A Little Goes a Long Way
Last week, a family friend who teaches at a local middle
school invited me to her classroom. She
wanted someone to teach her sixth graders about sediments, nutrients, and the
Bay. I agreed, and took Krystal, one of
my co-workers, along. We had an amazing
day. All in all, I think we talked to
about 300 incredibly smart 6th graders!
They knew that sediment clouds the water and covers any organisms on the
bottom, that the watershed is made up of six states (naming them was more challenging),
and that oysters used to be able to filter the entire volume of the Bay in
three days. (It now takes almost a year!) The kids had a great background of
information, so we added to it a little bit.
We’ve all heard that nutrients in the Bay are harmful and
cause algal blooms and dead zones. The
best question of the day, however, came from a student who asked, “If plants
need nutrients to grow, why aren’t the bay grasses growing a lot and providing
oxygen for the animals at the bottom?” I
had been waiting for someone to ask that!
He was right, the plants have all the nutrients that they could ever
want; the problem is that the plants don’t get enough light. Algae float near the surface, soak up
sunlight and nutrients, and form a layer over the water’s surface. That layer, (plus the murkiness due to sediment),
blocks sunlight. Not enough reaches the
bottom to let the grasses grow. As the
plants and older generations of algae die, they sink to the bottom and
decompose. Decomposers use oxygen. Without plants to provide oxygen, whatever
was left in the water is sucked out by decomposers, leaving an anoxic or “dead”
zone every summer.
Krystal and I had a wrap-up discussion with the students,
where we all listed things we could do
to help the Bay. They knew the basics, like recycling and car-pooling, and that
every little bit helps. They were
excited to hear other opportunities, though.
Some students live on waterfront property, and were eager to go home and
ask their parents if they could grow
oyster spat for a year. Some have
yards that are fertilized twice a year, and were concerned when it was
suggested that they skip the spring treatments and wait until fall. Several students even asked if there was
someplace they could volunteer.
Krystal and I left that day feeling like we’d made a small impact,
but apparently we did more than we thought.
The next day, I was handed a hundred or so thank-you letters from the students. Most were the typical “thanks for coming,”
but several got me really excited! One
said that they went home and told their dad not to fertilize this year. Another said that she’ll make sure her
parents clean up after the family dog. A
third got permission from her parents to raise oysters and wanted more
information. All of this reaction came
out of a 30-minute talk! The kids were
so eager to help, once they saw the real problem. It didn’t take much; an explanation of what’s happening, a picture of the Bay from last summer, and some easy tips to help
out. All they needed was to know what they
can do.
I sincerely hope they continue their enthusiasm through adulthood,
and I hope it’s as contagious for everyone else as it was for Krystal and me!
MAST students visit Bay Program office
Krystal Freeman is a Living Resources
Subcommittee staffer with the Chesapeake Research Consortium at the
Chesapeake Bay Program.
Yesterday morning, a group of college students from Hampton University’s Multicultural Students at Sea Together (MAST) program came to our office to learn about the Bay Program. We the Chesapeake Research Consortium (CRC)
staffers are generally only a few years removed from our Bachelor’s
degrees, making us perfect candidates to represent CBP for this
particular group.
As the group approached the Fish Shack, I couldn’t
help but think they looked very clean and well put-together to have
been sailing the Chesapeake for close to two weeks!
Everything about this group varied: one was a
graduate student and another will be starting college as a freshman
this coming semester. Majors ranged from marine biology to women’s
studies and political science. English is not the first
language of several of the students, and they allowed me to use my
Spanish with them as we continued discussing CBP during the break. The
students in this program create a fun and enthusiastic group — once
they started talking, you could tell that they would continue talking
about the summer of 2008 for a lifetime.
I and the rest of the CRC staffers were able to
share with the group many of the opportunities afforded us by working
here through the CRC Career Development Program: projects we have played a role in, people we have met, and volunteer activities we’ve completed. In
addition to information about the subcommittees we support, we shared
things from our own college experiences such as internships, research
projects, study abroad…even ID pictures and school spirit. It was
definitely a different feeling standing in the Fish Shack as the
“seasoned veteran” passing on words of wisdom.
Krystal speaks with MAST students in the "Fish Shack," the Bay Program's conference room.