Volume 21, No. 1 Special Issue 2002
Navigating Our Course to
a "Livable Coast"
The ocean is a source of endless fascination
- a vast resource whose power, mystery, and beauty commands our
respect.
Today, the ocean beckons many of us. In fact,
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), more than half of all Americans now live in coastal counties.
Here in the Diamond State, this trend underscores
the importance of Governor Minner's "Livable Delaware" initiative
- targeting sprawl and other quality-of-life issues. We need to
make wise decisions about growth today to ensure the future welfare
of our coastal communities and the natural resources on which we
depend.
Since the University of Delaware Sea Grant
College Program was established in 1976, our goals have been to
promote the wise use, conservation, and management of Delaware's
marine and coastal resources. We do so through a coordinated program
of high-quality research, education, and public service activities.
During the past year, a National Sea Grant
Review Team conducted an intensive evaluation of our program and
concluded that it is "excellent in all respects." They also recognized
five best management practices relating to our industry partnership
activities, interactive Web sites, Coast Day open house, and other
educational programs.
We remain dedicated to addressing coastal
challenges on behalf of Delawareans and the environment. This report
highlights several projects we're working on. To learn more, please
visit our Web site at www.ocean.udel.edu
or contact us at (302) 831-8083. We look forward to hearing from
you!
Dr. Carolyn A. Thoroughgood
Director, Sea Grant College Program
Dean, College of Marine and Earth Studies
What Is Sea Grant?
Sea Grant is a nationwide network of 30 university-based
programs that promotes better understanding, conservation, and use
of America's coastal resources - "from sea to shining sea." Delaware
Sea Grant was established at the University of Delaware in 1976.
It is a unique partnership between the University, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the State of Delaware.
Science Serving Delaware's
Coast
The University of Delaware Sea Grant College
Program currently is conducting 19 research projects in the following
priority areas: coastal ocean studies, coastal engineering, environmental
technology, marine biotechnology, and fisheries. These projects
range from developing new sensors that can detect harmful algae,
to determining how natural forces - winds and currents - can affect
the Delaware Bay's blue crab population.
This report highlights only a portion of
our research program. To learn more, please visit our Web site at
www.ocean.udel.edu.
Our Coastal Ocean Studies focus on
the Delaware Estuary and the Inland Bays. The Delaware Estuary extends
133 miles from the Delaware River rapids at Trenton, New Jersey,
south to the mouth of the Delaware Bay. Among the estuary's benefits,
it supports the fourth largest port in the U.S. and the largest
concentration of horseshoe crabs in the world.
Delaware's Inland Bays - Rehoboth, Indian
River, and Little Assawoman - cover 32 square miles in coastal Sussex
County. Besides providing habitat for ospreys to diamondback terrapins,
the bays rank as the state's top boating destination.
In Environmental Technology research,
our scientists are developing a specialized probe to detect coastal
water-quality problems. They also are exploring new satellite-based
techniques for assessing the health of large ecosystems such as
the Delaware Bay.
Among our projects in Marine Biotechnology,
researchers are working at the molecular level to assess the potential
of certain marine bacteria in cleaning up toxic pollutants.
The blue crab (above) and the summer flounder
(lower right) are among the species targeted in Delaware Sea Grant's
Fisheries research. We also are working to help the region's
once-thriving oyster population recover from disease and developing
an artificial bait to help relieve fishing pressure on the horseshoe
crab, which is used to catch eels and whelk. The Delaware Bay horseshoe
crab population has been on the decline for the past decade.
Graduate Education is a top priority
at Delaware Sea Grant. In each of our research projects, graduate
students gain valuable, hands-on experience in marine science working
under the guidance of their advisers. When these students graduate,
they will move on to careers in academia, resource management, government,
and industry.
"Biological Fence" May Keep
Phragmites Out of Marshes
Among marsh plants, Phragmites is
a big bully! Its fast-growing underground stems (rhizomes)
enable it to quickly take over a marsh, crowding out plants better
for wildlife.
Botanists Jack Gallagher and Denise Seliskar
and graduate student Jiangbo Wang are working to find a way to stop
Phragmites in its tracks. In their lab at the UD Lewes campus
(below), they are evaluating plants they have cultured, as well
as plants found in nature, to assess their ability to form a "biological
fence" to block Phragmites.
