1 / 39

Community Involvement

Community Involvement. ReefTeach. The Challenge. The Funding. Volunteer Monitoring & Community Based Management. Educators, Researchers and Managers Collaborate to Engage Coastal Users A Success Story in Hawaii. Educate and Involve. Issue Information Cutting Edge Research

badrani
Télécharger la présentation

Community Involvement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Community Involvement ReefTeach

  2. The Challenge

  3. The Funding

  4. Volunteer Monitoring & Community Based Management Educators, Researchers and Managers Collaborate to Engage Coastal Users A Success Story in Hawaii

  5. Educate and Involve • Issue Information • Cutting Edge Research • Promise of Future Call to Action • Volunteer monitoring

  6. Triple Component Approach Collaborative Effort: DAR, UH, UHSGES, DOE and W.Hi.Community 1. Education & Outreach > cross-generations > cross-peers > cross-cultures 2. Volunteer Monitoring 3. Community Based Management Council

  7. Narrow Reef Ecosystem Easily Wiped Out

  8. ReefTalks • 11 Free presentations per year for 8 years • Highlight issues of concern • Introduce residents to Hawaii’s resource people

  9. Aloha Kai West Hawaii Explorations Academy • High School Cross-peer • Cross-cultural experience

  10. ReefTeachWHEA & Volunteers • Reef Teach at High Impact Snorkel Beach • Teens and Adults Involved

  11. WHY IS MONITORING IMPORTANT?

  12. ReefTeach Can Make a Difference

  13. Constant Education Needed at Kahalu’u

  14. Show People How to Avoid Live Coral

  15. Kids for Corals Murals at Kahalu’u • Donated time and funds: artist worked with 5th grade, contractor framed and hung, private donations for plexi, frame material and painting

  16. 4 MOST FREQENT SUBSTRATE INTERACTIONS

  17. HELP FOR KAHALU’U’S SIGNS ! Uncle Dick & Roy Roy’s Holding This End

  18. Girl Scouts • Thank you for your help ! • The corals thank you for your help!

  19. ReefWatchers Volunteer Monitoring Training Fish Identification

  20. ReefWatcher Goals • Build community understanding marine resource management concepts • Record change over time • Provide data useful for DAR • Involve community • Monitor introduced and/or invasive sp

  21. ReefWatcher Program • Identify data needs • Community members are trained to develop and carry out survey protocols to meet those needs • Provide ongoing education opportunities

  22. ReefWatchers Begin • Meet DAR and UH Requirements • By Laws • Liability Release • Medical • PADI Diving & Snorkeling Procedures • SCUBA C Card & Insurance • Accident Reporting

  23. Protocols Developed & In Use • Tidepool Survey • Kahaluu Fish Feeding/No Feeding Survey • Human Impact With Substrate >SCUBA & Snorkelers • Individual Surveys >Point-to-Point, “Beltless Transects”

  24. WHAT HAS REEFWATCHERS DONE? AMAZING ACCOMPLISHMENTS LET’S REVIEW…

  25. HUMAN IMPACT SURVEY RESULTS • Human Impact on Substrate - SCUBA • Impacts per diver = 3.1 (233 divers observed) • Impact categories and location use analyzed • Ecological briefings rated

  26. Human Impact Survey Uses • Dive Charter Operators • Receive their own data as a subset of totals • Operators and Resource Managers • Use data to determine use of mooring buoys • Use data to identify ways to reduce impact • Use data to estimate future impact as numbers of divers increase

  27. Bob & Eve at Honaunau Transects

  28. REEFWATCHERS’ Data Contributions Honaunau: Bob Flatt, Eve Bullinger Hookena: David Shen Keauhou: Ann Guth, David Hoopaugh Kahalu’u: Marjorie & Duayne Erway & Leonard Torricer, WHEA Old Airport: Jim & MaryLinda Passon, WHEA Keahole: Jim & Norma Lathrop, Donna Lavorin Makaiwa(Mauna Lani): Susan Hunt Puako: Bob Teytaud

  29. Bob T’s Tidepool Site at Puako

  30. Bob Flatt’s Beltless Transect at Honaunau

  31. NEED MORE MONITORING COVERAGE • Coral Cover • Fish • Inverts • Tidepools • Sand /Mudflat Communities • Human Use • Water Quality

  32. Benefits to the Resource and Management • Community participation • Education for all ages • Support for DAR initiatives • Data collection over time (years) • Ocean USERS involved • Legislative action

  33. RESULTS • Regional Fishery Management Area • 9 FRAs established • Over 6000 people/ year • Community members are involved • Difficult issues • Working together

  34. You buy the ‘kit’ for $15 includes a fish ID card, and data input directions. Goes to national database. • Three levels of competency • Kona dive shops interested • Maui is using this survey method • Random Swim Surveys as You Dive

  35. The Largest International Coral Reef Monitoring Program Involving Sport Divers and Scientists • Can be done one or more times per year • We should contribute to this database

  36. YOU MAKE THE DIFFERENCE JOIN REEFWATCHERS DO WHATEVER YOU FEEL IS MOST IMPORTANT

More Related