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Contents
Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day
4 Ways to Help Save the Planet
What's in Your Watershed?
Are Wetlands the Solution to Climate Change?
Upcoming Events
January 18th
Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service
Februrary 4th
Community Watershed Stewardship Grant Applications Due
View past issues of Ebb & Flow
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
More
Contact the Editor
4 R's Mini Grant Program Now Accepting Applications
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Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Make January 18th a Day of Action
One of the most exciting days of the year is almost here. Monday, January 18th is the
2010 Martin Luther King Jr. National Day of Service. Since Congress passed the King
Holiday and Service Act in 1996, MLK Day has provided an opportunity for all of us to
work together to improve and beautify our communities.
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4 Ways to Help Save the Planet
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and Rot
In our modern world, considering every single environmental and economic concern when making
decisions can be overwhelming. At The Watershed Project, we realize that it isn't possible for
everyone to install solar panels on their roof or buy a hybrid vehicle. We also realize that there
are many ways to help the planet, and some of the most important steps are small, everyday
actions that you can take in your own home.
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What's in Your Watershed?
The Plunging Brown Pelican
On a recent walk along Limantour Beach at Point Reyes National Seashore, a place close to my heart,
I witnessed something truly special. About one hundred feet off the shoreline, there were seven
California Brown Pelicans orchestrating an amazing diving display in search of food.
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Are Wetlands the Solution to Climate Change?
Local Scientists Are Trying to Find Out
As the need for action to address climate change grows, scientists
are looking to nature for help. Wetlands construction is a creative solution to
rising temperatures. Because wetlands fix atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) into
soil biomass, they can take selected levels permanently out of the atmosphere.
In addition, their greenhouse gas mitigation potential far exceeds that
of other ecosystems currently used for carbon sequestration. While forests sequester
roughly six metric tons of CO2 per acre, wetlands have the ability to sequester as
much as twenty-five metric tons per acre. With numbers like these, talk of farming wetlands
to mitigate greenhouse gases has been growing increasingly loud, and The Watershed Project
has been listening.
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