
Awards from other years
1997
Partnership Award Recipients
Navy
Eelgrass Study - Narragansett Bay
This study created an interagency effort
from a previously disassociated group of efforts. The Coastal America
Northeast Regional Implementation Team became aware that the Navy was
working with the detection of submerged vegetation due to its military
implications for hiding undersea mines, that the Corps was mapping seagrass
because of its habitat value and significance for dredging projects, and
that the FWS and National Estuary Program were interested in the resource
for habitat management purposes. The coordination of these efforts affords
an ongoing dialogue that is producing habitat mapping to be used for management
and new tools for technological advancement.
On August 12-14, 1997, the team carried out its investigation into the
acoustic properties of eelgrass in Narragansett Bay. The Corps integrated
its 410-kHz sonar with differential GPS for accurate positioning and recorded
acoustic backscatter from eelgrass beds. It completed a full hydroacoustic
survey of Rose Island and partial surveys of Gould and Goat Islands. The
NUWC Dive Team performed ground truth referencing by carrying out sampling
in four quadrants and filming more than 50 minutes of video. NUWC engineers
deployed a 100-kHz EG&G side-scan sonar to image areas of seagrass and
the boundaries of the eelgrass beds.
In addition to providing a coastal research vessel and boat operator,
the EPA provided lab space and expertise in biological sampling methods.
All eelgrass samples obtained by the NUWC dive team were analyzed at the
EPA lab by NUWC and EPA staff. A multi-agency paper (Army Corps, EPA,
and NUWC) is in preparation. Entitled "Hydroacoustic Techniques for Detection
and Characterization of Seagrasses", it will be presented at the International
Conference for Remote Sensing for Marine and Coastal Environments.
Significant Achievements: This project has initiated research
into a new technology that will benefit military and resource agencies.
More important, a new dialogue of communication has been initiated between
state and federal agencies working in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: The mapping
and monitoring of eelgrass are a priority for habitat managers in the
northeast. Additionally, assuring increased communication between military
and resource agencies in Narragansett Bay fulfills the objectives of the
partnering process.
Team Members: U.S. Navy Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC),
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, EPA, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and
the Narragansett Bay Estuary Program
Northeast
Regional Implementation Team
The NERIT process has provided a multi-agency
ecosystem approach to coastal issues in the northeast region. The RIT
developed a regional action strategy, which defined the major issues and
special focus areas within the region. One of the key components of this
strategy is to incorporate environmental protection and restoration objectives
in regional development efforts. The result has been an aggressive effort
to restore salt marshes along the northeast corridor that have been degraded
by infrastructure development. In fact, the NERIT process was recognized
by the Interagency Ecosystem Management Task Force in its 1995 report,
which cited the Coastal America northeast coastal restoration effort as
an example of a partnership ecosystem approach that works.
Significant Achievements: The present NERIT process emerged from
an acknowledgment by the regional partners that many coastal insults do
not need further study. They need resolution within a regional scale of
prioritization. Their regional oversight process, which includes the Regional
Principals of the partner agencies, now provides a regional ecosystem
approach to management decisions for the federal partnership in the Northeast.
This is truly a significant achievement.
Specifically, the NERIT partnership process has accomplished the following:
- developed a strategy to address both environmental/resource and infrastructure
development objectives (e.g., used ISTEA funds to support wetlands restoration
in conjunction with highway improvement);
- developed partnership agreements with the states in the region (i.e.,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts);
- established the first Coastal America Coastal Ecosystem Learning
Center (i.e., New England Aquarium);
- and established a Regional Principals group.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: NERIT's
efforts have contributed significantly to Coastal America's goal to protect,
preserve, and restore coastal ecosystems while ensuring sustainable development.
The NERIT considers degraded salt marshes as the single most important
restoration initiative in New England, but is also addressing a range
of other issues in a watershed context. The team's ecosystem approach
and its innovative actions truly exemplify the spirit of Coastal America.
SERIT
Northern
Right Whale Project & Hotline, Monitoring, and Early Warning System
The waters off southern Georgia and northern
Florida are the calving grounds for the endangered Right Whale from November
to April. The total population of these mammals is currently about 300,
with about 11 calves born into the population each year. Human impacts
are a major factor in the whales' ability to increase their numbers. Since
the early 1990s, net entanglements and ship strikes have led to the average
death and injury of one to two Right Whales each year. These impacts are
believed to be retarding the recovery and growth of the population. Due
to this continuing threat, the NMFS designated this area as critical habitat
in June 1994.
