| 04 January 2010

Teen Anglers were recognized for their contribution to the Indian River ecosystem, by St. Lucie County Commissioners. Back row L-R: Commissioners Chris Dzadovsky and Doug Coward, Jim Oppenborn, Teen Leaders Cammie Ward and Captain Joe Ward, Teen Mom Carrie Roe, Teen Ariel Vance, Helen Kinchen, Dylora Kohler, Taylor Meding, Commissioners Chris Craft, Charles Grande, and Paula Lewis. Front 3 L-R: Teen Justin Roe, Cash Roe and Robert Kinchen Jr.
Indian River Lagoon Water Quality Benefits from Angler Interventions
The St. Lucie County Board of County Commissioners honored Teen Anglers' Treasure Coast Chapter with a proclamation recognizing their contribution to Indian River ecosystem projects, on January 5th, 2010 in the commission chambers in Ft. Pierce Florida.
The Treasure Coast chapter worked throughout the 2009 season to help the Indian River deal with upstream pollution from stormwater run-off by bagging and deploying oyster shells. In April last year, Teen Anglers launched their efforts by bagging an impressive 2 tons of oyster shells in one hour to help restore St.Lucie inshore reefs. They then continued to help carry the bags to the reef restoration sites and continue collecting and bagging shell.

Jim Oppenborn, St Lucie County's Marine Resource Coordinator, was recently honored for 'Excellence in Habitat Restoration' by the Snook Foundation.
The process of collecting oyster shell, bagging it and deploying it at designated sites in the Indian River Lagoon has been orchestrated by Jim Oppenborn, St Lucie County's Marine Resource Coordinator. Jim has been highly successful in his mission to restore historic oyster reefs because of his ability to engage public and private groups and businesses. Recognized for Excellence in Habitat Restoration in 2009 by the Snook Foundation, Jim humbly noted, "i just listen to what the public wants - I couldn't do any of this without the participation of individuals and groups." Snook Foundation has been working with Jim supporting these projects for several years.

Teen Anglers also helped in deploying bagged oyster shell to create new reefs in 2009.
Oyster reefs create habitat for creatures such as crabs, shrimp, invertebrates by the score and a myriad of forage fishes. They provide a ready food source for gamefish such as snook, trout, tripletail, macks and jacks. These underwater grocery stores also provide nursery habitat for many of the species of juvenile fishes such as snapper and grouper that grow up and migrate to offshore reefs.
Oysters are filter feeders and they improve water quality. Restoring oyster reefs in the Indian River and St. Lucie is an ongoing project coordinated by Jim and we salute Teen Anglers for taking part. We thank Jim for his leadership and for his effective works toward Indian River restoration.
McCulley Marine Services has been of great help with the bagging projects as well as deployment. Providing a front end loader to transfer approximately 2 tons of shell onto a module construction table, bringing the work area up to waist height was just one of their contributions.
Special thanks also goes to the St. Lucie County Erosion District for purchasing the bagging material.
Teen Angler coordinator Cammie Ward, and founder Al Bernetti organized the group of teens who are motivated to establish inshore and offshore reefs as fish habitat.
Thanks to the Teen Anglers (and parents) for helping with the project.
More about This Project
More about Teen Angler
Thanks to Al Bernetti for providing this info:
- The National Teen Angler program is a free outdoors program for middle and high school teens.
- They meet once a month during the school year for education sessions, then have a tournament each month as well for trophies and prizes. The volunteers provide boats.
- The teens must maintain a 2.0 GPA, pass a boater safety course, and complete the education sessions to qualify to fish the tournaments.
- Scholarships are awarded based on academic ability, not on how many fish they catch.Scholarships are awarded to teens going into fields in the outdoors.
- We have 3 fundamentals- Safety-Education and Fun. If there are no fish left, then what! Fishing's Future: Teen Anglers -- Recreation and Education for the next generation.
- National Teen Anglers
(http://www.teenanglers.org/)





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