Conservationists celebrate new marine protected areas

January 16, 2013 6:41 PM

Share this Article

Author:

Liz Crosson and Amanda Gruen of L.A. Waterkeeper unveil a new sign in Malibu warning people not to fish in newly created Marine Protected Areas. (Photo by Melonie Magruder)

Liz Crosson and Amanda Gruen of L.A. Waterkeeper unveil a new sign in Malibu warning people not to fish in newly created Marine Protected Areas. (Photo by Melonie Magruder)

MALIBU — Southern California beaches finally have received the appropriate signage advising commercial and sport fisherman of sensitive “No Take” Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), thanks to new laws implemented a year ago.

A consortium of stakeholders including the L.A. Waterkeeper (formerly the Santa Monica Baykeeper), Paradise Cove, Heal the Bay and L.A. County lifeguards celebrated the installation of the first Marine Protected Area signs at Paradise Cove in Malibu Wednesday morning. The simple signage was a long time coming.

In 2008, the California Fish and Game Commission began a public planning process to identify and designate Marine Protected Areas that would close sensitive Southern California coastal regions to over-fishing. After much contentious public debate, the commission adopted regulations designating 36 new MPAs encompassing about 187 square miles of southern coastal waters. Those regulations became law in January 2012.

“It will still take a lot of public education,” L.A. Waterkeeper Executive Director Liz Crosson said. “But having signs up so people know they are approaching a Marine Protected Area is a first step.”

The Department of Fish and Wildlife is working with local environmental groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Ocean Conservancy, Surfrider and the Santa Barbara Channel Keepers to make sure that the word gets out. Even with the new MPA laws in place for more than a year, there are plenty of coastal water enthusiasts who don’t know what an MPA is, much less where one might be located.

As outreach coordinator for L.A. Waterkeeper, Michael Quill, monitors fishing activity off the Palos Verdes peninsula and along Malibu waterways, where MPAs have been located. In Malibu, he said he’s noticed less boat fishing, but more people fishing from shore at protected sites. But he said that most people he has approached are grateful to hear about the new restrictions.

“I come upon families out with their mother-in-law who haven’t been fishing in a year,” Quill said. “No one knew about the MPAs and were glad that I was able to inform them. It will be an ongoing effort.”

Efforts will continue on and off shore, as well as in the air, to identify commercial fishermen or sports anglers who have entered protected waters. L.A. Waterkeeper has even printed waterproof maps, with GPS coordinates clearly marked, so fishing enthusiasts can note what areas are off limits. The key, Quill emphasized, is proper education, so that people are aware not only of the sensitivity of the area, but are assured that their actions are going far to ensure the sustainability of the oceans for future generations.

“I hit up all the bait and tackle shops with maps and posters,” Quill said. “Most people realize these MPAs are in place for a good reason and that there is plenty of ocean out there to fish.”

The Fish and Wildlife Commission took years of data and fish counts to determine which areas were seeing alarming declines of fish populations. And there is good evidence that establishing MPAs in over-fished regions can see a surprisingly rapid return of native marine populations. In a marine reserve established at Anacapa Island, lobsters, rock scallops and sea cucumbers have become plentiful after a decimating decline. The reserve’s kelp forest and understory algae are more stable than in fished areas, as well.

Heal the Bay’s Coastal Resource Director Sarah Sikich said that most fishing enthusiasts her monitor teams approach are non-consumptive and compliant with the new regulations. She said the Fish and Wildlife Commission is taking the new MPA designations seriously and it could be expensive if one is found to be violating the laws.

“There was a crab fisherman off Sonoma who was caught in a protected area with a full load,” Sikich said. “His license was suspended, he got five days in jail and a $20,000 fine.”

Heal the Bay is banking on a strong volunteer contingent to help broaden education outreach to inland L.A. County, looking to engage as many stakeholders as possible. The idea is that working together will help the community monitor how astutely the MPA laws are being observed, as well as help insure that more coastal visitors are aware of the regulations.

“There are already surveys underway to monitor fish populations in the MPA regions,” Sikich said. “Our MPA usage data helps them with their counts. People can see that MPAs really do help so we are working together as a community, instead of just arguing whether MPAs are good or bad.”

The first simple signage is being installed up and down the coast and at all coastal access roads now. Future interpretive signage is being designed with images, maps and multi-lingual explanations of the purpose of MPAs.