"We're looking for plants that have roots
and rhizomes so dense they impede Phragmites' growth and
whose roots release chemical compounds that inhibit Phragmites,"
says Gallagher. "Evergreen plants that grow taller than
Phragmites and 'keep it in the dark' are also good because
it doesn't like to grow in shade."
So far, he says, black needle rush, wax
myrtle, and several other plants show good potential as Phragmites
blockers. This summer, field testing of the plants will be expanded
at a marsh restoration site along Delaware Bay. The project is supported
jointly by Sea Grant and Public Service Enterprise Group.
Capturing Breaking Waves
It's a busy day at "the beach" in DuPont
Hall on the UD Newark campus. Coastal engineer Nobuhisa Kobayashi
and graduate student Yuki Tega (above) are conducting experiments
in a wave tank to better understand what happens to the seafloor
when waves break near shore.
While the waves are only about a foot high
- typical of a calm sea - they hit the simulated seafloor when they
break, kicking up sediment particles that become suspended in the
water.
"We can see what's happening, but quantifying
what we see is very difficult," Kobayashi says. "We're working to
determine how much sediment is being moved by breaking waves and
carried on- or offshore."
The scientists will translate their observations
into a mathematical model that can determine how long it will take
a beach to recover from storm erosion. Their ultimate goal is to
develop a computer program that beach managers can use to predict
how long the sand they've put on a beach will last.
Scientists Map Delaware
River Seafloor
From the deck of UD's research vessel Cape
Henlopen, scientist Chris Sommerfield (left) is preparing to
deploy a "towfish" in the Delaware River. As its name belies, this
instrument is towed underwater a few feet above the bottom. It transmits
narrow beams of acoustic energy to the seafloor and converts the
reflected sound into images. Sommerfield is using the tool to map
the seafloor of the Delaware River from Burlington, New Jersey,
to New Castle, Delaware.
"We're covering the entire seafloor of that
area," Sommerfield says. "We've towed our instruments back and forth,
over 300 miles total, to document the bottom completely. It's the
most comprehensive survey of this region ever done."
The hundreds of images that have been taken
are now being digitally "stitched" together to produce a composite
view of the seafloor. Additionally, Sommerfield and his research
team have collected several hundred sediment samples to correlate
their mapping data with specific sediment types.
Sommerfield's aim is to better understand
where over a million tons of sediment that enter the Delaware Estuary
annually go, and how the seafloor is being affected by natural and
human processes. This baseline information can then aid resource
managers and engineers with issues such as contaminant dispersal
and shoaling of navigable channels.
The Sea Grant study is being conducted in
partnership with the Delaware River Basin Commission, Delaware Department
of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, and Environmental
Protection Agency.
Can Microbes Detoxify River
Pollutant?
Polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are nasty
pollutants. Originating in tar, wood preservatives, and oil and
other fossil fuels, they don't break down in water. Found in industrialized
estuaries like the Delaware River and Bay, they can cause tumors
in fish and accumulate to lethal levels in seafloor dwellers such
as clams and oysters.
UD microbiologist David Kirchman and graduate
student Dawn Ward (left) are working to find out what effect PAHs
have on the microbes of the Delaware River and Bay. While some of
these tiny organisms, which form the base of the food chain, are
harmed by PAHs, others can actually detoxify the complex chemical
compounds.
During the past year, the scientists sampled
several contaminated sites in the river near the Philadelphia Naval
Shipyard and found some known hydrocarbon degraders.
"These microbes may be very useful in bioremediation,"
says Kirchman. "We're working to learn more about them and the conditions
that enhance their ability to detoxify PAHs."
The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory is collaborating
on the project.
Tracking the Travels of
the Blue Crab
The blue crab is Delaware's number-one commercial
fishery, so when its population fluctuates, people want to know
why. While fishing pressure is a factor, natural forces - wind and
currents - also can impact the crab population, according to UD
marine biologist Charles Epifanio.
He and oceanographer Richard Garvine have
determined that once the tiny, larval crabs hatch in July and August,
they get swept out of the bay and onto the continental shelf by
the Delaware Coastal Current. Summer winds then push the crabs home,
back into their bay nursery grounds.
"If river flow is at a minimum due to drought,
wind has a greater effect in shuttling the crabs back into the bay,"
Epifanio says. "Thus, the supply of larval crabs may be highest
in drought years."
The scientists have discovered that the
larval crabs often occur in the bay in large, distinct patches.
"We think these patches may be formed through the synchronized spawning
of large aggregations of female crabs," Epifanio notes.