These same waters are also used heavily by commercial, recreational,
and military vessels traveling to and from highly valuable ports in this
region. Jacksonville, the largest, services nearly 1,400 vessels, carrying
five million tons of cargo each year worth nearly $1.8 billion. The cost
to run one of these cargo vessels under normal conditions is about $35,000
per day. When these vessels are impeded during transit, by either collisions
or regulations that reduce their speed, it results in increased transportation
costs, reduced fuel efficiency, and decreased international competitiveness.
To mitigate the effect of these human activities, overflights of the
waters off Georgia and northern Florida are conducted to locate the whales
and relay this information to transiting vessel captains. In the 1996-97
whale season, flights have increased in frequency and aerial coverage.
Last year, six whales died during the calving season. During this season,
the Navy, Coast Guard, and port pilots have cooperated to inform ships
of whale occurrence. The Navy has installed an acoustic array in the coastal
waters of Jacksonville and has experimented with a towed array along the
coast. An "early warning system" on the marine radio has been
established to inform all mariners immediately of the presence and locations
of whales. Thus, vessel captains avoid collisions and can maintain an
efficient speed into and out of the ports.
A citizen and volunteer network augments the work of scientists and professionals.
Citizens distribute whale alert stickers and posters, and give presentations
to local clubs and organizations. Beachside residents in homes, businesses,
and hotels from St. Mary, Georgia to Bonyton Beach, Florida monitor the
coast and report possible whale sightings to the Marine Resources Council
(MRC), which monitors the public telephone hotline. MRC then conveys the
report to the Florida DEP. Scientists respond by launching aircraft to
confirm the sighting and to photograph each animal for identification
by scientists from the New England Aquarium. The ports, the Navy, and
the Coast Guard alert shipping interests. The aquarium and scientists
from Florida DEP and Georgia DNR coordinate surveys.
Significant Achievements: Collisions between whales and vessels
are avoided; information is gathered on Right Whales and vessel movement
patterns and speeds to establish further avoidance measures for shippers,
Corps dredges, and Navy and Coast Guard vessels; and the recovery of the
whales in these waters is fostered. This project has also expanded public
awareness and increased the use of volunteers from 125 in 1995 to nearly
350 in 1996-97.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: This monitoring
project of the endangered Right Whales' movements and calving ground activities
off the northern coast of Florida and southern Georgia has contributed
significantly to our growing knowledge of this species' behavior, while
also reducing shipping costs. Because the calving grounds are identified
and individual animal movements are tracked, ships can now chart courses
accordingly to maintain speed and avoid ship strikes with the Right Whale.
Team Members: National Marine Fisheries Service; Marine Mammal
Commission; U.S. Navy; U.S. Army COE; Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary;
Southeastern Implementation Team for the Recovery of the Northern Right
Whale; Florida Department of Environmental Protection; Florida Sea Grant;
Georgia Department of Natural Resources; Florida Advisory Council on Environmental
Education; Marine Resources Council of East Florida; Marineland, Florida;
Georgia Land Trust; Port Canaveral; Georgia Port Authority; Fernandina
Port; and Jaxport
Sandy
Island Mitigation Advisory Panel
The Panel worked together to develop plans
for, and to bring about the purchase of, a wetland mitigation bank totaling
16,825 acres in Horry and Georgetown counties south of Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina. The Sandy Island tract of 9,164 acres was purchased from Sandy
Island Associates, while the 7,661 acres in three adjoining tracks--known
as the Bucksport, Oliver, and Sarvis tracts--were purchased from the Georgia-Pacific
Investment Company. The Sandy Island tract consists of a combination of
both important forested wetlands and a unique sand ridge upland habitat.
A longleaf pine community that harbors numerous clusters of the federally
endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, as well as many significant archeological
sites, comprises much of the upland component.
