marine protected areas along the coast based on scientific study and years of public input.



June 7, 2012

Today’s guest blogger is Sarah Sikich, Heal the Bay’s coastal resources director

 Just in time for World Oceans Day, the Fish and Game Commission in a 3-0 vote, designated new marine protected areas (MPAs) along the North Coast (CA/OR border to Alder Creek near Point Arena in Mendocino County). This is a major milestone that completes the statewide network of underwater parks in California’s coastal waters.

These new MPAs were designated under the Marine Life Protection Act, a visionary law enacted in 1999 that called for a new approach to ocean management, and enlisted local fishermen, scientists, business and tribal leaders and conservationists to plan science-based protections for their part of the state. Heal the Bay played a major role in the creation of Southern California’s MPAs by sitting on a panel of stakeholders that designed our local set of underwater parks that went into effect on January 1 of this year.

California’s network of underwater parks now includes 119 MPAs, five recreational management areas, and 15 special closures, representing about 16% of all open coast state waters. With only about half of these areas designated as no-take marine reserves, the vast majority of California’s coast is open to fishing. The new North Coast MPAs are expected to go into effect by early 2013.

As an investment to protect ocean health for future generations, MPAs safeguard key areas for marine life and their associated habitats. They will help ensure a vibrant coastal environment that delights visitors, supports local businesses, and makes local places, like Malibu Palos Verdes, and Catalina a great place to enjoy California’s coast and ocean.

With World Oceans Day just days away, Californians can be proud about the legacy we’re leaving for our kids and grandkids.

Visit the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium or join us on June 9 for the Paddleboard Race and Ocean Festival to help celebrate.

Volunteer for our MPA Watch program to help monitor these new underwater parks.

 



June 4, 2012

The California Travel Association (CTA) will bestow its annual Tourism Stewardship of the Year award this week to Heal the Bay, recognizing us for doing the most to “protect, preserve, restore, improve, expand, or otherwise enhance California’s natural, cultural, or historical treasures.”

In honoring Heal the Bay, the CTA noted our education and advocacy initiatives to protect oceans statewide and beautify beaches for the millions of people who visit California each year, including:

  • The Beach Report Card® that provides weekly water quality grades to more than 500 California beaches;
  • Our advocacy work to help create newly established Marine Protected Areas off the coast of Southern California;
  • The ongoing education of nearly 100,000 visitors to Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium and
  • Our contribution to ending the scourge of pollution on our shores by sponsoring a number of regional and statewide measures that have significantly reduced urban runoff and marine debris.

Heal the Bay’s Coastal Resources Director, Sarah Sikich, will accept the award on Heal the Bay’s behalf during an event organized by the state’s leading travel trade organization during its annual convention June 4-6 in Sacramento. Heal the Bay is among seven honorees designated by the CTA, including surf industry legend Jack O’Neill, the Francis Ford Coppola winery and Napa Valley chef Michael Chiarello.

“Protecting the California coastline isn’t just good for the environment,” said Sikich. “It’s good for the statewide economy. The millions of visitors who come to our beaches each year expect clean water and sand. We all have a duty to protect what we love.”

Read more.

Learn more about all the ways you can help Heal the Bay.

Full information on all the award winners here.



Today’s guest blogger is Sarah Sikich, Heal the Bay’s coastal resources director

California lost a coastal hero this week, but it is a life to be celebrated. After a long battle with lung cancer, Peter Douglas passed away. I found out about this loss Tuesday morning, on my way to a meeting to celebrate our new South Coast marine protected areas and to strategize on ways to make implementation of these critically needed underwater parks as successful as possible.

Driving from Los Angeles to Crystal Cove, there were signs of Peter all along the way: projects he improved through leading his staff to prioritize coastal protection; access points he helped open; and a San Onofre State Beach that would look quite different if the proposed toll road leading to it wasn’t defeated under Peter’s leadership a few years ago.

Peter’s dedication and focus on coastal protection was extraordinary. He began his early career by co-authoring a state ballot initiative, Prop. 20, that created the Coastal Commission in 1972. A few years later he helped write the Coastal Act to formally create the Coastal Commission and establish goals and means to protect coastal resources and critically evaluate development along California’s coast.

Under his decades of leadership as the executive director of the Coastal Commission, he facilitated access to hundreds of miles of coastline by opening up dozens of coastal accessways along our coast, he curtailed industrialization of Southern California’s shores by defeating projects like the Cabrillo liquefied natural gas terminal off Malibu’s coast, and affected many other proposed projects. He will long live on as an environmental leader and coastal champion.

After a day of MPA meetings, Tuesday concluded with an event at MacGillivray Freeman Films, the producers of many inspirational IMAX films about the ocean’s wonders. The evening event opened with a moment of remembrance for Peter, and everyone among the group reflected on his inspiration. Dr. Jane Lubchenco, the Administrator of NOAA and another incredible ocean hero, gave a moving speech that night. She encouraged the group of California ocean advocates, researchers, and educators to continue our engagement on new and challenging issues, and tirelessly work to find innovative solutions to the problems facing our coasts and oceans. Her words are exemplary of the type of leadership Peter provided over the past several decades. In a night dedicated to Peter, I think it rang especially loud to all of us.



Who wouldn’t want a job that involves strolling along some of the most beautiful beaches in L.A.? It’s not a paid gig, but you get to help protect what you love – the ocean! Heal the Bay is now training volunteers to help monitor our new marine protected areas (MPAs) in Point Dume and Palos Verdes. Volunteers collect observational data on coastal uses in MPAs; data which is then used by the California Department of Fish & Game to help with management and compliance.

