Title: The Chesapeake Bay Watershed
1The Chesapeake Bay Watershed
- The Bay
- The Watershed
- The Issues
- The Workshop
- Follow-up Activities for the school-year
2The Chesapeake Bay
3- Chesapeake Bay facts
- Name is from the Native American word
"Chesepiooc," meaning "Great Shellfish Bay - The bay is largest estuary in the country
- The Bay is almost 200 miles long and 30 miles
across at its widest point with 4400 miles of
shoreline - An average depth of 27 feet
- 48 larger rivers and nearly 100 smaller rivers
drain into the Bay - Susquehanna river provides X of freshwater to
the Bay?
50 of freshwater
4A healthy estuary can produce more food per acre
than even the most productive farmland
5Importance of the Bay
- The Bay supports more than 3,600 species of
plants, fish and animals, including 348 species
of finfish, 173 species of shellfish and over
2,700 plant species. - The Chesapeake is home to 29 species of
waterfowl and is a major resting ground along the
Atlantic Migratory Bird Flyway. - The Chesapeake is a commercial and recreational
resource for the more than 15 million people who
live in its basin. - The Bay produces 500 million pounds of seafood
per year.
6The Problems
- In 50 years, over half of the aquatic grasses in
the Bay disappeared. - Shellfish and other aquatic life have declined
dramatically. - Other?
7The Chesapeake Bay Watershed
- Land from 64,000 square miles in six states feeds
freshwater into the Chesapeake Bay. - Over 15 million people reside in this area.
NJ
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8A Watershed is an area of land that sends all
water to a common place.
9Causing the Problems
- Population growth and development in the
watershed - Industry and agricultural practices
- Transportation
- Pollution
- Nutrients
- Toxins
- Sediment
- Air Pollution
- All water from the watershed drains into the Bay
10Agricultural Pollution
11Storm water Runoff
12Effects of Nutrient Pollution
13Toxins Pollution
- Point sources
- Includes industries and wastewater treatment
plants discharging wastewater directly into local
waterways. - Relatively easy to locate and regulate.
- Non-point sources
- Includes agricultural, urban and suburban storm
water runoff. - Significant sources of chemical contaminants such
as pesticides, oil and gas. - Very difficult to control.
- Air pollution
- Particles in the atmosphere precipitate into
water and accumulated
14Dermo and MSX are diseases that kill oysters, and
are caused by parasitic protozoans
15Solutions
- Education
- Action!
- Better planning
- Example cluster housing and reduce land use
- Control pollution and run-off
- Example restore riparian buffers
- Clean-up
- Example- oysters
16Agricultural Pollution
17Riperian Buffers Can Help
18Activities and information on the Internet
- http//chesapeakebay.net/
- Background and links
- http//www.epa.gov/owow/nps/nps_edu/index.html
EPA site with activities and information sheets - http//www.pawatersheds.org
- PA information
19Workshop Activities
- Stream-study field trip
- Background lectures on the science and issues
- Investigative activities for your students
20CBW Topics and Activities
- Data collection and analysis
- Acid rain
- Weather
- Water testing
- Physical and chemical characteristics of a stream
- Sampling and examining aquatic organisms
- Effects of toxins
- Global climate change
- Ecology
- Spectroscopy
- Microscopy
- Alternative fuels
- Groundwater
- Soil testing
- Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
- Using GPS and GIS
- Data presentation (PowerPoint and posters)
21Chesapeake Bay Watershed Activities
- Summer October teacher workshops
- Field trip for grade 5-12 students
- Costs paid for at least 125/participating
teacher - Teacher chooses the site to visit and schedules
this - Teacher coordinates with AS for equipment and
support - Investigative activities supported as needed by
van visits and equipment loans (6-8 student
activities in year) - Student conference for grades 5-12 at Gettysburg
in May - Students will give powerpoint presentation or
poster on one or more of their investigative
activities - CBW website where students can post results of
stream analysis and link to maps
22Benefits
- Students learn to conduct investigative work
- Students contribute to longitudinal study by
posting results on website - Students disseminate information to others
- Teacher networking and stipends!
- Half after workshop, and half at end of school
year