Significant Achievements: This project will lead to the protection
and conservation of 16,825 acres of important coastal forested wetlands
and associated upland habits. It is significant that all the panel members
agreed to accept protection of these existing important habitats as mitigation
for the wetlands that would be impacted by future highway construction,
both within the Winyah Bay system and elsewhere along the South Carolina
coast. Traditionally, most would have insisted on some type of wetland
restoration or onsite mitigation. By working together to make this mitigation
bank a reality, however, an important wetland system that would surely
be impacted at some point in the future, will now be protected and remain
available for the enjoyment of the public, now and into the future.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: This wetland
mitigation bank is located about 15 miles south and west of Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina. Myrtle Beach, with its nationally acclaimed Grand Strand
area beaches and extensive golfing resorts, has become one of the fastest
growing resort and residential areas in the nation. The rapid growth has
resulted in threatening expansion westward of the Grand Strand that would
ultimately impact the Sandy Island area if it were not protected through
this banking effort. Also, the upland component of Sandy Island provides
high and dry potentially developable land that is limited in the area.
As a result of this project, a 16,825-acre ecologically sensitive wetland
system has been purchased and will now be protected in its natural state
in perpetuity.
This project contributes to the economic vitality of the region by providing
acceptable mitigation for unavoidable wetland impacts associated with
two of the region's major transportation facilities: the Conway Bypass
and the Carolina Bays Parkway. As a result, these important projects should
become a reality in a much shorter time frame than would otherwise be
expected if such a partnering effort had not been initiated. These two
transportation facilities are considered essential for the area to maintain
its economic vitality as one of the nation's leading tourist destinations.
Team Members: Federal Highway Administration, EPA, National Marine
Fisheries Service, S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control,
The Nature Conservancy, The Trust for Public Land, S.C. Department of
Transportation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, S.C. Department of Natural
Resources, S.C. Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, Winyah
Bay Focus Area Task Force, S.C. Coastal Conservation League
Southeast
Regional Implementation Team (SERIT)
The Southeast RIT has produced significant
progress toward solving major ecosystem problems in the southeastern environment.
The partnership process, led by SERIT, has been key to highly successful
regional federal/state/non-governmental organization collaboration, technology
transfer mechanisms, and education outreach efforts. SERIT has nurtured
this process by:
- publishing a quarterly newsletter, "The Coastal Environment";
- creating a regional HomePage on the Internet;
- and serving as the host of the 1996 Coastal America Annual Retreat.
Significant Achievements: The most significant achievements of
the SERIT-led partnership process include developing mutual trust and
confidence between the regional partner agencies, improving communication
between environmental issue stakeholders, and creating better understanding/appreciation
of other partner agency missions/goals/constraints. These partnership
process achievements have contributed immeasurably to the development
and/or implementation of the following:
- recovery efforts for the Northern Right Whale (e.g., Florida, Georgia);
- projects to remove dams that block spawning runs of anadromous fish
(e.g., Neuse River in North Carolina);
- and restoration of important wetland and upland areas (e.g., Munyon
Island in Florida)
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: The teamwork
demonstrated by SERIT creates a sense of mutual issue ownership and leads
to more complete solutions. This teamwork among Coastal America federal
agencies, and state and non-governmental organization partners, is essential
to sustained economic development in harmony with protection/maintenance
of coastal ecosystem integrity. SERIT's strategy/process emphasizes the
following three areas:
- evaluating each project in terms of its impact on biodiversity and
the application of sound ecosystem management principles;
- recognizing that areas of the southeast have experienced tremendous
pressures from urban expansion, which represents a continuing threat
to species and habitat;
- and studying the decline of important fisheries, caused in part,
by obstacles to fish migrations that prevent adult fish from reaching
the spawning grounds
SWRIT
Sonoma
Baylands Project
This project was designed to assist in the
restoration of tidal wetlands at the Sonoma Baylands site by demonstrating
the beneficial use of dredged sediments on a 39-acre pilot site and then
transferring those lessons to the entire site. The overall project has
created new habitat for fish and wildlife by using dredged sediments from
the Petaluma River and Oakland Harbor navigation channels to restore tidal
marsh on a subsided former hay field.
