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Surf’s up! This gray seal peeks out ahead of a wave crashing at Race Point Beach in Cape Cod National Seashore, just outside Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Gray seals are often spotted within the sanctuary, where they feed on fish,...

Surf’s up! This gray seal peeks out ahead of a wave crashing at Race Point Beach in Cape Cod National Seashore, just outside Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. 

Gray seals are often spotted within the sanctuary, where they feed on fish, crustaceans, squid, and sometimes even small seabirds! Sometimes employing “social feeding” techniques in which multiple individuals work together to trap a prey item, gray seals are quite the talented hunters. 

What are some of your favorite ocean predators?

(Photo: Peter Flood)

gray seal seal surf surfing ocean pinniped waves wave cape cod animal nature Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary noaa earthisblue
Happy 25th anniversary to Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary! Looking something like a burst of celebratory confetti, corals like this one spawn within the sanctuary each year, releasing hundreds of gametes into the water. The warm, sunlit...

Happy 25th anniversary to Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary! 

Looking something like a burst of celebratory confetti, corals like this one spawn within the sanctuary each year, releasing hundreds of gametes into the water. The warm, sunlit waters of this Gulf of Mexico sanctuary make it a comfy home for hard corals like these, as well as hundreds of other marine species. Plus, the sanctuary is considering expanding

(Photo: G.P. Schmahl/NOAA)

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Happy 36th anniversary to Gray’s Reef and Greater Farallones national marine sanctuaries! The misty seascape of California’s Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary (top) provides breeding and feeding ground for many different species, including...

Happy 36th anniversary to Gray’s Reef and Greater Farallones national marine sanctuaries! 

The misty seascape of California’s Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary (top) provides breeding and feeding ground for many different species, including blue, gray, and humpback whales, and supports one of the most significant populations of white sharks in the world. 

Located off the coast of Georgia, Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary (bottom) protects a dynamic live-bottom reef home to more than 200 species of fish, as well as the only known winter calving ground for the highly-endangered North Atlantic right whale. 

Happy anniversary to these two sanctuaries, and many thanks to their staff for protecting our ocean’s amazing places! 

(Top photo: Matt McIntosh/NOAA; bottom photo: GregMcFall/NOAA)

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A living museum: some sanctuaries, like Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, protect shipwrecks and other historic artifacts. By preserving these resources – like the wreck of W.G. Mason, pictured here – we preserve parts of our history. The wrecks...

A living museum: some sanctuaries, like Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, protect shipwrecks and other historic artifacts. 

By preserving these resources – like the wreck of W.G. Mason, pictured here – we preserve parts of our history. The wrecks of Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary represent generations of life on the Great Lakes, and because many of them are accessible via diving and snorkeling, you can experience this history for yourself! 

(Photo: David J. Ruck/NOAA)

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Hey guys, what’s over there? These sea lions are congregating in the waters of Santa Barbara Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. The sanctuary overlaps with Channel Islands National Park, and together, the part and sanctuary protect...

Hey guys, what’s over there? 

These sea lions are congregating in the waters of Santa Barbara Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. The sanctuary overlaps with Channel Islands National Park, and together, the part and sanctuary protect the ecosystems and organisms of California’s Channel Islands! 

(Photo: Patrick Smith)

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Internship opportunity at the NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries

Love the ocean and Great Lakes? Spend all your time on social media? Wish you could use your prodigious GIF-making skills to help protect animals like this sea otter?

Consider applying for our social media volunteer internship!

As our social media intern, you’ll help with our social media and web outreach, including the Earth Is Blue campaign. You’ll have the opportunity to learn how social media campaigns and posts are designed and implemented, hone your science writing and editing skills, and get a better sense of how federal marine protected areas are managed. Ideally, you live in Portland, Oregon, but we’re also happy to work with remote interns.

Get the full details (including how to apply) here. We’ll begin reviewing applications on February 13th.

Interested in other internship opportunities with the Office of National Marine Sanctuaries? You can find them all here.

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Success for the sea otter!Sea otters were once locally extinct from the Washington coast, but in 1969 and 1970, 59 sea otters were relocated there from Alaska. These otters have thrived: today more than 1,800 individuals call the Washington coast...

Success for the sea otter!

Sea otters were once locally extinct from the Washington coast, but in 1969 and 1970, 59 sea otters were relocated there from Alaska. These otters have thrived: today more than 1,800 individuals call the Washington coast home! Most of them live in the waters of Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. 

Each year, researchers survey the population – the 2016 census was organized by U.S. Fish and Wildlife and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, with assistance from volunteers and staff from the sanctuary, Seattle Aquarium, and Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium. One large raft of over 600 sea otters was observed off the mouth of the Hoh River! 

