FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: Lawrence Ragonese (609) 292-2994
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DEP TEAMS UP WITH AREA'S LEADING RESEARCHERS ON BARNEGAT BAY (11/P131) TRENTON – The Department of Environmental Protection is teaming up with several of the region’s leading research institutions to perform scientific studies that will help the department make critical decisions on how to restore and enhance ecologically stressed Barnegat Bay, Commissioner Bob Martin announced today. Taken together, the series of ten studies coupled with other work the DEP is undertaking will result in the most comprehensive scientific analysis ever for the bay. The studies will be performed by the Rutgers University Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, the New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium, Montclair State University, Rider University, Monmouth University and the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, in cooperation with the DEP. “Governor Christie is committed to restoring Barnegat Bay, an ecological treasure and tourism asset that is important to all of New Jersey” said DEP Commissioner Bob Martin. “The results of these studies will fill in data gaps and arm us with critical information that will help define future actions we must take to restore the bay and bring it back from many decades of decline. We are extremely fortunate to have such a pool of talent and expertise in marine sciences so close at hand to assist us as we nurse the bay back to health.” The Governor’s 10-point Comprehensive Barnegat Bay Restoration Plan calls for a variety of strategies to reduce nutrient pollution to the bay, including the nation’s toughest statewide fertilizer law, low-cost funding for local governments to improve stormwater control projects, acquisition and protection of land in the watershed to filter pollutants and provide buffers, and development of a Special Area Management Plan to improve coordination among planning jurisdictions. The plan also calls for the closure of the Oyster Creek nuclear power plant in Lacey Township by the end of 2019, a decade ahead of the expiration of its federal license. “I commend the DEP for pulling together so much scientific expertise from agencies and institutions around the region to work together to address the bay’s problems,” said Stan Hales, Executive Director of the Barnegat Bay Partnership. “These studies represent the most comprehensive research commitment to the Barnegat Bay in the past 30 to 40 years, perhaps ever. The studies address numerous information gaps about the bay’s fundamental ecology. They should provide us with a more complete understanding of the bay’s current condition and the extent to which the bay’s ecology has changed.” Long and very shallow, Barnegat Bay has limited inlets to allow flushing of degraded water to the ocean. The bay is becoming eutrophic, meaning that nutrients are causing frequent algae blooms that can cause low dissolved oxygen conditions and block sunlight, affecting the estuary’s overall ecological balance. Over the years, extensive research has been done on the bay’s struggles with water quality problems. But the work was not fully coordinated, resulting in key information gaps. Brown tide outbreaks, declines in hard clam populations and eel grass, and population explosions of sea nettles are some of the most visible signs of the ecological stress the bay faces. Yet the role that specific changes in water quality conditions have in causing these and other bay problems remain unclear. The DEP’s Division of Water Quality Monitoring and Standards over the summer launched a first-ever bay-wide water quality monitoring network to gather data from both the bay and its tributaries on pollutants, sources of those pollutants, and how water flow affects the health of the bay. The DEP Office of Science also has been working with the state’s Science Advisory Board, state universities, the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the Barnegat Bay Partnership to develop and fund additional research projects that will fill in the gaps and establish baseline ecological conditions for the bay for comparison over time. Scientists hope to better characterize and address the environmental stresses the bay faces. Toward this end, Commissioner Martin has authorized funding of contracts for the following studies: Benthic Invertebrate Community Monitoring and Indicator Development for the Barnegat Bay-Little Egg Harbor Estuary Barnegat Bay Diatom Nutrient Inference Model Benthic-Pelagic Coupling: Hard Clams as Indicators of Suspended Particulates in the Barnegat Bay Assessment of Fish and Crab Responses to Human Alteration of Barnegat Bay Baseline Characterization of Phytoplankton and Harmful Algal Blooms Multi-Trophic Level Modeling of Barnegat Bay Tidal Freshwater and Salt Marsh Wetland Studies of Changing Ecological Function and Adaptation Strategies Ecological Evaluation of Sedge Island Marine Conservation Area in Barnegat Bay For more information on the studies, visit: http://www.state.nj.us/dep/barnegatbay/plan-research.htm For more on the Christie Administration’s 10-point restoration plan, visit: http://www.nj.gov/dep/barnegatbay/ | |
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