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Community Activities

Environmental Organizations
Community Groups
American Littoral Society (ALS) Deep Creek Yacht Club, Inc.
Gaia Institute Friends of Rockaway, Inc.
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) Jamaica Bay Ecowatchers
New York Aquarium National Resources Protective Association (NRPA)
New York Botanical Garden New York/New Jersey Baykeeper
New York City Audubon Society Norton Basin Edgemere Stewardship Group (NBESG)
Regional Plan Association TreeBranch Network/Friends of Gateway/Neighborhood Open Space Coalition
Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation  
Wildlife Trust  

Contributions

Several groups listed above are very active in beach cleanups, cruises, festivals, lectures, and nature hikes. For more information, view Public Events.

The Jamaica Bay Institute (JBI) at Gateway National Recreation Area (GNRA), along with Wildlife Trust, Harbor Herons Subcommittee of the NY-NJ Harbor Estuary Program, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service sponsored the Harbor Herons, Cormorants, and More - Current Research and Future Planning meeting, November 30 - December 1, 2006, Fort Wadsworth, Staten Island, New York. The 2-day gathering featured the Harbor Herons Sub-Committee Meeting, followed by sessions including Monitoring Methodology, Environmental Toxins, Bioindicators, and Habitat Quality, Colonial Waterbird Populations beyond Harbor Herons, Population Perspectives, and Double-crested Cormorants.

Dan Mundy of Jamaica Bay Ecowatchers is a member of the Jamaica Bay Watershed Protection Plan Advisory Committee, tasked with the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to generate a watershed protection plan. This activity is being tracked in the Advisory Committee section of this website.

Don Riepe (Jamaica Bay Guardian) and Mickey Cohen (American Littoral Society) are leading an investigation of the Asian Shore Crab. Jim Haley of the Broad Channel community reported at the January 11, 2006 Jamaica Bay Task Force meeting that large numbers of this invasive species were visible, and may be causing the salt marsh grasses to decline. If you're interested in joining this crab monitoring effort, contact Mickey Cohen.

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