Congratulations to the Winners of the Fifth “Communicating for a Clean Future” Ohio Marine Debris PSA Competition!

4 years 11 months ago
Congratulations to the Winners of the Fifth “Communicating for a Clean Future” Ohio Marine Debris PSA Competition! jennifer.simms Fri, 05/08/2020 - 08:20

The NOAA Marine Debris Program is excited to announce the winners of the fifth annual Communicating for a Clean Future: Ohio Marine Debris Challenge! This contest is open every year to students in grades 9-12 who are enrolled in recognized public, private, and home schools in Ohio’s Lake Erie coastal communities.

 

Tags Great Lakes
jennifer.simms

2020 Great Lakes Marine Debris Action Plan Released

5 years 3 months ago
2020 Great Lakes Marine Debris Action Plan Released Posted Wed, 01/22/2020 - 08:24

The NOAA Marine Debris Program is pleased to share the 2020-2025 Great Lakes Marine Debris Action Plan. This document is the result of a collaborative effort between the NOAA Marine Debris Program and partners in Ontario, Canada and eight U.S. states (IL, IN, MI, MN, NY, OH, PA, WI), and represents a partner-led effort to guide marine debris actions in the Great Lakes for the next five years.

Tags Great Lakes
jennifer.simms

Casting a Wide Net: A Community Approach on Marine Debris in the Niagara River Watershed

5 years 3 months ago
Casting a Wide Net: A Community Approach on Marine Debris in the Niagara River Watershed Posted Fri, 01/17/2020 - 10:26

Western New York State lies in the heart of the lower Great Lakes Basin and includes the Niagara River Watershed. The Niagara River Watershed is notable for its important habitats, which supports lake sturgeon, muskellunge, lake trout, walleye, and northern pike, and has been internationally recognized as an important migratory route for birds.

Tags Great Lakes removal
jennifer.simms

Working Together for a Debris-Free Great Lakes

5 years 3 months ago
Working Together for a Debris-Free Great Lakes Posted Fri, 01/17/2020 - 10:00

The NOAA Marine Debris Program Great Lakes Region spans eight states from Minnesota to New York, covers the north coast, and forms a water boundary between the United States and our Canadian friends to the North.

Tags Great Lakes prevention removal
jennifer.simms

The Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan Accomplishments Report 2014-2019 Now Available

5 years 4 months ago
The Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan Accomplishments Report 2014-2019 Now Available Posted Wed, 12/11/2019 - 12:58

The NOAA Marine Debris Program is pleased to share the Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan Accomplishments Report 2014-2019. The Report documents the many actions taken over the five years of the Action Plan to reduce the impacts of marine debris in the Great Lakes.

Tags Great Lakes
jennifer.simms

Estimating the Effects of Marine Debris on Coastal Economies

5 years 7 months ago
Estimating the Effects of Marine Debris on Coastal Economies Posted Wed, 09/25/2019 - 13:14

Imagine you’ve planned a big trip to the beach with your family and friends, loaded up the car with supplies or jumped on a plane, and traveled to your vacation spot, only to find a beach littered with plastic beverage bottles, stray fishing line, chip bags, cigarette butts, and other debris. Would you stay and play, or be on your way? What if there were no debris, would you be more likely to return in the future? These are the kinds of questions we asked to better understand the relationship between marine debris and the coastal tourism economy.

Tags California Mid-Atlantic Gulf of Mexico Great Lakes
jennifer.simms

Helping Lake Erie One Water Bottle at a Time

5 years 10 months ago
Helping Lake Erie One Water Bottle at a Time Posted Tue, 06/11/2019 - 21:09

Lake Erie experienced a drinking water crisis in 2014, as well as ongoing algal blooms, leading to an increased preference for bottled water, and a potential source for marine debris. At Partners for Clean Streams, we are working to help reduce further impacts by taking on marine debris in the freshwater tributaries that lead to Lake Erie. With support from the NOAA Marine Debris Program, our Clean Your Streams program allows kids and adults alike to get engaged in marine debris removal.

Tags Great Lakes
Shanelle.Naone

Litter & Lakes: Tackling Marine Debris in the Great Lakes

5 years 10 months ago
Litter & Lakes: Tackling Marine Debris in the Great Lakes Posted Fri, 06/07/2019 - 18:27

Although they don’t have salt water, the Great Lakes are vast, and can feel like small oceans. This connected series of lakes, Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario, are the largest surface freshwater system on earth and account for 21 percent of the world’s supply. They shape the north coast of the United States, bordering eight states and the Canadian province of Ontario, for a total of 10,200 miles of coastline. That surpasses the East Coast of the U.S. (2,069 miles)!

Tags Great Lakes
Shanelle.Naone

Clean Water for our HOMES

6 years 1 month ago
Clean Water for our HOMES alexis.thorbecke Fri, 03/22/2019 - 09:42

Today is World Water Day, a day to recognize that water is our most precious resource, needed by every single living thing on earth. In the Great Lakes, over 40 million people depend directly on HOMES (Lakes Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior) for drinking water. These lakes are the largest freshwater system on Earth and contain a fifth of the world’s water, adding up to more than 6 quadrillion gallons. Unfortunately, marine debris not only exists in our ocean, but can also be found in the Great Lakes and affect the quality of the water that we are drinking. Tiny plastics less than 5mm in size, called microplastics, dominate the waters of the Great Lakes. We don’t yet know how microplastics in our drinking water can affect human health, but we do know that preventing marine debris is a crucial step in improving the water quality of the Great Lakes.