This summer, the scientists will test their
hypothesis using satellites to track the crab patches, coupled with
intensive sampling operations at various locations in the bay. This
spatial data will help them refine a unique mathematical model of
the physical and biological processes involved in blue crab transport.
New Probe Can Rapidly Detect
Brown Tide
Delaware Sea Grant researchers have developed
a molecular probe that can rapidly detect the microscopic plant
that causes brown tide. The probe is so sensitive it can detect
brown tide at just a few cells per milliliter, advancing the capability
to predict waters at risk, well before blooms occur.
"We've already used the probe to assist
DNREC in monitoring brown tide in the Inland Bays and expect it
will become the method of choice for regulatory agencies throughout
the United States," says UD oceanographer David Hutchins, who is
leading the project with marine biologist Craig Cary.
Brown tide is not harmful to humans, but
it can hurt bay life. When the tiny plant grows rapidly, or "blooms,"
at the water's surface, it forms a thick, brown soup impenetrable
by sunlight. Major brown-tide blooms have damaged the shellfish
industries in several states.
A few years ago, New Jersey was the southern
extent of brown tide on the East Coast. Then in 1998, Hutchins found
it in Delaware's Little Assa-woman Bay. Last summer, his students
tested for the organism farther south and found it in estuaries
"from here to Florida," according to Hutchins.
Currently, Linda Popels, one of Hutchins'
students, is working to assess brown tide's ability to survive darkness.
If the microscopic plant can live for an extended period with no
light, it might be hitching a ride to new waters via the ballast
tanks of ships and recreational boats.
Chemical Sensor Helps
Scientists Solve Fish-Kill Mystery
What killed over 2 million bait fish in
Torquay Canal in July 2000? Some suspected Pfiesteria. Others
thought "low oxygen." UD chemist George Luther wanted to investigate.
Last year, he found over a dozen "deep holes" in the shallow canal,
which connects to Bald Eagle Creek, a tributary to northern Rehoboth
Bay. Some holes are 18 feet deep and as large as a football field.
They were dug when mud was removed from the canal to build up the
soil for nearby housing developments in the 1960s.
Using a novel microelectrode sensor he developed
in Sea Grant research, Luther and his team tested the sites' water
chemistry. They found that when the weather is calm, oxygen is measurable
in the canal's surface waters, but in the deep holes, only toxic
hydrogen sulfide exists.
"In summer, if storms or strong winds occur
over a few days, the water in the holes overturns and the hydrogen
sulfide comes to the surface, harming fish and crabs," Luther says.
He's working with DNREC to try to solve
the toxic problem. "The best approach may be to simply fill the
holes with iron-rich sediment to an even water depth of 6 feet,"
he says.
He recently got a lander to which the sensor
can be attached, deployed, and operated remotely from boats. It
will be used in the Inland Bays this summer.
Regional Team Working
to Define Fish Habitat Needs
UD fisheries scientist Tim Targett and his
graduate students have built a state-of-the art aquarium system
that is a key component in a regional Sea Grant effort to assess
the effects of low-oxygen conditions, called hypoxia, on
fish in coastal nursery grounds.
Targett's collaborators include Jim Rice
from North Carolina State University and Ken Rose from Louisiana
State University.
"Fisheries management organizations have
placed a strong emphasis on the importance of identifying 'essential
fish habitat' - those waters critical to fish for spawning, breeding,
feeding, and growth to maturity," says Targett. "In our regional
project, we're working to develop a simulation model that can predict
the impact of changing oxygen conditions on the growth, survival,
and distribution of several major species including young weakfish,
summer flounder, Atlantic menhaden, and spot."
Using their computer-controlled aquarium
system, Targett and his students are monitoring how juvenile fish
(less than a year old) respond to the varying oxygen conditions
found in healthy versus polluted estuaries over a range of temperatures
and salinities. Over the next two years, the data will be used by
Targett's collaborators to develop a novel fisheries model.
"When we're done," Targett says, "we should
have the framework for quantifying the complex relationships between
water quality and fish populations."
Sea Grant Outreach
Where can you learn about fish farming,
horseshoe crabs, rip currents, seafood, and much more? Sea Grant
is the answer! Our outreach team - the Marine Advisory Service and
the Marine Public Education Office - delivers research-based information
on coastal topics via seminars, publications, SeaTalk radio
announcements, special events, and Web sites.