(Photo: NOAA)

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We all work better together: we’ve proposed the designation of two new sanctuaries, and we want to know what you think! One of the proposed sites is the waters of Lake Michigan adjacent to Wisconsin. The proposed Wisconsin - Lake Michigan site would...

We all work better together: we’ve proposed the designation of two new sanctuaries, and we want to know what you think! One of the proposed sites is the waters of Lake Michigan adjacent to Wisconsin. 

The proposed Wisconsin - Lake Michigan site would protect a nationally-significant collection of shipwrecks in the Great Lakes. Archival and archaeological research indicates that the proposed sanctuary includes 37 known historic shipwrecks and about 80 potential shipwrecks yet to be discovered. Fifteen of the shipwrecks are preserved virtually intact with a high degree of hull integrity. The area also includes Wisconsin’s two oldest shipwrecks dating to the 1830s. 

Eighteen of the known shipwrecks within the proposed sanctuary are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The shipwrecks in this proposed sanctuary represent a cross-section of vessel types that played critical roles in the expansion of the United States and the development of the Midwest during the 19th and early 20th centuries. During this period entrepreneurs and shipbuilders launched tens of thousands of ships of many different designs, with eastbound ships carrying grain and raw materials, and westbound vessels carrying coal, manufactured goods, and settlers.

You can learn more about the proposal, including how to submit comments online, by mail, or at public meetings, hereThe comment period will be open through March 31st – we can’t wait to hear from you! 

(Photo: Tish Hase) 

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Stories from the Blue: Beach Watch

For more than 20 years, volunteers with Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary’s Beach Watch program have been surveying California coastal beaches. These volunteers walk the beaches of Greater Farallones and northern Monterey Bay national marine sanctuaries each month to collect data on live and dead species of birds and marine mammals, as well as on human activities. Read on for Beach Watch manager Kirsten Lindquist’s Story from the Blue to learn what makes Beach Watch such a special program.

Kirsten Lindquist (at right) gives a lecture about California wildlife to a group of Beach Watch volunteers. (Photo: Philip Barlow)

Kirsten:

I graduated from school back in 2000, and spent 11 or 12 years doing remote field work. I had a lot of experience working with the same species that we have here in the San Francisco area, only in the places where they breed, like Alaska and Chile, and I was ready to set down roots. So, six years ago I came to Beach Watch because I have a skill set that is applicable to teaching people about the species that are found here. I never anticipated what I was getting into: walking in the door and suddenly working with a team of over 100 Beach Watch volunteers.

We currently have about 140 volunteers, and almost every one of them has been with the program more than five years. In fact, we have 12 who have been with the program almost 25 years. The volunteer retention rate for this program is phenomenal.

These volunteers are really life-long learners, and we are satisfying their curiosity about our wildlife in exchange for all of their time and energy in collecting data along the beach. We foster a sense of community by providing an opportunity for a group of really interesting people to come together and learn together, and together they provide an incredible data set on our stretch of coast that can start to speak to long-term biological and ecosystem trends.

“In many ways, we provide the eyes and ears on the beaches. The first step toward understanding the world begins for us on the beach. And there is nothing more exciting or challenging than what we do. Without solid, honest information it is impossible for communities to make long and short-term decisions. We are the army of citizen scientists who provide data and stand up for the Earth so that our children will have a better world than we did.”

– Ed Ryken, Beach Watch volunteer since 2008

We hold trainings for new volunteers every couple of years, and usually around 50 people apply who really want to be in the class. Usually our training classes are filled to capacity, at 25 spots. Those people go through an intensive process that equals about an 80-hour training and a mentorship period before they’re actively collecting data. Once they’ve gone through the training they are assigned to a beach, where they conduct a survey one time a month. These people become the experts on that beach. They collect wildlife data about the birds and mammals that are using that stretch of coast, as well as record dead wildlife. They also monitor human uses and any oil deposition they may find on that beach. Those data then can be used in any number of ways.

We’ve had a number of oil spills along this coast that Beach Watch has recorded, and we’ve documented many other sanctuary management concerns. We also work with several different land managers with overlapping jurisdiction along this coast: two national parks and a number of state, county, and regional parks. All of those groups have access to Beach Watch data, and use them for their management purposes. So our volunteers get a lot of satisfaction from seeing how their data are used in so many different ways.

“You really feel like you’re making a contribution to something much bigger than yourself, but your focus is on your beach, so it doesn’t feel overwhelming. We are all on this planet together, and Beach Watch is a small part of what it will take to keep it healthy.”

