Protecting Our Aquatic Backyard
National Sanctuary and Park Collaborate to Educate
Monday, October 1, 2012
A few years ago, my wife and I were returning to the Santa Barbara Harbor from a disappointing boat trip in search of migrating gray whales. We’d seen a few spouts from a distance, but that was all the elusive marine mammals deigned to display this day to our group of whale watchers.
Then, as we approached Stearns Wharf and the people on its lip, a young gray suddenly breached from the blue-green waters some 1,500 yards ahead of our boat. Shouts of “Whale!” turned our heads to the bow, and we were rewarded with the animal’s second full-bodied lunge. It was now about 1,000 yards from the tip of the wharf.
Vic Cox
Noting that all the people on the pier had their backs to the ocean, some passengers called out, “Turn around, turn around.” Apparently, no one heard us, for no one turned toward the sea, and for a third and final time, the whale rose like a glistening gray iceberg, crashed into the water, and disappeared.
The incident was a reminder that humans are vision-dependent land mammals. Many factors restrict sensitivity to our environment, but living on a planet where 71 percent of the surface is covered by seawater is a major one.
Except for the few who dive into or fish in this world of aquatic wonders, we generally do not pay much attention to the ocean. A disaster, such as the 2010 Gulf of Mexico blowout or 2011 tsunami, is the exception, but once the headlines fade, so does the living sea retreat from our awareness.
Fortunately, there are exceptions to this rule, though they may also lie below the surface. Chief among them is a system of national marine sanctuaries dotting United States territorial waters. Congress launched the National Marine Sanctuaries Act 40 years ago this month to protect and conserve very special places in the oceans and the Great Lakes. The system now counts 13 sanctuaries and one large scattering of islands and atolls northwest of Hawaii.
Due to unusual geographic location, varied wildlife, extensive human history, and rich cultural resources, the five Santa Barbara Channel Islands and a seven-mile-wide liquid border about them were early candidates for protected status. In 1980, that border, totaling 1,470 square miles, became the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary (CINMS) and the third member of the sanctuary community.
That same year, the islands of San Miguel, Santa Rosa, Anacapa, and Santa Barbara joined the National Park System. If you wonder what happened to 96-square-mile Santa Cruz, the largest of the northern islands surrounded by the sanctuary, only one-quarter is currently parkland. The Nature Conservancy owns the remainder, making it the only privately held island within the CINMS borders.
Sanctuary and park operations (and staff) are supported by two separate federal budgets located in the Departments of Commerce and Interior, respectively. However, their missions are similar and complementary; most importantly, their managers are committed to strengthening a partnership that protects an area that each describes as a unique place, one of North America’s natural treasures.
They also want visitors to understand and appreciate a park and sanctuary that are virtually in their backyard. “It’s great to see park rangers, concessionaires, volunteer naturalists, sanctuary staff, all helping people to enjoy the trip,” observes CINMS Superintendent Chris Mobley. “Visitors quickly learn that it is knowledge and attitude, not the uniform, that makes a difference.”
Adds Russell Galipeau, National Park superintendent, “One of our agencies may take the lead on a collaborative project, but both benefit.” An example he cites is research into the locations of the more than 150 historic ships and aircraft reported lost within sanctuary waters (25 have been discovered so far). Salvage is prohibited, but potential hazards to boats must be marked.
Similarly, Mobley notes that the park’s longterm monitoring of the islands’ giant kelp forests provides his subsea guardians with decades of invaluable information on the health of an ecosystem crucial to hundreds of plants and animals. Changes in these oceanic forests and their residents can have a ripple effect on many living organisms, including sport and commercial fishermen.
Both managers point to their cosponsorship of the 140-member strong Channel Islands Naturalist Corps to illustrate how they work together to spread awareness to the public. Drawn from Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, these trained volunteer naturalists enrich many whale watching trips and island explorations with interpretations of the Channel’s wildlife, environment, and human history.
Not all sanctuaries have adjacent national parks nor do all national parks have access to the ocean as part of their experience. However, many do have collaborative ties with museums and government agencies. Check out this website to see what the sanctuary system considers its top accomplishments to date.
(Disclosure: I am a member of the Channel Islands Naturalist Corps and the Sanctuary Advisory Council.)
Related Links
This column was amended on Otober 9, 2012 to correct the number of National Marine Sanctuaries.
Comments
I am sorry I don’t see it your way.
I see Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Taxpayer Dollars flowing down the drain.
I started diving in the 1960’s. Kelp Forests were much larger and healthier than they are today.
During a 1970 Santa Barbara Island Race, we had high seas and wind. The Kelp Forest was so large on the back side of Santa Barbara Island that when we rounded the Island we had to stand off enough so that our fin keel did not snag on it. The wind was so fierce that the Kelp leaves danced on the waters surface as we surfed downwind.
Today there is no Kelp on the backside of Santa Barbara Island and the sea bottom looks like a thermonuclear device was detonated. No white abalone either.
What is prominent on Santa Barbara Island the large house and boat garage built by the NPS bureaucracy on a Rock.
The 1970’s era showed large beds of abalone, rock scallops as large as dinner plates, blue shark, swordfish, salmon, rockfish etc. All Gone Today.
What has happened is overharvesting and human overpopulation/pollution.
You are curators of a Bumbling Bureaucratic Money Pit, which will never recover as long as the human population on land continues to grow.
The Channel Islands National Park suffers the same ills as all of California, human overpopulation/pollution.
I was lucky to have lived in a time before the Natural Environment was destroyed by over fishing, constant freighter/tanker traffic etc. As California looks to a population of 50 million there is no hope.
Channel Islands National Park is a Cottage Industry of spurious science in the Name of a Pay Check but the reality is it will never recover without removing the current level of human activity.
You are not saving anything for Future Generations, its already gone.
Just last month with extremely clear water my dive buddy and I were able to photographically document a half dozen healthy abalone of green, red, pink varieties, not in CINMS, but that is a far cry from hundreds of animals in hundreds of beds at existed 40 years ago.
Jim Coulouris, who owned the Seafarer Dive Shop in Channel Islands Harbor, took tens of thousands of slides of the day when the Channel Islands flourished, those images documented the way things were, and I sure hope they have been preserved.
I believe he was also a founding member of the Channel Islands Underwater Photographic Society.
I would like to see 40 year-old underwater pictures compared with today and then tell us about all your good deeds.
howgreenwasmyvalley (anonymous profile)
October 1, 2012 at 10:13 a.m. (Suggest removal)