This page highlights just a few of the activities
we're involved in. For more information, visit our Web site at www.ocean.udel.edu
or call the Marine Advisory Service in Lewes at (302) 645-4346 or
the Marine Public Education Office in Newark at (302) 831-8083.
Planning for a "Livable
Coast"
Delaware's beaches attract over 5 million
visitors a year. The traffic on major roads from Lewes to Rehoboth
Beach is intense from May through September.
In March in Lewes, Delaware Sea Grant and
the Greater Lewes Foundation, working with several sponsors, hosted
programs on land-use planning to reduce traffic congestion problems
while protecting the coastal area's heritage and natural resources.
More than 120 planners and elected officials participated in a technical
seminar, while 75 people turned out for a public forum.
The educational programs are helping to
advance Governor Minner's "Livable Delaware" initiative, which is
targeting sprawl and other quality-of-life issues throughout the
state. For more information on Sea Grant's efforts to promote a
"Livable Coast," contact the Marine Advisory Service at (302) 645-4346.
Demo House Shows How to
Protect Your Home from Storms
If you want to know what you can do to better
protect your home from storm damage, take a tour of Delaware's new
coastal demo house.
The portable 6-by-16-foot unit, built on
a trailer, demonstrates the construction techniques and materials
that coastal residents and builders should use to safeguard their
homes from storms. It was built through a partnership involving
Delaware Sea Grant, the City of Lewes, Town of Bethany Beach, Federal
Emergency Management Agency's Project Impact, and a host of local
businesses.
The demo house may be coming soon to an
event near you! For more information, call the Marine Advisory Service
at (302) 645-4346.
Interested
in Fish Farming?
The Delaware Aquaculture Resource Center
at UD's Lewes campus can help. Visit the Web site at www.darc.cms.udel.edu
or call (302) 645-4060.
Horseshoe
Crab Model Available
Our paper horseshoe crab model is educational
and fun! To order, send $1 per copy with your name and address to
Univ. of Delaware, Marine Public Education Office, Newark, DE 19716-3530.
Catch of the Day
If you're hooked on seafood, you'll enjoy
Sea Grant's popular cookbooks - eafood Delaware Style ($4)
and the Coast Day Crab Cake Cook-off Cookbook ($3). To order,
send your name/ address and check payable to "University of Delaware"
to Univ. of Delaware Marine Public Education Office, Newark, DE
19716-3530.
Web Site Makes a Splash!
Be sure to visit our Web site at www.ocean.udel.edu
and click on "Neat Stuff!" Here are a few of the treasures you'll
find:
- "SeaTalk," our award-winning radio
series
- Sea Flicks video clips of marine
research
- Interactive Coastal Habitat where
you can meet a diamondback terrapin, blue crab, osprey, sand tiger
shark, loggerhead turtle, horseshoe crab, and more!
Students "Dive in" to
Deep Sea with UD Scientists
Last October, UD marine biologist Craig
Cary (below) led "Extreme 2001: A Deep-Sea Odyssey," a 17-day expedition
to hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean. The mission: to learn
more about the Pompeii worm (left), one of Earth's most heat-tolerant
animals, able to withstand water as hot as 176°F.
While Cary and his team dived 2 miles to
the seafloor in the submarine Alvin, more than 13,000 middle-
and high-school students in 32 states followed along via a formal
classroom program developed by the Marine Public Education Office
with support from the National Science Foundation, WHYY-TV, and
Sea Grant. The program included curricula, a documentary video,
and an interactive Web site at www.ocean.udel.edu/extreme2001,
where the scientists reported their findings each day. Forty
classrooms also participated in a conference call with Cary and
his team as they worked live in Alvin on the seafloor.
Extreme 2002 will set sail in October. Teachers,
register your class now at www.ocean.udel.edu/expeditions!
Upcoming Events
Ocean Currents Lecture Series - Free
lectures are presented once a month, April,through September,
at 7 p.m., UD Hugh R. Sharp Campus, 700 Pilottown Road, Lewes. Reservations
required. Contact: (302) 645-4279.
Marine Science Tours - Free tours of the
UD College of Marine Studies in Lewes are offered every Friday at
10:30 a.m., June through August. Ages 12 and up. Reservations required.
Contact: (302) 645-4346.
Coast Day - Sunday, October 6, Lewes
Campus. This award-winning festival features research demonstrations,
ship tours, exhibits, a crab cake cook-off, and more! Contact: (302)
831-8083.
