Students take closer look at kelp
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Christine Carrillo
The gaping holes and nonexistent kelp forestry along the coast have
served as a platform for educating Orange County students on ecology
since September 2001. On Thursday, Orange County CoastKeeper, the
organization conducting the kelp reforestation project that includes
student education, extended those lessons beyond the classrooms.
For the first time, middle and high school students involved in
the project culminated their educational lessons with a boat tour of
the kelp forest they helped harvest.
About 50 students spent the day on a boat moving from one teaching
station to another, learning about navigation, bird watching,
pollution and marine mammals, before visiting the site at Crystal
Cove State Park where marine biologists planted the kelp. Students
were able to follow divers underwater via live video feed, enabling
them to see their harvesting efforts flourish.
“I think it intrigues them and I know that every time they go to
the beach from now on ... they’re going to see the kelp and maybe
make a connection,” said Scott Smith, a Newport Harbor High biology
teacher who has participated in the project with his class for the
past two years. “Ecology, in general, is a pretty serious part of a
biology class and [this project] just makes the ecology much more
real. It incorporates itself very well into the curriculum.”
At the beginning of the year, CoastKeeper introduced students from
five Orange County schools, including Newport Harbor High and
Fairview Developmental Hospital, to the underwater world of kelp.
With more than 800 species dependent upon its existence, the huge
gaps and lack of kelp forests along Newport’s coastline have led to
environmental concern that inspired the students participating in the
project as well.
“I just like nature so I’m very interested in that kind of stuff,”
said 15-year-old Kelly Kaban, a ninth-grader in Smith’s biology class
at Newport Harbor. “It’s a good thing that people care about the
environment ... and I’m proud of myself. I’m proud I was able to do
something with the environment also.”
Banding together to rebuild an underwater forest, students took an
active role harvesting new kelp forests for reefs along Crystal Cove
as part of a statewide CoastKeepers’ effort.
“The idea behind our project is ... to fill in the gaps and kind
of Johnny Appleseed the whole kelp forest back into place,” said
Nancy Caruso, a marine biology with CoastKeeper who heads the
organization’s project. “The goal is to increase the reforestation of
kelp -- it is the rainforest of the sea.”
The project began when representatives from CoastKeeper talked to
students about the role of kelp and microscopic spores that they
could harvest in the classroom’s kelp nursery. Three months later,
their spores grew about a half inch, a minuscule height when compared
to the 30 feet they reached when the students saw them Thursday.
“I see a definite advantage for [the students] being involved in
this project because they don’t really have a chance to see kelp ...
and a lot of kids don’t really have any idea that this ecosystem even
exists,” Caruso said. “It really does raise their awareness. It just
opens up a whole new world of learning.”
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