Transplantation operation
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Alicia Robinson
Newport Beach is a city on the move in the world of eelgrass, which
dock owners have long considered the bane of their existence.
The underwater plant, plentiful under many docks in Newport
Harbor, is an important habitat for marine life and is protected by
state and federal policies. Dock owners wanting to dredge their boat
slips can’t remove eelgrass without spending thousands of dollars to
have it replaced elsewhere, and that mitigation can raise the cost of
a $2,000 dredging project to more than $30,000.
A seven-week pilot project now underway will provide Newport Beach
with its own eelgrass mitigation site, allowing harbor users to
remove the grass and dredge without fear.
“It’s a real controversial issue here in the harbor,” Harbor
Resources Manager Tom Rossmiller said. “We think by the city managing
the mitigation, we can cut the cost to the homeowner to a more
reasonable level.”
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is heading the cooperative
project with the city. Divers with Orange County CoastKeeper are
pulling up eelgrass at several “donor sites,” and workers from the
nonprofit Orange County Conservation Corps are putting the grass in
bundles to be replanted at seven transplant sites around the Balboa
Peninsula, Lido Isle and the Upper Newport Bay.
After seeing how well the transplanting works, the city plans to
maintain a mitigation site with a baseline amount of eelgrass. As
long as the grass is more plentiful than the baseline, homeowners
could remove small amounts of eelgrass as needed, and for larger
projects the city would sell mitigation credits to those who need to
dredge.
That’s in the future. At present, the city is about halfway
through the pilot project, and workers spend several days a week
moving the eelgrass from one part of the bay to another.
It’s wet and muddy work, but it’s educational too, said Cassandra
Clemens, 17, of Fullerton. She and the other Orange County
Conservation Corps workers find marine life every day in the buckets
of eelgrass -- jellyfish, octopi, mussels, even tiny crabs smaller
than a thumbnail.
“We’re learning while we’re working, so I think that’s pretty cool
too,” she said. “This is, I think, the funnest work that I’ve ever
done at a job.”
Through the conservation corps, young workers like Clemens can
write about what they’re doing and get credit toward their high
school diplomas.
The eelgrass project will be rolled into a more comprehensive plan
the city is developing to manage the harbor’s resources while
protecting its public uses, Rossmiller said.
Officials’ growing eelgrass savvy, and the plant’s apparent
overabundance in some parts of Newport Beach, are signs of a
comeback. When the grass first became protected in 1991, there were only about three acres of it in Newport Bay, Rossmiller said.
A just-completed survey shows eelgrass now covers about 150 acres,
or 20% of the 750-acre bay. Thanks to dry weather and water-quality
improvements, that’s a trend all along the coast, said Rick Ware, a
marine biologist with Coastal Resources Management, a consulting firm
overseeing the Newport Beach project.
“Between 1993 and now, we’ve seen a tremendous amount of natural
regrowth of eelgrass in the bay,” he said.
City officials hope to have their eelgrass-mitigation plans
approved by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the California
Coastal Commission by fall 2005. For more information visit
https://www. newport-beach.ca.us/HBR online.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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