Volunteers take part in water-quality tests
- Share via
Andrew Edwards
Runoff from Big Canyon Creek flowed into Newport Bay as two children
tried some science firsthand Saturday by holding testing devices
under the musty-smelling water.
Amanda DeNichilo, 7, and Ethan Williams-Dalgart, 6, used a pair of
cylindrical devices to test the water for phosphates and salinity.
They protected their hands with plastic gloves in case the flow
carried anything truly nasty.
The children started a battery of tests to look for chemicals and
bacteria in Big Canyon Creek. The youngsters were part of a group of
eight volunteers -- four children and four adults -- who took part in
water testing at the stream.
Amanda’s mother, Irvine resident Liz DeNichilo, said Amanda likes
science, so the test was a good project for her, too.
Big Canyon Creek was just one of several Orange County waterways
tested Saturday as part of Orange County Snapshot Day, a project
coordinated locally by the Newport Beach-based Orange County
Coastkeeper. Every major Orange County stream except Salt Creek was
tested, Coastkeeper project manager Ray Hiemstra said.
The project was called snapshot day because test results from
multiple sites will be compiled to create a “snapshot” of Orange
County’s water-quality situation. The report is set to be finished
later in the month, Coastkeeper special projects coordinator Dan Cruz
said.
About 30 volunteers, including 15 experienced members of the
state-sponsored Citizen Watershed Monitors of Orange County,
participated in testing procedures Saturday, Hiemstra said.
Test results ready Saturday showed high amounts of salinity and
phosphates in the creek. Phosphates can be found in laundry detergent
and can accelerate plant growth beyond environmentally-healthy
levels, Hiemstra told the volunteers.
In 2003, Coastkeeper participated in the first-ever California
Coastwide Snapshot Day, when environmentalists and volunteers
collected water-quality data from Oregon to Mexico. Grant funding for
the project has since declined, Hiemstra said. This year, Coastkeeper
relied on a donation from the Orange office of J.D. Power and
Associates to cover the $1,500 cost of testing kits. The eight
volunteers at Big Canyon Creek were connected to the company.
Despite the shortage of funds, Orange County was not the only
region scheduled to take a water snapshot Saturday. The Coastal
Watershed Council and Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary had
announced plans for water testing in San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Monterey
and San Luis Obispo counties.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.