Volunteers to scour the coast
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Jeff Benson
An array of colorful wildlife visits Upper Newport Bay every
mid-September, as nesting birds move out and migratory birds move in.
But something that can be seen year-round by bird watchers is the
mass of trash that migrates down storm drains and the main channels
and ends up on the bay’s islands and marshes.
Approximately 600 local volunteers, led by the Newport-Balboa
Rotary Club and including several hundred Boy Scouts and high school
students, will clean up trash in Upper Newport Bay Saturday to
coincide with International Coastal Cleanup Day.
Rotary Club member Rob Williams said that from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Saturday, these volunteers will steer shallow-water skiffs, 20-foot
pontoon boats, four Boston Whalers and nearly 50 canoes to the
islands. They’ll clean up Styrofoam cups, cigarette butts, golf
balls, plastic bags and other waste that washes up on Shellmaker and
other islands.
“The primary type of trash and the biggest contaminant is
Styrofoam,” Williams said. “It’s the most dangerous, because it acts
like a sponge to absorb toxic chemicals. They don’t break down, and a
lot of fish and wildlife eat Styrofoam.”
Back Bay Science Center environmental scientist John Scholl said
some birds, like the avocet, skim the water looking for small bugs,
only to swallow something not quite as delectable.
“If a Styrofoam piece is small enough and there’s some algae
covering it, it looks like something very edible,” he said. “It could
stay in their stomachs and they’ll die of starvation.”
Williams equated Upper Newport Bay’s 750-acre ecological reserve
with a filter that prevents trash from making its way to the ocean.
Last year, 250 volunteers, who don’t typically get the opportunity to
enter the Back Bay, filled a 40-cubic-yard Dumpster with 10 tons of
trash in a few hours, he said.
“In a short four hours, we do collect a tremendous amount of
stuff,” Williams said. “Without the help of youth and the general
public, it couldn’t be done.”
Scholl said volunteer scouts from the Newport Beach Boy Scout Sea
Base will assist with parking, registration and dumpster duty.
“The Sea Base has been especially wonderful because they’ve been
more than willing to help out when we have these kinds of events,”
Scholl said.
Anyone interested in volunteering for the cleanup from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. Saturday can meet at the Back Bay Science Center, 600 Shellmaker
Road, Newport Beach. The Newport Beach Fire Department will serve
free hamburgers to all participants, Williams said.
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