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Monterey Bay: A Jewel in Our Own Backyard ENGR 100w Spring 2009 Where is Monterey Bay Why is Monterey Bay Unique • Monterey submarine canyon is one of the largest underwater canyons in the world • Deepest part 3,600 m below the surface (> 2 miles) • Shelf ~1 mile below surface (about depth of Grand Canyon) • Habitat for many types of marine life Marine Life • Nation’s largest kelp • forest 33 species of marine mammals • 94 species of birds • 345 species of fish • invertebrates Monterey Bay Habitats • Kelp forest – Harbor seal, sea otter, rockfish and other fish, octopus, sea stars, snails, cormorants • Sandy beaches – Shrimp, sand crabs, birds, topsmelt • Coastal dunes – Salt grass, geese and other birds • Rocky intertidal – Tide pools: snails, crabs, sea stars, anemones, chitons, limpids, mussels, etc. • Deep ocean – Tuna, whales, shark, sea turtle, elephant seal, jellies, sea cucumber, lobster Historical Context • Site of John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row • Sardines were abundant in the early part of 1900s • Largest fishery in Western hemisphere – 726,000 tons of sardines during the peak season of 1936 • 19 canneries in Monterey • 1940s – sardines disappeared – became like a • ghost town Sardines are returning – seems to be a natural cycle – 50,000 tons of sardines in 2004 Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary • Federally protected • • • marine area Designated in 1992 13,730 square kilometers (5360 square miles) Larger than Yellowstone or Yosemite National Park Purpose of Marine Sanctuary • Protect resources – marine life, kelp forest, beaches, etc. • Preserve cultural landmarks – shipwrecks, prehistoric archeological sites, etc. • Research – monitor health of marine species – changes in habitats – seafloor mapping • Education • Public use Marine Sanctuary Management • No oil drilling • No dumping • Fishing regulated • Wastewater regulated Current Issues in Monterey Bay • Agricultural runoff – pesticides, sediment, chemicals such as nitrogen & phosphorous, bacteria • Urban runoff (storm water) – oil, grease, pesticides, herbicides, soil, pet droppings, etc. • Kelp harvesting • Desalination • CO2 absorption low oxygen dead zones • Shipping Albatross • Eat squid and fish eggs floating • • • • on water Floating plastics look like food Pick it up and feed to young 40% of Laysan albatross chicks die from eating plastic bottle caps Found in a baby chick stomach http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/oc eanissues/plastics_albatross/makana.aspx – “red, blue and orange bottle caps, a black spray nozzle, part of a green comb, a white golf tee Plastics from one albatross stomach and a clump of tiny dark squid http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/oceanissues/plastics_albatross /makana.aspx beaks ensnared in a tangle of fishing line” (Weiss, 2006) Sea Otter Credit: Scott Roland www.defenders.org/wildlife_and_habitat/ wildlife/sea_otter.php • Largest member of weasel family (45-65 lbs) • Eat 25 % of weight each day – Sea urchins, abalone, mussels, clams, crabs, snails, & ~40 other marine species • Important to health of kelp forest – Eats sea urchins, which feed on kelp • Fur is most dense of any animal ~1 million hairs/in2 • Population devastated by fur trading in 19th century – 300,000 ~1000-2000 in early 1900s – 2,750 in California in 2006 Sea Otter – Keystone Species randsco.com/index.php/2006/07/06/ vancouver_island • Listed as “threatened” under federal Endangered • • Species Act “Fully protected” under California state law Threats – Oil spills, habitat loss and degradation, food limitation, disease, fishing gear entrapment, conflict with shellfish fisheries • Toxoplasma gondii causes protozoal encephalitis – Enters ecosystem through improper disposal of cat litter • Oil spills – Mats fur fur cannot retain air die of hypothermia – 1989 Exxon Valdez – 1000 sea otters died • Where sea otters have disappeared, so have the kelp forests (keystone) Desalination Desalination plant montereybay.noaa.gov/resourcepro/resmanissues/desalination.html • • • • Method of obtaining fresh water from salt water 3 desal plants in Sanctuary Several additional plants proposed Impacts – Brine waste effluent (2x salt of sea water), heavy and sinks to bottom becoming concentrated – Construction of offshore pipeline – Thermal pollution – Loss of marine species at intake – Encourage more growth Want to know more? • Visit Monterey Bay Aquarium • Visit tidepools in Pacific Grove