Kelp-forest project growing
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Alicia Robinson
Donning wetsuits, fins and in one case a bathing cap, a half-dozen
members of Newport Beach’s Coastal/Bay Water Quality Advisory
Committee plunged into the ocean off Crystal Cove Thursday. Their
mission was to check out a kelp-reforestation project undertaken by
Orange County CoastKeeper, a Newport Beach water-quality watchdog
group.
The project, started in 2001, was intended to restore
once-abundant kelp forests that have suffered from man-made hazards
such as water pollution and also from natural predators. CoastKeeper
grows kelp on tiles, places them underwater, and the plants take
root.
The kelp reforestation has been a success, said Diane Witmer, a
volunteer with Orange County CoastKeeper. The group has established
five kelp sites in Crystal Cove and, more recently, two in Laguna
Beach. Fish counts at the older kelp sites show the diversity of
aquatic life there has increased, Witmer said. The kelp is important
because it help provides natural habitat.
“That’s pretty exciting for us to know that it’s not only
successful in growing the kelp, but it’s helping the marine life,”
Witmer said.
Giant kelp, a brownish-green plant with crinkly leaves, can grow
as much as two feet a day in ideal conditions. Thursday’s jaunt
aboard Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway’s boat allowed water-quality
committee members to see how the kelp is thriving, thanks to an
underwater video camera connected to a monitor on the boat.
Environmental activist Jack Skinner, a member of the water-quality
committee, got into the water to see the kelp for himself. He
remembers how abundant the kelp used to be about 50 years ago, and
he’s glad to see it growing well again, he said.
“Maybe this is a significant beginning of the comeback of the
former kelp beds that used to cover the area,” he said.
The committee also has thrived since it was formed in the late
1980s to combat water-quality problems in Newport Bay, Skinner said.
Many members belong to environmental groups and are stressing
education as a way to prevent water pollution, he said.
For the kelp project, CoastKeeper is planning to develop new
planting sites, possibly in Laguna Beach or on reefs west of the
Newport Pier, Orange County CoastKeeper Program Director Randy Seton
said.
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