The environmentalists celebrating the new signage installation were hopeful for meaningful change.

“Just imagine,” L.A. Waterkeeper Outreach Coordinator Amanda Gruen said. “Maybe soon we’ll see otters playing in the water here again.”

Heal the Bay will be celebrating MPAs at its annual Underwater Parks Day, Saturday, Jan. 19 from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium. More information may be found at http://www.healthebay.org.

 

news@smdp.com


READ MORE Environment News

Other News

  • Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center

    Health worker strike set at SM-UCLA Medical Center

    MID CITY — Patient care workers at the Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center will join thousands of others at UC hospitals across the state in a two-day strike to protest what they say are unsafe staffing levels while administrators rake in fat-cat salaries and pensions. Members of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees union will walk off the job between 4 a.m. Tuesday until 4 a.m. Thursday at both the Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and the Ronald Reagan [...]

    Read more →
    Featured News
  • New state standards may cut advanced math course

    SMMUSD HDQTRS — A proposed shift in the progression of math classes at the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District could eliminate the highest level course taught in the district, which some parents feel put students at a disadvantage when applying to top-tier universities. The class, Calculus DE, focuses on multivariate calculus, a class not often taught until students go to college. To take it in high school, a student must have taken algebra in seventh grade, a year earlier than [...]

    Read more →
    Education Featured News Public
  • To cash in or let it ride?

    It seems to me that a lot of people that buy and sell stocks are a lot like the people that go to the racetrack. When you are at the track you are investing — some call it betting — on a short-term result, which horse comes in first in the next few minutes. Of course you do your research. How did this jockey (the CEO) do in the past? How did the horse (the enterprise) perform recently?  How is [...]

    Read more →
    After The Bell Columns Opinion
  • Remembering those who sacrificed so much

    As we close in on Memorial Day, the time America has set aside to honor the men and women who have given their lives for our freedom, a controversy rages. Politicians are using yet another tragedy to once again try to make political hay for their party. The Republican Party is aghast that on-duty diplomats were killed in Benghazi. The Democrats are fighting back by saying that attacks on our embassies have occurred under both parties’ control of the White [...]

    Read more →
    Columns Opinion What's the Point?
  • Letter: Demise of Downtown

    Editor: To the City Council, commissioners and city staff, Winston Churchill simply described “civilization” as the subordination of the ruling class to the will of the people. In this regard, the development agreement process has been more like a game of monopoly than one of environmental and urban planning for the benefit of the community. What’s been proposed and supported to date is going in the wrong direction. (Will it take rallies and bonfires of the 1960s free speech movement [...]

    Read more →
    Letters Opinion
  • PARCHED: The United States is embroiled in the worst drought since the “Dust Bowl” days of the 1930s. The current drought started in 2012, the hottest year on record in the U.S. Pictured: A dust storm approaches Stratford, Texas in 1935. (Photo courtesy NOAA George E. Marsh Album)

    Calling for rain

    Dear EarthTalk: Could it really be true that we are in the midst of the worst drought in the United States since the 1930s? — Deborah Lynn, Needham, Mass.   Indeed we are embroiled in what many consider the worst drought in the U.S. since the “Dust Bowl” days of the 1930s that rendered some 50 million acres of farmland barely usable. Back then, drought conditions combined with poor soil management practices to force some 2.5 million Americans away from [...]

    Read more →
    Columns Earth Talk Opinion
  • Santa Monica Civic Auditorium (File photo)

    Curtains for the Civic

    The future of the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium was debated at a community meeting held at the Main Library last Monday. The late 1950s era, multi-purpose facility has been operating in the red for years. City officials plan to mothball it on June 30 then decide whether to renovate or demolish it The auditorium was a major show place when it opened in 1958. It hosted the Academy Awards from 1961 through 1968 and was a major regional concert and [...]

    Read more →
    Columns Featured My Write Opinion
  • (File photo)

    Road advisories

    Expo Light Rail Line Project Note the following activities: 1. Colorado Avenue between Fifth and 17th streets: Expect westbound and eastbound lane closures during day time hours. Expect reduction of travel lanes during the non-peak day at Ninth Street at Colorado and 10th Street at Colorado. 2. Colorado Avenue between Fifth and Sixth streets: Night time (9 p.m.-6 a.m.) Colorado Avenue closure, through Thursday. 3. Olympic Boulevard between 20th Street and Cloverfield Boulevard: Westbound and eastbound lane closures during non-peak [...]

