Volunteers Restore Malibu Lagoon

May 4th, 2009

20 volunteers came out on Saturday, May 2nd to remove invasive vegetation from the bio-swales of the newly installed parking lot at Malibu Lagoon State Park. Bio-swales capture rainwater to remove silt and pollution before it enters the lagoon. The parking lot is designed to capture, treat and infiltrate more than three inches of rain in a 24-hour period. More than three-thousand native plants have been placed in the bio-swales to create habitat and aid in the uptake of stormwater pollution. Thanks to the hard work of our volunteers these native plants will continue to thrive without invasive vegetation crowding their space.

 

 

UCLA Lab School Visits Malibu Creek

May 4th, 2009
The students of UCLA Lab School in Westwood are very lucky to have Stone Canyon Creek running through their campus, but in it’s current state the banks are overgrown with invasive and/or exotic vegetation. Santa Monica Baykeeper is very excited to be partnering with UCLA Lab School to return their portion of Stone Canyon Creek back to its former native habitat. Students have recently started to collect water quality data from the creek to help them determine its health where the creek runs through their school.

Over three days last week approximately 120 intermediate students from the school took field trips to Malibu Creek State Park to observe stream conditions, identify benthic macroinvertebrates (the bugs that live on the bottom of the stream), and conduct water chemistry tests for nitrates, chlorine, dissolved oxygen, pH, and turbidity on Malibu and Las Virgenes Creeks. They will use the data collected from this visit to compare with thier results from Stone Canyon Creek to see how they differ. Ultimately, the intermediate students from UCLA Lab School will use what they have learned to help design a restoration project for their school.

Fuel the Movie - Check it out!

February 13th, 2009

This is a great opportunity to learn how we can all participate in a petroleum-free sustainable existence right here, right now.

If this groundbreaking film does well in Los Angeles, it will be shown across the nation!

Please go see Fuel the film this weekend and pass the word to your friends about the screenings in L.A. over the coming week.

Fuel Showings, February 13 - February 19

Santa Monica:
AMC Loews Broadway 4, 1441 3rd Street Promenade

Fri-Sun: 10:00am, 1:00pm, 4:00pm, 7:00pm, 10:15pm
Mon-Thurs: 1:00pm, 4:00pm, 7:00pm, 10:15pm
Q&A with filmmaker Josh Tickell following the 7:00pm showing on 2/14

Sales hotline: (310) 458-6232

Los Angeles:
Laemmle Sunset 5, 8000 Sunset Blvd.
Daily: 1:20pm, 4:10pm,7:00pm, 9:55pm
Q&A w/ Josh Tickell after all showings Friday!

Sales hotline: (323) 848-3505

Click here to purchase tickets online

MLPA: Seeing the ocean from above

February 10th, 2009

Santa Monica Baykeeper is partnering with LightHawk, a non-profit volunteer-based environmental aviation organization, to conduct aerial surveys and document how both commercial and recreational boaters use our local waters. The collected data will provide important information for the Marine Life Protection Act decision-making process. Santa Monica Baykeeper welcomes RSG (regional stakeholder group) members to join staff conducting aerial surveys of the south coast study region.

This is a great opportunity to see the MLPA study region from a bird’s eye view and increase familiarity with the entire coastline from Point Conception to the US-Mexico border.  The surveys are conducted year round with flights scheduled on weekdays, weekends and even holidays in order to capture how boaters use our local waters.

ECHS Green Thumbs

January 19th, 2009

Santa Monica Baykeeper and Environmental Charter High School (ECHS) have partnered to create a native plant nursery on their campus. Here they will grow and care for native riparian plants to be placed at the restoration site on Stone Canyon Creek located on UCLA’s campus.

During the students field trip to Malibu Creek State Park, Environmental Scientist Nat Cox showed the students how to collect and clean seeds, plant cuttings and transfer them as they mature in the nursery.

We are very excited to be working with ECHS and can’t wait until their plants can be moved to the Stone Canyon Creek restoration site.