Sonoma Baylands is a 348-acre former tidal wetland that was diked, drained,
and used as an oat hay field for decades. The site was prepared for tidal
restoration by constructing peripheral and interior levees and interior
wave barriers, modifying three high voltage electrical transmission towers,
and constructing three return flow weir structures. Dredged sediments
from maintenance of the Petaluma River navigation channel and the deepening
of the Oakland Harbor channels were then placed within the site to restore
the original marsh elevations partially.
The project was constructed in two major phases. The first phase consisted
of the 39-acre pilot unit that was restored using 207,000 cubic yards
of maintenance dredged sediments from the Petaluma River channel. The
pilot unit was opened to tidal action by breaching the old bayfront levee
in January 1996. The second phase was the restoration of the remaining
309-acre main unit using about 1.7 million cubic yards of dredged sediments
from the deepening of Oakland Harbor. The main unit was restored to tidal
action in October 1996. It is expected that an existing adjacent marsh
will provide abundant propagules for the natural establishment of vegetation
within the Sonoma Baylands site. Monitoring the development of the restored
marsh is an element of the overall plan and includes provisions for mediation
if the monitoring results indicate a need for corrective action. Current
monitoring activities include tidal hydrology, sediment deposition, fish
and bird use, vegetation and benthic colonization, water quality, sediment
organic chemistry, and channel morphology.
Significant Achievements: This project has restored tidal wetlands
in a region that has lost about 82 percent of this resource. The pilot
unit was also the first use of electrical resistivity technology to manage
the hydraulic placement of dredged material for habitat restoration. This
innovative use of technology greatly improved the ability of the construction
managers to achieve the desired marsh elevations. The results from the
pilot unit demonstrated that electrical resistivity technology could be
relied upon to manage the construction of the main unit, as well as future
marsh restoration projects using dredged material.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: The Sonoma
Baylands project is restoring 348 acres of tidal wetlands through the
selective placement of clean, dredged material from federal navigation
channels. While providing for the maintenance of the federal channels
and contributing to the local economy, the beneficial use of dredged material
is also allowing the restoration of tidal wetlands in a region that has
lost 82 percent of this resource.
Team Members: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, EPA, National Marine
Fisheries Service, California Coastal Conservancy, San Francisco Bay Conservation
and Development Commission, San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control
Board, Sonoma Land Trust, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
NWRIT
Duwamish
Estuary Habitat Restoration
Past dredging and filling activities had
eliminated almost 99 percent of the estuarine habitat in the Duwamish
River area, which is located in Seattle, Washington. Although past development
activities have created one of the largest ports on the west coast, the
natural resources that depend on estuaries have declined substantially.
Many of the resources, such as salmon, are important both commercially
and culturally. This Coastal America project attempts to demonstrate that
marine commerce and critical habitats can co-exist. Three separate sites
within the estuary were chosen to demonstrate a variety of habitat restoration
techniques that could be implemented in an urban environment. Mudflats,
emergent marsh, and intertidal sloughs were re-created in historic locations
to benefit the variety of migratory fish and wildlife that are still dependent
upon the estuary for survival.
Some of the novel elements of the project include the unique partnership
between the agencies and the Port in developing this project. Also, one
of the sites was owned by the General Services Administration. While this
type of activity is not typically associated with its mission, GSA offered
both property and financial assistance in completing the project. Many
of the team members working on this restoration project still work in
the estuary on other restoration activities. This project has fostered
a long-term relationship between agencies that continues to provide benefits
to the resources of the estuary.
Significant Achievements: The most significant achievement of
this project is the relationship and trust that developed between the
team members and their long-term commitment to the resource. Also, the
Coastal America process allowed the team to take a limited amount of funds
($296,000) and leverage it into a much larger project (about $600,000).
The restoration sites also allowed the team to attract other partners
and provide an educational resource that has been used by such diverse
groups as the Student Conservation Association and the University of Washington.
The largest payoff has been to the many salmon and shorebirds that have
used the sites since construction.
Coastal America Objectives/Regional Economic Benefit: The project
is a perfect fit for the Coastal America objectives. It restores a tiny
portion of an important estuarine ecosystem, but accomplishes this in
a manner that does not impact the important marine commerce that is associated
with Port activities. In addition, if this demonstration project is realized
at a larger scale, it will increase the commercial viability of the salmon
runs in the Duwamish River and Estuary.
Team Members: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, EPA, Port of Seattle
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