    Read more →
    Featured News Transportation
  • Letter: Why so large?

    Editor: I’m a 34-year Santa Monica resident. Does the Miramar really need to expand its size to over 500,000 square feet to make a profit or achieve its goals as a business? To put that into context for everyone, that’s about the size of Santa Monica Place, on a much smaller land parcel. We haven’t seen a plan that proposes a lower density that’s in keeping with the LUCE and the current version of the Downtown Specific Plan — without [...]

    Read more →
    Letters Opinion
  • Q-Line: Cash from overseas

    The Santa Monica Convention & Visitors Bureau held its fourth annual Travel and Tourism Summit last week during which they released figures that showed tourists and the hotels they stay in pumped $1.5 billion into the local economy in 2012. Of that, $48.4 million went directly into City Hall’s General Fund, which supports basic city services.   This week, Q-Line asked:   A handful of hotels are being planned for Downtown, but some residents are working to put a stop [...]

    Read more →
    Opinion Qline
  • pch+crash+1

    PCH safety study finds 90 areas of concern

    MALIBU — There are over 90 existing conditions targeted as potential safety concerns along Pacific Coast Highway that the city of Malibu should address, according to a months-long, $375,000 engineering study of Malibu’s 27 miles of PCH. While some of the possible safety issues were “pervasive,” meaning they occur along the entire corridor of PCH in Malibu, other problems were location-specific. Areas of particular concern included the intersections of Las Flores Canyon Road, the Malibu Pier and Paradise Cove Road, [...]

    Read more →
    Featured News Transportation
  • trafficon405freeway

    Congressman can’t stomach 405 delay

    DOWNTOWN Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Santa Monica) fired off a letter Friday to Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood asking him to investigate delays in the construction of the Interstate-405 Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project. The project, which had previously been scheduled to be completed by spring 2013, won’t be finished until fall 2014, according to reports. “I am asking Secretary LaHood to investigate the delays and do everything in his power to speed completion of the project,” Waxman said. The $317 million [...]

    Read more →
    Briefs Featured News
  • Catherine Greig (Photo courtesy Google Images)

    8-year term for Bulger girlfriend upheld

    BOSTON — The longtime girlfriend of reputed gangster James “Whitey” Bulger lost her bid to reduce the eight-year prison sentence she received for helping Bulger during his 16 years as a fugitive. A three-judge panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Friday that it found no basis to change the sentence that Catherine Greig received after she pleaded guilty to conspiracy to harbor a fugitive, identity fraud and conspiracy to commit identity fraud. The panel included retired [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News
  • Nueske's apple-smoked bacon and chicharrones mingling with fresh avocados make up Tinga's bacon guacamole. (Photo courtesy Tinga)

    Tinga offers bold flavors in a familiar place

    It probably came as a surprise to many locals when Renee’s Courtyard Cafe closed its doors for good a couple of months back. But then again Santa Monica’s landscape is undergoing some serious transformations. With the exception of Chez Jay, it seems like no place is safe from new development or trendier competition. Renee’s did sadly seem antiquated when pitted against some of the hot new bars and restaurants hitting the Santa Monica scene. And one eatery that exemplifies this [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food Life Tour de Feast
  • coke-smoke-b

    Treating processed food like Big Tobacco

    Are food companies to blame for the rise in obesity in America by creating specially formulated junk food that is addictive? According to the Feb. 20 article in the New York Times, food companies are being compared to tobacco companies. They are advertising and marketing to children, they hire food scientists and psychologists to formulate a more physically and psychologically addictive food and they target the poor and uneducated. The last statement I have a moral issue with; food companies [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food The Better Option
  • Head in the sand

    Editor: The Torrance, Calif. man’s rebuke (“Obama gets a free pass,” Letters to the Editor, May 15) to Jack Neworth’s column “Bush painted U.S. into corner,” May 3, Laughing Matters, is an example of someone whose head has been stuck in the sand and can’t — or won’t — see the obvious. Mr. Neworth’s column simply pointed out the deficiencies in the Bush administration. I should think it would be obvious to everyone. It is appalling that the barrages of [...]

    Read more →
    Letters Opinion