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SeaWorld And Coastkeeper To Clean Up Mission Bay

October 9, 2013 By sdcnews

SAN DIEGO–SeaWorld and San Diego Coastkeeper are teaming up to keep Mission Bay beautiful with the 2nd annual Mission Possible: Clean the Bay Day on Oct. 26.

Participants can bring their boat, kayak or paddleboard to join the on-water effort, either on their own or as a team with family, friends or coworkers.  Those who cannot participate on the water can join the shoreline cleanup.  Organizers will award prizes, including yearlong passes to SeaWorld, beluga interactions, penguin tours and more.  The cleanup will take place on Mission Bay from 8 to 11 a.m.  Food from Rubio’s, prizes and fun will complement the cleanup throughout the morning at Rose Marie Starns South Shores Park.

Last year’s inaugural event saw 150 volunteers clear about 450 pounds of trash in one day, including items like a DVD, an engine pump, firework debris, a can of foam cleaner and a street sign. Because of the type and amount of trash recovered at the initial event, SeaWorld added additional days of water and beach sweeps to its already extensive post-firework cleanup program in the bay.

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SeaWorld And Coastkeeper To Clean Up Mission Bay

In 2012, volunteers with San Diego Coastkeeper removed 1,000 pounds of debris during cleanups hosted at beaches on Mission Bay and nearby Mission Beach.  Most of these were buoyant items, including plastic foam and plastic particles, bags, wrappers and straws that impair water quality and degrade coastal habitats, and also harm wildlife through entanglement or ingestion.  While volunteers collected these items on the shoreline, the presence of debris extends into the water as well.  Sitting at the base of the San Diego Watershed, water from inland creeks, streams, rivers, and rain events flows into Mission Bay on its way to the Pacific Ocean. Water transports trash left on the ground or accidentally blown out of trash bins through our watershed into our coastal waters.

SeaWorld’s Rescue Team sees first-hand the effects of marine debris because they care for animals that become entangled or ingest the items.  Every year, SeaWorld rescues an average of 150 marine mammals, many of them affected by debris or pollution, such as fishing line and gear, oil spills and general debris such as plastic bags and other trash items.  Debris also affects sea birds, especially pelicans.  In 2013 so far, SeaWorld has rescued and cared for more than 400 marine mammals and hundreds of brown pelicans and other marine birds, many of which were injured or ill because of marine debris.

For more information on the cleanup, visit www.sdcoastkeeper.org

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Central San Diego, Local Tagged With: Local


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