Webs Under Waves: Exploring Coastal Marine LifeWhat is Web Under Waves? Webs Under Waves: Exploring Coastal Marine LifeThis coastal marine educational program explores the food webs of the central California coastal marine environment and teaches students about the habitats of the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, Farallon National Wildlife Refuge, and Devil's Slide Rock, including adaptations of the common murre and what students can do to help protect the marine environment. With the placement of remote video cameras on Devil's Slide Rock, this enabled us to introduce an even more exciting component to this new program. Now each student can observe ad record data in a science journal of common murres and other seabird activity from the live web cam during the mating and breeding season. With the newsletters from the Common Murre Restoration Project (Murre Maniac) and the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge (Farallon Fanatic), students can get current data from scientists' wildlife observations too. History: Common Murre Restoration ProjectSince the program's inception in 1996 through 2005, approximately 5,390 students from the San Francisco Bay Area have participated in the environmental education component of the Common Murre Restoration Project. The program served two main functions by providing environmental education to local children while assisting the project with murre decoy maintenance. Education presentations covered a variety of topics ranging from the biology of sea birds, especially the common murre, to current and historical pressures affecting seabird decline, using hands-on activities and slide shows. The presentations also focused on the 1986 Apex Houston oil spill and its impact on the common murre colony on Devil's slide Rock as well as the social attraction restoration efforts. In addition, students had the opportunity to help the project directly by repainting murre decoys in preparation for redeployment in the coming winter. With the success of social attraction efforts for common murres on Devil's Slide Rock, the project no longer needed to deploy decoys on the rock. Because students during the past 10 years helped to paint these decoys, the education program needed to undergo some changes. Fortunately, thanks to new partnerships with the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge, the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, and PRBO Conservation Science, a new program was launched on the heels of the former Common Murre Restoration Project education program! On-Line Activities: From Webs Under Waves Education Program
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