Over the last week or so, I've been involved in forming a GUE Affiliate organization here in Seattle. One of the major purposes of forming this affiliate is to launch a branch of Project Baseline here in Seattle. Project Baseline is an ambitious concept, to try to gain as much documentation of dive areas as possible, so that in ten years, we won't be dependent on individual memories to say, "There used to be a lot more fish here!"
I know of a number of other organizations trying to gather and make available data that only divers can provide. CINDAQ in Mexico is placing Sensus Pro sensors in the underwater caves, to gather information on depth and water temperature, to try to document some of the flow dynamics in the aquifers there. People are encouraged to "sponsor" sensors -- they purchase them, and the dive pros place them in the caves, and retrieve them at intervals and download the data. And, of course, if you are a cave diver, you can do what I do, and retrieve your own sensor and download it.
REEF here in the PNW is an attempt to validate and collect diver data on marine life populations, and Reef Check in California is a more rigorous form of the same thing. I also know of divers who volunteer with aquariums, or do video dives to pipe live feeds of the underwater world to children and their parents on boats.
In Southern California, there have been net retrieval projects, to remove derelict fishing nets that are continuing to harvest marine life.
These are just the things I know about. Being involved with GUE has put me in touch with a number of conservation/documentation efforts, but I am sure there are lots more.
Do you do something to "give back" to the marine environment we love? Tell me about where you are, and what you are doing -- perhaps we will inspire other folks to join your efforts, or start their own.
I know of a number of other organizations trying to gather and make available data that only divers can provide. CINDAQ in Mexico is placing Sensus Pro sensors in the underwater caves, to gather information on depth and water temperature, to try to document some of the flow dynamics in the aquifers there. People are encouraged to "sponsor" sensors -- they purchase them, and the dive pros place them in the caves, and retrieve them at intervals and download the data. And, of course, if you are a cave diver, you can do what I do, and retrieve your own sensor and download it.
REEF here in the PNW is an attempt to validate and collect diver data on marine life populations, and Reef Check in California is a more rigorous form of the same thing. I also know of divers who volunteer with aquariums, or do video dives to pipe live feeds of the underwater world to children and their parents on boats.
In Southern California, there have been net retrieval projects, to remove derelict fishing nets that are continuing to harvest marine life.
These are just the things I know about. Being involved with GUE has put me in touch with a number of conservation/documentation efforts, but I am sure there are lots more.
Do you do something to "give back" to the marine environment we love? Tell me about where you are, and what you are doing -- perhaps we will inspire other folks to join your efforts, or start their own.