Tags Great Lakes microplastics World Water Day
alexis.thorbecke

Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan 2018 Action Summary Report Released

6 years 2 months ago
Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan 2018 Action Summary Report Released Posted Wed, 02/20/2019 - 09:05

The NOAA Marine Debris Program is proud to release the Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan 2018 Action Summary Report. This report highlights all the important work completed by Great Lakes partners, as the plan officially comes to a close in 2019. Since creating the first the Great Lakes Land-based Marine Debris Action Plan in 2014, over 30 participating organizations around the region have worked together to complete 22 actions addressing marine debris in the Great Lakes.

Tags Great Lakes
alexis.thorbecke

Watch the Winning PSA Videos from the Ohio Marine Debris Challenge

6 years 11 months ago
Watch the Winning PSA Videos from the Ohio Marine Debris Challenge Posted Thu, 05/24/2018 - 11:00

By: Sarah Lowe, Great Lakes Regional Coordinator for the NOAA Marine Debris Program

The NOAA Marine Debris Program is excited to announce the winners of the third annual Ohio Marine Debris Challenge! This contest is open every year to students in grades 9-12 who are enrolled in recognized public, private, and home schools in Ohio’s Lake Erie coastal communities. Students complete lessons and create a public service announcement to help raise awareness of marine debris. Winning teams were recognized last week at an awards ceremony at Cedar Point Amusement Park and were given recognition by members of congress, including Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, Congressman Jim Renacci, Senator Rob Portman, and Senator Sherrod Brown. Check out this year's winners!

Tags Great Lakes
krista.e.stegemann

Consumer Debris and the Great Lakes

8 years 1 month ago
Consumer Debris and the Great Lakes krista.e.stegemann Thu, 03/16/2017 - 11:30

While marine debris is perhaps more commonly thought of as an oceanic problem, the Great Lakes region is an area that is also affected by debris, particularly consumer product items and other such land-based litter. In 2015 alone, the Alliance for the Great Lakes Adopt-a-Beach Program removed 92,616 pounds of debris from Great Lakes habitats. These debris items come from a multitude of sources including overflowing trash cans and other improper waste management, as well as both accidental and intentional littering. Being far from the ocean, many people don’t think about how their trash can end up in our waterways. Weather such as winds and rains can help transport debris into streams and rivers, eventually traveling into the Great Lakes. Once in our environment, these debris items can cause a range of issues, including ingestion by and entanglement of wildlife, hazards for fishermen and boaters, and even simply creating an eyesore on once-beautiful shorelines.

Tags Great Lakes consumer debris
krista.e.stegemann

Addressing Marine Debris in the Great Lakes

8 years 1 month ago
Addressing Marine Debris in the Great Lakes krista.e.stegemann Tue, 03/14/2017 - 11:30

Meet Sarah Lowe, the NOAA Marine Debris Program’s Great Lakes Regional Coordinator! Reach out to Sarah at sarah.lowe@noaa.gov!

The NOAA Marine Debris Program’s Great Lakes region is a large one, encompassing all Great Lakes states— from New York to Minnesota. This region has unique beauty with its complex system of habitats, ranging from the Lakes themselves to their associated wetlands, rivers, and tributaries.  Unfortunately, this landscape is marred by the presence of marine debris. Like many places throughout the country, marine debris is a big problem in the Great Lakes region, impacting the environment and the animals that live there, as well as the Great Lakes’ robust recreational fishing and boating economy. Luckily, there are many efforts currently underway to tackle marine debris in this area. Check out some of the newly-established projects funded by the Marine Debris Program.

Tags Great Lakes
krista.e.stegemann

Congratulations to the Winners of the First “Communicating for a Clean Future” Marine Debris PSA Competition!

8 years 11 months ago
Congratulations to the Winners of the First “Communicating for a Clean Future” Marine Debris PSA Competition! krista.e.stegemann Fri, 05/20/2016 - 13:54

The NOAA Marine Debris Program and our partners – Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, Ohio Sea Grant, and the Ohio State University Stone Laboratory – are pleased to announce the winners of the first annual “Communicating for a Clean Future” Marine Debris Public Service Announcement Competition!

The competition was open to students in grades 9 through 12 from Ohio’s 9th Congressional District. After learning about the issue of marine debris in the ocean and Great Lakes through lessons and school activities, students were challenged to develop innovative public service announcements (PSAs) aimed at inspiring others to take action to prevent and reduce marine debris. This competition not only worked to engage students and to spread the message about marine debris, but empowered students to become leaders in their communities in the fight against it.

Tags Great Lakes
krista.e.stegemann

Abandoned Vessels in the Rouge River: Removing Debris in the Great Lakes

9 years 2 months ago
Abandoned Vessels in the Rouge River: Removing Debris in the Great Lakes krista.e.stegemann Thu, 02/25/2016 - 10:23

Over the years of the NOAA Marine Debris Program, there have been many efforts around the country to rid our waters and shores of marine debris. As part of our ten-year anniversary celebration, let’s take a look back at one of those efforts in our Great Lakes region.

Fordson Island, in the Lower Rouge River, is located near Detroit, Michigan, and was the site of some pretty neat removal efforts back in 2011. The area actually has some cool history which you can read more about here. The shore of Fordson Island, which hosts some of the last remaining undeveloped habitat in a very industrialized area, was unfortunately the site of a lot of marine debris, most notably abandoned and derelict vessels.

Tags Great Lakes ADVs MarineDebris10YR removal
krista.e.stegemann
Checked
52 minutes 39 seconds ago
Subscribe to Great Lakes feed