CoastKeeper cheers kelp comeback
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- The kelp is back, and Wheeler North couldn’t be
happier.
“I wouldn’t have believed it could happen,” said the Caltech emeritus
professor of environmental science.
North was referring to an Orange County CoastKeeper project to replant
the Newport coastline with giant kelp.
It’s something that people, including North, have tried before. But a
combination of water pollution and El Nino storms has, until recently,
conspired to wipe out their efforts.
CoastKeeper’s project, ongoing for about a year, seems to be meeting
with success. Some of the plants the group has raised from spores are now
15 feet tall. And Garry Brown, CoastKeeper’s director, thought it was
time for a little celebration.
Last week, that’s what the group did, holding a luncheon at the Yankee
Tavern restaurant. In recognition of North’s contributions to kelp
research, CoastKeeper announced it had a new name for its aquaculture
test site near Crystal Cove: Wheeler’s Reef.
“Before we came on the scene,” Brown said, “[North] was advising the
Santa Monica BayKeepers on their kelp program. And where they stopped, we
picked it up.”
Also at the lunch were a producer and a cameraman for an upcoming
National Geographic news program. The pair was working on a feature about
kelp restoration.
Ernie Kovacs, the producer, said the program is likely to air in
January or February.
At the head of the table, the 78-year-old North appeared to be pleased
about witnessing the fruits of a long career.
“I just needed a job,” he said, recalling his entry into the research
in 1956. At that time, the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in La Jolla
had just launched a major study of kelp growth.
“I was the only PhD around who could dive, so I was made for it,” he
said.
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