“Our volunteer citizen scientists come from varied backgrounds – from social workers to students – but all our volunteers have one thing in common: a passion for the sea,” says Dana Roeber Murray, Heal the Bay’s coastal scientist. Dana started the MPA Watch program in early 2011 to train local citizens on MPA monitoring and has trained over 60 volunteers to date.

“It took years of collaboration with scientists, fishermen, government, and other non-profits to see these protected areas enacted,” Dana says. “We worked hard up and down the state to make it happen. So it’s been very gratifying to see the public embracing MPAs and volunteering their time to help monitor their effectiveness.”

MPA Watch volunteers commit to attending one classroom and one field training to become citizen scientists, then go on to survey the coast at least four times a month. Heal the Bay also offers MPA Watch summer internship opportunities for people eager to get more deeply involved with Heal the Bay’s Science and Policy department.  For more information, check out our MPA Watch FAQs or contact Dana. 

Trainings are only offered a few times a year, so reserve your spot and sign up now.



Medina Rodriguez named Board chair; Exec Director Hall assumes top staff post

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (Jan. 24, 2012) – Community leader Stephanie Medina Rodriguez has been appointed to a two-year term as chairman of Heal the Bay’s board of directors as part of a new management team announced today by the regional environmental group.
 
Karin Hall, Heal the Bay’s longtime executive director, will take over staff leadership of the organization, now in its 27th year. 
 
President Mark Gold will leave Heal the Bay to accept a post at UCLA on Jan. 27, retaining his seat on the board of directors. The board has decided to eliminate the position of president, a job it created for Gold in 2006.
 
Medina Rodriguez, who has served on the board for eight years, succeeds Matthew Hart, who completed his chairmanship Jan. 19. She is an Emmy Award-winning media executive with decades of experience in broadcast journalism, community relations and marketing. She now oversees corporate initiative marketing at KTLA5 Television in Los Angeles, after a previous stint as Director of Public Affairs at CBS2 and KCAL9.
 
Medina Rodriguez has won two Emmys for producing one-hour specials focused on Heal the Bay’s annual Coastal Cleanup Day and other ocean-related issues. A San Fernando Valley resident, she has played a critical role in educating inland communities about ocean protection and helping connect stewardship of their neighborhoods to the health of the coastline.
 
“As we transition into a new phase for the organization, I’m looking forward to working closely with the dedicated board and staff to extend our reach throughout Southern California — the South Bay, the San Fernando Valley and the Latino community,” said Medina Rodriguez. “Education will remain a priority for Heal the Bay, rooted in strong science and advocacy. There is no better time to become a member, get involved and help protect what we love.”  
 
Hall, a 10-year veteran of Heal the Bay, will provide day-to-day management and strategic direction for the organization.  Before joining Heal the Bay, Hall spent 15 years as a senior advertising executive at several prominent national advertising firms. She managed high- profile accounts such as Starbucks, Expedia, DIRECTV, Earthlink, and Acura.
 
“I am proud and humbled to lead Heal the Bay,” said Hall, who has served as executive director since 2006. “We have an incredible team of dedicated professionals and volunteers who are making a difference every day. Our mission of protecting people and nature, teaching future generations, and enjoying the oceans and waterways is essential to a vibrant, healthy Southern California.”
 
Under Hall’s direction, Heal the Bay staff will continue to focus on four key policy issues this year: 
  • The implementation of Marine Protected Areas off the coast of Southern California. Heal the Bay is assisting the state Department of Fish & Game gather research to help educate the public about the boundaries, which took effect Jan. 1.
  • Coordinating with Assembly member Julia Brownley on her pending bill to enact a statewide ban on the distribution of environmentally and fiscally wasteful single-use plastic bags. Heal the Bay also has led the drive for a ban in the city of Los Angeles that is expected to be enacted this spring.
  • Working with local school districts to implement environmental literacy materials developed by National Geographic and Heal the Bay into K-12 curriculum statewide.
  • Advocating for a countywide storm water permit that will reduce polluted runoff to levels that protect public health and aquatic life
More about Medina Rodriguez and Hall
 
Los Angeles City Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa appointed Medina Rodriguez to the Transportation Board of Commissioners in 2008. She also serves on the board of Special Olympics Southern California and Full Circle Learning. She has served on the boards and advisory committees of Asian Pacific American Legal Center, American Cancer Society, American Heart Association and Economic Alliance of the San Fernando Valley. 
 
Hall joined Heal the Bay in 2002 as Associate Director. Her background in Fortune 500 business and strategic planning, marketing, public affairs and political/grassroots organizing experience has helped spur Heal the Bay’s rapid growth during the past decade. Hall also sits on the board of the environmental education organization Sustainable Works. 
 
About Heal the Bay
 
Heal the Bay is a nonprofit environmental organization that makes Southern California coastal waters and watersheds, including Santa Monica Bay, safe, healthy and clean. We use science, education, community action and advocacy to achieve our mission. 
 
Contact: Matthew King, Heal the Bay, (310) 451-1500, x 137; cell 310-463-6266
 
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Heal the Bay volunteers who helped make the new marine protected areas (MPAs) a reality can now join our new citizen scientist program, MPA Watch. Staff scientist Dana Murray, who manages the program, says you don’t need to be an expert to lend a hand.

“We had many supporters and people who worked hard to get MPAs approved in L.A. County,” she said. “We thought this was a good way for people to stay involved.”

Pairs of volunteers with binoculars, clipboards and cameras already have started canvassing the beaches, recording data on what they see people doing, from scuba diving to commercial squid fishing.

Join Dana and become an official steward of the sea at two upcoming classes.

Can’t make it this week? For future trainings, contact Dana.

Or, celebrate Underwater Parks Day with us Sat., January 21 at Point Dume and our Aquarium.

Learn more.