Extreme 2002 - Middle- and high-school teachers,
sign up now for an award-winning educational program that will connect
your students with UD marine scientists working live at deep-sea
hydrothermal vents this fall. Register on-line at www.ocean.udel.edu/expeditions.
Contact: (302) 831-8083.
Wilmington Lunch & Lecture Series -
Enjoy a delicious lunch and engaging food for thought at the Hotel
du Pont as UD marine scientists share their latest research. Held
periodically, November through April. Cost: $10 per person. Reservations
required. Contact: (302) 831-8083.
2002 Sea
Grant Advisory Council
Mr. William J. Miller, Jr., Chairman
Mr. Russell Archut
Mr. Jerry Blakeslee
Hon. George H. Bunting, Jr.
Hon. V. George Carey
Hon. John C. Carney, Jr.
Hon. G. Wallace Caulk, Jr.
Ms. Carol R. Collier
Hon. Dori Connor
Ms. Sarah Cooksey
Ms. Marsha Corcoran
Mr. Richard S. Cordrey
Hon. Richard DiLiberto, Jr.
Mr. Nicholas DiPasquale
Hon. Joseph G. DiPinto
Mr. John Dragone
Hon. Bruce C. Ennis
Mr. Gerald Esposito
Ms. Lorraine Fleming
Mr. William Grosskopf
Mr. A. Richard Heffron
Ms. Cheryl Heiks
Ms. Phyllis Laffey
Mr. Charles A. Lesser
Mr. Spiros Mantzavinos
|
Mr. R. Adam McBride
Hon. David B. McBride
Ms. Suzanne Moore
Mr. Gary B. Patterson
Ms. Grace Pierce-Beck
Dr. Joseph Pika
Hon. Shirley A. Price
Hon. G. Robert Quillen
Dr. Hazell Reed
Dr. Bruce A. Richards
Mr. Jonathan Rinde
Mr. James J. Roszkowski
Dr. T. W. Fraser Russell
Mr. John Schneider
Hon. John R. Schroeder
Dr. Edward M. Simek
Hon. F. Gary Simpson
Hon. Liane Sorenson
Ms. Maria A. Taylor
Mr. Douglas Van Rees
Ms. Trish Vernon
Ms. Julie Wagner
Ms. Katherine Ward
Mr. Stuart Widom
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University
of Delaware
Sea Grant College Program
Financial Report
July
1, 2001 June 30, 2002
|
Program Area
|
State Funds
|
Federal & Other
Matching
|
|
Coastal Ocean Studies
Environmental Technology
Coastal Engineering
Marine Biotechnology
Fisheries
Marine Outreach
Graduate Education
Program Management
Totals
Grand Total
|
$ 51,796
63,156
53,187
9,551
23,801
285,275
0
0
$486,766*
|
$ 229,225
215,768
72,132
128,160
242,999
566,365
403,448
309,560
$2,167,657
$2,654,423
|
* Original Allocation of State Funds:
$496,700
2% State Revision: ( 9,934)
Total State Allocation w/2% Revision: $486,766
|
In addition to this Sea Grant funding, Delaware investigators
successfully competed for several National Strategic Initiatives
from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
U.S. Department of Commerce. Funds for these programs are managed
by the University of Delaware Sea Grant College Program and serve
as an important mechanism for the development of comprehensive and
integrated research efforts:
Under the National Marine Aquaculture Initiative, Dr. Biliana Cicin-Sain,
director of the UD Center for the Study of Marine Policy, received
funding for developing and testing an operational framework for
offshore aquaculture in conjunction with stakeholders at the national
and regional levels. This 24-month effort is funded for $487,700
for the time period of September 1, 2001 through August 31, 2003.
Dr. Patrick Gaffney,
UD marine biologist, received funding through the Oyster Disease
Research Program for a multi-state collaborative research project
to develop disease-resistant oysters for the Chesapeake Bay and
Mid-Atlantic waters. This 24-month effort is funded for $24,361
for the time period of October 1, 2001 through September 30, 2003.
Dr. Gaffney also
received funding through the Oyster Disease Research Program to
develop a moderate-density genetic linkage map of the eastern oyster
(Crassostrea virginica) to help identify disease resistance
genes and accelerate breeding programs for disease-resistant oysters.
Dr. Gaffney is completing the third year of a $114,275 award.
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