Restoration is bringing back the kelp
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Andrew Edwards
Kelp, also known as seaweed, is in McDonald’s apple pies, Sara Lee
frozen desserts and Corona beer. The trouble is, environmentalists
said, is that it’s not in the ocean.
“Over the last couple of decades [kelp has] kind of disappeared,”
diver Pat Welch said. “Because of El Nino and a lot of the building
that’s gone on inland, and pollution that comes down.”
Urban runoff and storms aren’t the only problems for kelp. Sea
urchins are also to blame, said marine biologist Nancy Caruso of the
Orange County Coastkeeper. The spiny invertebrates love to munch on
kelp, and the predators that feast on urchins, lobsters and
sheepshead fish, often end up on dinner plates, leaving a high number
of urchins on the ocean floor near Laguna.
“You have a huge population of purple sea urchins,” Caruso said.
A team of volunteer divers working with the Orange County
Coastkeeper under Caruso has spent three years working to reforest
California’s coast from San Diego to Santa Barbara in hopes that
California’s underwater realms will teem with healthy marine life.
“Over 800 different species live in kelp forests, it’s one of the
most important ecosystems in the world,” Caruso said.
This is the first year reforesting efforts will target the waters
off Laguna Beach, Caruso said. On July 30, divers worked in the
waters near the Surf and Sand Hotel, after a busy day spent under the
sea around Heisler Park on July 27.
The divers started out on Friday by loading a large icebox full of
kelp spores onto a donated patrol boat in Newport Bay. The brown,
mossy-looking spores are attached to small tiles that the divers
attach to rocky reefs using biodegradable rubber bands. Preparation
work includes making sure the reef offers good potential for growth
and relocating any hungry sea urchins.
“You put your urchins in a big burlap bag ... and take the urchins
away from the reef,” diver Ron Pedley said.
Kelp is the fastest growing marine plant Caruso said and can grow
two feet in one day. Volunteers have already seen the fruits of their
labor growing near Crystal Cove and other coastal areas.
“They’re all up to the surf, they’re 30-feet tall and they’re
reproducing on their own now,” Caruso said.
Volunteer diver David Stewart said he has ventured under the sea
when Laguna’s waters were thick with kelp forests and is glad to see
the plants return.
“It’s kind of nice to see the kelp come back, because I’ve been
diving in Laguna Beach since 1974 and I can remember the kelp,” he
said.
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