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Latest

 

Officials prepare for Japan tsunami debris; float found on Mad River Beach spurs questions

Details
Donna Tam, Times Standard
Latest
Created: 20 February 2012

2/20/12

 

A black float recently spotted at Mad River Beach has stirred up some questions surrounding Japan's tsunami debris and when it will make its way to our shores.

 

The find coincides with state and county officials' efforts to form a plan for any upcoming increase in debris due to the tsunami triggered by the 9.0-magnitude earthquake in Japan on March 11. 

 

Officials are expecting to develop a response in the next month.

 

Mike Kelley, a fisheries biologist and an avid beachcomber, found the float -- the size of a 55-gallon drum -- two miles south of the Mad River Beach parking lot near Arcata in late January and reported it to the authorities. Kelley said he received a marine biology news alert regarding similar floats washing ashore in Washington and Oregon.

 

Humboldt State University geology professor Lori Dengler said officials are still reviewing data, but it is very unlikely that what beachcombers are finding right now came from the tsunami.

 

”Debris with Japanese writing shows up on our beaches all the time. ... The odds that it is from the tsunami are about the same as winning the Big Spin,” she said.

 

National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration officials said they are aware of Kelley's find and, while they can't confirm it is specifically from the Japan tsunami incident last year, they have not ruled it out.

 

Kelley also reported the finding to Curtis Ebbesmeyer, a Seattle resident who has been following flotsam -- everything from Nike sneakers to plastic bath toys -- since the 1960s. Ebbesmeyer said Kelley's sighting is the first he's received from California.

 

Ebbesmeyer's prediction of the debris making its way to North America's western shores -- which is based on modeling and beachcomber reports -- puts the first arrival at a faster pace than NOAA estimated. According to Ebbesmeyer, 38 beachcombers from California to Alaska reported sightings of 260 buoys since October, with 188 of those seen along the coast of Vancouver Island. He's been chronicling the finds at www.beachcombersalert.blogspot.com.

 

”Part of the difference is that NOAA doesn't really deal with the debris on the beach as I have been doing it for 20 years, and I have a network of beachcombers around the world sending me information,” Ebbesmeyer said.

 

 

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Another record-breaker: Chinook salmon stage a comeback on the Eel

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Jennifer Poole, Willits News
Latest
Created: 18 February 2012

2/17/12

The Eel River Recovery Project reports that the 2011 fall run of Chinook salmon on the Eel River was "another record-breaker" at the Van Arsdale Fish Station.

 

The first of 2,436 Chinook that jumped over the Van Arsdale Dam and spawned in the 12 miles of habitat below Scott Dam and Pillsbury Reservoir was counted on October 16. This was a new high since records began to be kept at Van Arsdale in 1946/47. Last year's fall Chinook run was also a record-breaker, with 2,315 salmon counted.

 

"Steelhead and chinook right now seem to be experiencing fairly major resurgences," said fisheries biologist Pat Higgins, who has helped organize the EERP. Higgins says improved salmon counts on the Eel, "in a nutshell," are a result of high water flows in the spring during five of the last seven years, a reduction of the pike minnow population, good ocean conditions, and "not much fishing pressure."

 

High flows get the salmon past the pike minnows, also known as squawfish, Higgins said, and high flows and wet conditions also tend to suppress the pike minnow population.

 

Future climate cycles, Higgins said, may be "less helpful," making it important to restore salmons' fresh water habitat, "to help these fish to be more resistant to changes in ocean conditions and flows."

 

The Eel River Recovery Project is a new grassroots effort to help citizens monitor and report Eel River water quality and fish runs and to share information on how to protect and restore the river.

 

These citizen fish reporters gave eyewitness reports of widespread Chinook spawning throughout the Eel River watershed, which was also documented by California Department of Fish and Game surveys. This is "more good news," Higgins commented.

 

There have been no official Eel River basin-wide estimates of Chinook population since 1955-58, the EERP report said, "but there are indications the 2011 population spawning in the wild may rival the annual average of 24,000 spanners found at that time."

 

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U.S. to cut funds for water testing at beaches

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Tony Barboza, Los Angeles Times
Latest
Created: 16 February 2012

2/16/12

The EPA plans to cut $10 million in grants it gives annually. Water quality advocates worry that swimmers and surfers will be at even greater risk of illness.

Health testing at beaches in California and across the nation is at risk of being cut under a plan to eliminate federal funds for monitoring whether the water is too contaminated to swim in.

Citing the "difficult financial climate," the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said in its budget request this week that it would do away with $10 million in grants it gives each year to state and local agencies in coastal and Great Lakes states to test for tainted water.

 

"While beach monitoring continues to be important to protect human health and especially sensitive individuals," the EPA said in an emailed statement, "states and local governments now have the technical expertise and procedures to continue beach monitoring without federal support."

 

But state and local officials have struggled to pay for health testing along California's busy coastline in recent years, and water quality advocates worry that swimmers and surfers will be at even greater risk of getting sick if the federal funds evaporate.

 

The proposed cuts come as the agency is drafting new nationwide beach water quality standards, which have been panned by environmental groups as being even weaker than the 1986 rules they replace.

 

"It feels like a double whammy to beachgoers," said Kirsten James, water quality director for Santa Monica environmental group Heal the Bay. "The EPA is on multiple levels telling them they are swimming at their own risk every time they go to the beach."

