Survey areas of San Diego bay.
Port of San Diego and
Education-Research Institutions Celebrate Partnership Creating Center for Bay
and Coastal Dynamics
Commissioner Robert J. “Rocky” Spane to be
honored
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography/University of California, San Diego
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, San
Diego Unified Port District and two other world-renown research and education
institutions—San Diego State University and Hubbs-SeaWorld Research
Institute—will formalize a partnership this week establishing a research center
focusing on the study of San Diego Bay.
In addition, Board of Port Commissioners member Robert J.
“Rocky” Spane will be recognized for his role in establishing the Center for
Bay and Coastal Dynamics (CBCD).
The event will begin at 10:30 a.m., Thursday, Dec. 17, 2009,
at San Diego State University’s Coastal and Marine Institute Laboratory, where
the center is housed. The bayside lab is located at the former Naval Training
Center, 4165 Spruance Road in San Diego.
The speakers at the Thursday event will include Port
Commissioners Robert “Dukie” Valderrama and Scott Peters; Stanley Moloy, Dean of San Diego
State’s College of Sciences; Tony Haymet, Director of Scripps Institution of
Oceanography and Donald Kent, President of Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute.

“Respected scientists from our world-renown partner institutions
are conducting cutting-edge research at the center,” said Board of Port
Commissioners Chairman Stephen P. Cushman. “The work of these researchers will help us better understand how our bay,
the watershed and the coastal waters connect and that’s going to mean we on the
Board will be making wiser and smarter decisions as we consider the bay and its
preservation.”
The
Center for Bay and Coastal Dynamics brings together geologists from Scripps
Institution of Oceanography and ecologists from San Diego State University
(SDSU) to study the complex environmental processes influencing San Diego Bay
and surrounding coastal waters.
"I would like to acknowledge and thank the Board of
Port Commissioners for their vision and support for better scientific knowledge
of the local environment," said Haymet. "This is a direct investment
in our local community and positions San Diego to continue its leadership role
in the cross-disciplinary study of coastal and bay environments."
In response to growing environmental pressures on San Diego
Bay and surrounding coastal regions, researchers at Scripps and SDSU, in
collaboration with the San Diego Unified Port District, will meld geophysical
and marine biological research to conduct long-term scientific monitoring of the
entire ecosystem. The new center will be co-managed by both universities with
input from an advisory committee comprised of representatives from all three
institutions.
Cushman explained that the Port’s Environmental Services
Department has undertaken several projects to help protect and enhance the Bay
and its environment. The Port manages San Diego Bay, which stretches about 12
miles from the tip of San Diego’s Shelter Island to near the Mexican border.
Through its Environmental Fund, the Port is involved in several projects
focusing on improving the health of the bay.
“Rocky was instrumental in establishing the Port’s
Environmental Fund, he was the first chair of the Environmental Advisory
Committee and he was our chief advocate for this center,” Cushman said.
San Diego State University, Scripps Oceanography, and
Hubbs-SeaWorld scientists are collaborating on research that includes not only
the changing physical characteristics of the bay and coast, but also the study
of eelgrass habitats to help better understand the abundance and distribution
of fish in the bay, mapping of kelp beds and the fishes and invertebrates and
the study of worms, crustaceans and mollusks that feed on seafloor sediment
that will give clues into the effect of pollutants on the marine environment.
The Paul Peterson Family Foundation has provided a $30,000
gift to help pay for education programs for undergraduate and graduate research
training.
In addition to training graduate and undergraduate students,
the center will be a resource for project-based learning for students ranging
from grades six through 12.
--Annie Reisewitz
December 16, 2009
|