NOAA Marine Debris Program e-Newsletter | May 2019

May 2019

Small plastic pieces removed from the Anacostia River in Washington, DC (Photo: NOAA).

In This Issue

2019 Art Contest Winners

Tackling Seaside Cigarette Litter

Makah Tribe Addresses Derelict Pots

How to Help After Earth Day

Turning off the Tap on California’s Trash

Marine Debris in the Pacific Northwest

Quick Links

Marine Debris Website
Marine Debris Blog
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Make a difference by using the Marine Debris Tracker app to record debris items you find.

Upcoming Cleanups

May 3
SOLVE
Devil's Punchbowl Beach
Otter Rock, OR

May 4
I Love a Clean San Diego
Flinn Springs County Park
El Cajon, CA

May 4
NC Cooperative Extension
Nebo, NC

May 4
Surfrider Jersey Shore
North Beach
Asbury Park, NJ

May 4
Surfrider New York City
Rockaway Beach
Queens, NY

May 4
Seaside Aquarium
Seaside Beach
Seaside, OR

May 4
Surfrider Charleston
Sullivan's Island, SC

May 4
Waste Watchers of the Eastern Shore
Onancock, VA

May 5
Sun’aq Tribe of Kodiak
Buskin Beach
Kodiak, AK

May 5
Save Our Shores
Cowell Beach
Santa Cruz, CA

May 5
Alliance for the Great Lakes
Atwater Park Beach
Shorewood, WI

May 8
Shedd Aquarium
12th Street Beach
Chicago, IL

May 10
Harbor City International School
South Pier Beach
Duluth, MN

May 11
Native Village of Eyak & Cordova Harbormaster’s Office
Fisherman’s Memorial
Cordova, AK
Contact: 
ivy.patton@eyak-nsn.gov

May 11
Save Our Shores
Seascape Beach Resort
Aptos, CA

May 11
Pacific Beach Coalition
Dunes Beach
Half Moon Bay, CA

May 11
Florida State Parks
Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park
Key Biscayne, FL

May 11
Ocean Hour
Bay Bluffs Park
Pensacola, FL

May 11
Kent Island Beach Cleanups
Hemingway's Beach
Stevensville, MD

May 11
Blue Ocean Society
Jenness Beach
Rye, NH

May 11
Surfrider Eastern Long Island
Shinnecock East County Park
Southampton, NY

May 11
MidCoast Watersheds Council
Siletz River
Siletz, OR

May 12
Tybee Clean Beach
Marine Science Center
Tybee Island, GA

May 14
Save the Bay
Fields Point
Providence, RI

May 18
Heal the Bay
Will Rogers State Beach
Pacific Palisades, CA

May 18
Alliance for the Great Lakes
Hamburg Town Beach
Hamburg, NY

May 18
Pennsylvania DCNR
Beach 1
Erie, PA

May 18
Surfrider Virginia Beach
Virginia Beach, VA

May 18
Metroparks Tacoma
Point Defiance Beach
Tacoma, WA

May 18
Green Bay AAZK
Bayshore Park Beach
Green Bay, WI

May 19
Surfrider San Francisco
Ocean Beach
San Francisco, CA

May 19
808 Cleanups
Makai Research Pier
Waimanalo, O'ahu, HI

May 25
Cordova Chamber of Commerce
Cordova Center
Cordova, AK

May 25
Hui O Ho’ohonua
Kapapapuhi Point Park
Ewa Beach, O'ahu, HI

May 25
Alliance for the Great Lakes
Pere Marquette Park
Muskegon, MI

May 25
Mississippi Coastal Cleanup
Biloxi Small Craft Harbor
Biloxi, MS

May 25
Winyah River Alliance
Mill Street Landing
Kingstree, SC

May 26
Sharkastics
Kukona Place
Wailuku, Maui, HI

May 28
Van Buren Voyagers 4-H Club
Casco Township Nature Preserve
South Haven, MI

May 29
Connected By Oceans
Evanston Clark Street Beach
Evanston, IL

May 29
Clean Ocean Access
Sachuest Beach
Middletown, RI

June 1
Pacific Beach Coalition
Rockaway Beach
Pacifica, CA

June 1
Seaside Aquarium
Seaside Beach
Seaside, OR

June 4
Alliance for the Great Lakes
Lakefront Reservation
Cleveland, OH

 

Can't make it to a listed cleanup? Organize your own and use the Marine Debris Tracker!

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Website & Blog

Congratulations 2019 Art Contest Winners!

Artwork by Jennie C, Grade 8, Massachusetts

Winning artwork by Jennie C. Grade 8, Massachusetts.

We are excited to announce the winners of the annual NOAA Marine Debris Program Art Contest! We received hundreds of impressive entries from around the country, and although we wish we could showcase them all, we are pleased to share this year’s winners with you.

Learn More


Tackling Seaside Cigarette Litter

Volunteers from the Surfrider Foundation’s San Francisco Chapter installing a buttcan.

Volunteers from the Surfrider Foundation’s San Francisco Chapter installing a buttcan and showing off the day’s booty (Photo: Surfrider San Francisco).

Smoking may be on the decline, but in San Francisco cigarette butts are still a common site on streets and beaches. That’s why our partners at Surfrider San Francisco are asking smokers to "Hold Onto Your Butt" and bringing awareness to the environmental impact of the cigarette flick.

Learn More


Makah Tribe Addresses Derelict Pots

Derelict crab pot removal Makah Tribe

Derelict crab pot removal (Photo: Makah Tribe).

Winter storms are fierce and powerful along the coast of the Pacific Northwest, capable of moving fishing gear far from where it was deployed. The Makah Tribe is well aware of the impacts of lost fishing gear, and has mobilized to address it in the Makah Tribe’s Usual and Accustomed Fishing Area and the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary.

Learn More


How to Help After Earth Day

Reusable bag zero waste

Whenever possible, use a reusable bag and your own containers when you shop (Photo: NOAA).

Earth Day has come and gone, but that doesn't mean good habits have to go away too! You can keep up the momentum, reduce your waste footprint, and do good for our planet, no matter where you are. 

Learn More


Turning off the Tap on California’s Trash

Goat Canyon Sediment Basin

Trash accumulated behind a trash boom in the Goat Canyon Sediment Basin after a storm in late 2016 (Photo: Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve).

California is not only home to beaches, super blooms, and stars, but is also home to 12% of the population of the United States, and the fifth largest economy in the world. With such concentrated human and economic activity, marine debris can be a serious problem. However, our partners are leading the way on waste reduction and marine debris prevention efforts in California.

Learn More


Marine Debris in the Pacific Northwest

Derelict crab pots

Derelict crab pots removed from the Puget Sound (Photo: Northwest Straits Foundation).

To visitors of the Pacific Northwest, beaches along the Pacific Ocean and the Puget Sound seem stunningly beautiful and often pristine. A closer look reveals that these beaches, like beaches the world over, are impacted by marine debris that harms the ecosystem, creates navigational hazards, and negatively affects the economy.

Learn More