 

The EPA has paid $111 million for beach water quality testing over the last dozen years through the grant program authorized by Congress in the 2000 BEACH Act. "As a result, the number of monitored beaches has more than tripled to more than 3,600 in 2010," the agency announced last month.

 

The grants slated for elimination pay for local health and environmental protection agencies to conduct water quality tests and post warning signs or even close the beach when bacteria levels indicate the water is too contaminated.

 

Swimming in polluted water exposes people to pathogens that can cause gastrointestinal illness, diarrhea, vomiting, skin rashes and ear, eye and staph infections.

 

California is eligible for about $500,000 each year, second only to Florida, and uses the EPA funds to supplement beach water monitoring up and down the coast.

 

"The cut could reduce the amount of testing unless other funding sources are found," Judie Panneton, a spokeswoman for the state water board, wrote in an email.

 

State and county budget cuts have in recent years led California beaches to scale back testing, though a law signed last year by Gov. Jerry Brown restored funding at the state level, giving the water board authority to provide up to $1.8 million a year to pay for more consistent testing at hundreds of beaches.

 

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Overfishing costs EU £2.7bn each year

Details
Mark Kinver, BBC News
Latest
Created: 12 February 2012

2/10/12

Overfishing of EU fisheries is costing £2.7bn (3.2bn euros) a year and 100,000 jobs, a report has said.

The research, by the UK-based New Economics Foundation, said a third of Britain's fish consumption could be met if stocks were allowed to recover.

Separate research suggests that half of fishermen would not be willing to give up their livelihoods.

Last week, a report said there were reasons to be optimistic that fisheries could recover from past exploitation.

"Overfishing is bad for the economy," said report author Rupert Crilly, environmental economics researcher for the foundation's Ocean2012 initiative.

"With the stroke of pen, European fisheries ministers are wiping out millions of pounds and thousands of jobs each year by allowing overfishing to continue."

The report, Lost at Sea, concluded that the restoring 43 of the continent's fish stocks to their "maximum sustainable yield" (largest annual catch that can be maintained over the long term) would result in an additional 3.5m tonnes of fish reaching markets, "enough to meet the annual demand for almost 160m EU citizens".

It added: "Overfishing is the single most destructive force in the marine environment.

"It has made the fishing industry economically vulnerable and caused coastal communities to crumble. Instead of rebuilding (fish) stocks, the industry has become heavily subsidised by the taxpayer.

Last week, the Prince of Wales launched a report by his think-tank, International Sustainability Unit (ISU), that looked at a way to put fisheries around the globe on a sustainable footing.

The report, Fisheries in Transition, concluded that by regulating the catch in a sensible way, fishermen were able to make more money for less effort, allowing the stock to be safeguarded against exploitation.

"We recognise that there is no 'one size fits all', solution - every fishery is different," said Charlotte Cawthorne, ISU marine programme manager, speaking at the report's launch.

But, she added, three things were essential: scientific understanding of the ecosystem, funding for the transition, and sound management.

A study published this week in the journal Plos One said that half of the fishermen in developing nations would not be willing to give up their livelihoods, regardless of declining catches.

"We found that half of fishermen questioned would not be tempted to seek out a new livelihood, even if their catch declined by 50%," said co-author Dr Tim Daw from the University of East Anglia.

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Natural Splendor Bombarded By More Garbage

Details
Kevin Hoover, Arcata Eye
Latest
Created: 11 February 2012

2/11/12

 

As dawn’s rosy fingers crept over the Arcata Bottom along Liscom Slough last Friday, Feb 10, they revealed to Ted Halstead the hideous pile of debris above, which included all manner of wretched refuse.

Three things we know:

1. That we have absolutely no idea who did the dumping.

2. That the envelope below was found in the garbage.

3. That the return addressee, Arthur Criner was arrested November 9 in Eureka. Here’s the EPD press release:

“On 11/09/11, at about 3:50 PM, POP investigators spotted a wanted fugitive, Arthur Thomas Criner (age 50 of Eureka), walking near Myrtle and West Ave. Criner had five confirmed warrants for his arrest stemming from five separate cases (misdemeanor and felony). This included a POP drug sales search warrant service on the 1100 block of O Street in June 2011 (Criner was arrested and booked by POP for possession of a controlled substance for sale). Criner was arrested and transported to the Humboldt County Jail where he was booked on his warrants alleging the following offenses: burglary, petty theft, driving while license suspended or revoked, unlawful possession of prescription medication, being under the influence of a controlled substance, disorderly conduct (prostitution), resisting/obstructing a peace officer, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of a controlled substance for sale.”

Later that day, when Ted returned to collect the mess for disposal, a was car parked nearby, with a blonde woman chopping her hair off and throwing it on the ground under the “No Dumping” sign.

“She had a ‘Think Globally, Act Locally’ bumper sticker on her car, along with what appeared to be boxes of junk in her car,” Ted said. “She asked me if I lived nearby and why I was picking the trash up. I told her, because I cared and that I thought it was a nice area.”

 

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More Articles …

  1. Draft Coho Recovery Plan Comment Period Extended
  2. HSU, Tribes to Hold Klamath Whale Retrospective Monday
  3. White Shark Tagging Map
  4. Conservationists concerned over coho recovery plan; fisheries service emphasizes that plan is not final
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