– Anne Kelley, Beach Watch volunteer since 2012

In fall 2014, we had hosted two new training classes. Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary expanded northward in 2015, but just prior to that the Greater Farallones Association had already brought Beach Watch up the coast to that area. So we had added 40 new recruits  to the project to monitor the newly extended area, and they were super excited to get out on the beach. The day that our second training session ended, we got a phone call from one of our new volunteers saying, “there are 180 dead Cassin’s auklets on my beach.“ This was before their surveys had actually started, but it was basically the very first time these 40 new Beach Watch volunteers were to strike out onto the beach, prepared for action. As it turned out, this occurred in the middle of the largest Cassin’s auklet die-off that’s ever been documented on the West Coast of North America.

It was a trial-by-fire initiation. We found ourselves literally wading through a massive number of dead birds, saying, ‘this isn’t characteristic, this isn’t normal – believe me! Oh please don’t be scared off.” Ultimately, not a single person quit – not that they weren’t fazed by it, because it was an incredible sight and fairly disturbing. However, they were prepared for it, and they were game. They knew that the data they were collecting reflected the leading edge of the storm. These new Beach Watch surveyors were collecting very timely and pertinent information that now, two years later, we are contributing to four manuscripts that will go out for peer review in 2017. Also, we’ve had 15 different conference presentations over the last couple of years on that die-off. Academics from all over the country have asked us for those data. So these poor volunteers, who I was so terrified would all bail, just toughed it out and were absolutely incredible about starting their Beach Watch “careers” at this disturbing but amazing time – they could see just how important the Beach Watch data they gathered were.

It’s one thing when we call out the troops for some unusual event like an oil spill or a die-off. But it’s another thing altogether to be out there on the beach every month, over a period of several years, conducting regular, systematic surveys. Those are really the data that are so interesting and unique, because they provide us with a baseline of the normal conditions along our coast. We could then state with confidence and accuracy that the fall of 2014 was exceptional, because we had data reaching back 24 years that told us this was a huge and important event. We could prove it. But, to just go out during an event and say, “Wow, a lot of birds died!” – well, what does that really mean without this historical baseline data? That is what is so important about what our Beach Watch volunteers do: they go out and collect the “zero” or baseline, data. Those data show what things are like here normally, so that we can then call out what is unusual, should an event occur in the future.

“I grew up on beaches and am intrigued with intertidal ecosystems and their inhabitants. I’ve seen many changes in the populations of intertidal animals and some seabirds over just the last 5-10 years and the kind of information obtained from this kind of monitoring contributes to the knowledge base needed for effective protections. On a personal level, I like being able to contribute to something important and it’s such a tremendous learning experience.”

– Hollis Bewley, Beach Watch volunteer since 2014

We look for people who are really excited to learn, have a passion for wildlife, and who also have an aptitude for filling out forms – as tedious as that is. We don’t need someone to come to us and say, “I already know all the birds and mammals out there, I know the scientific method, I know all of these things.” Instead, we welcome people who are hungry to learn even more about our wildlife and ecosystem, and to learn more about Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary’s science and specific data collection methods. And ultimately, they understand how all of this ties into our conservation strategies. Beach Watchers see clearly that they play a significant role in the science and education community that supports this vital work.

Beach Watch volunteers survey a beach. (Photo: NOAA)

Videos by David J. Ruck/NOAA

Learn more about Beach Watch on the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary website.

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Hardworking Mom Wisdom the Laysan Albatross Returns to Nest

usfwspacific:

Wisdom sits on her nest after returning from foraging for food in the ocean. Photo credit:  Wieteke Holthuijzen/Friends of Midway Atoll

After a couple weeks of foraging in the open ocean, Wisdom has returned to relieve her mate, Akeakamai, from nest duty. Both Akeakamai and Wisdom will share the responsibility of incubating the egg, each taking turns going weeks without food and water while the other one forages, to assure the success of their chick. Volunteers report the egg looks healthy with no visible issues. If all goes well we should expect an early February hatch date.

Wisdom sits on her nest after returning from foraging for food in the ocean. Photo credit:  Wieteke Holthuijzen/Friends of Midway Atoll

The approximately 66 year old Laysan albatross was spotted on December 3 already incubating the newly laid egg. Eggs will generally take between 62 and 66 days to hatch and chicks will need care for an additional four months before they are able to fledge. Laysan albatross will only lay one egg a year, almost every year.

Home sweet home!

Wisdom, live! Video captured by: Charlie Pelizza/USFWS

Wisdom has been using the same nesting site on Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, within Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument since at least 1956, when she was first banded. The landscape around her nest may look different but in 61 years our famous bird is still sitting pretty.

Read more about this hardworking mom!

Learn more about Wisdom and her incredible story!

Wisdom has returned to her nest in Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument! 

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