STEAM Learning: Saltmarsh Sparrow Study

Students share their work at the end of the 11/27/23 Nature Drawing workshop, led by Gail Ahlers, Joanne Chen and myself.

Students share their work at the end of the 11/27/23 Nature Drawing workshop, led by Gail Ahlers, Joanne Chen and myself.

While the Saltmarsh Sparrow (Ammodramus caudacutus) has been named the poster child for sea level rise, its actual story is about restoring salt marsh habitat and conserving a threatened species, protecting it from loss and harm. The Saltmarsh Sparrow is the first of seven species studied in the Empowerment Factory’s Nature Drawing Salt Marsh series, which begins with establishing an understanding of the value of a salt marsh.

SALT MARSH HABITAT

  • Rhode Island salt marshes are found all around the Narragansett Bay – along the shores of salt ponds, in small bays and estuaries, and within estuary rivers.
  • Salt marshes serve as natural pollution treatment systems by filtering out pollutants before they reach coastal waters. The marsh’s diversity of plants and shellfish help with the filtering.
  • Salt marshes provide coastal community developments with a protective buffer during storms and flooding, however, human development itself has increased the likelihood of floods occurring.
  • Salt marshes provide nursery grounds and foraging habitat for hundreds of species of birds, fish, shellfish, mammals and other animals. At the same time, salt marshes provide recreational areas for line fishing and shellfishing, practices which need to be managed to prevent overfishing.

The salt marsh is a vital resource for both wildlife and humans. Unfortunately, this habitat has been destroyed by human activities, which have thrown the ecology out of balance and adversely affected the wild inhabitants in different ways. The City of Providence was once known as the Great Salt Cove. Over the past 200 years, however, humans have filled an estimated 60% of Rhode Island’s salt marsh’s with mud and sand. Construction of dikes, roads and rail crossings have restricted natural tidal flow and disrupted numerous marsh ecosystems.

The Saltmarsh Sparrow has been living life on the edge of danger and destruction, literally, because they tend to build their nests just above the “normal” high tide mark. Like humans, they love their waterfront property. Each female has 26 days, within the 28-day high tide cycles of the full moon, to build her nest, lay her eggs, hatch her chicks and feed them into fledgling stage. All this has to happen within 26 days! What a Super Mom! This adaptation has been necessary for each baby bird’s survival, yet increasingly marshes are flooding before peak tides and again at mid-cycle, destroying many nests.

How does this happen? It all comes down to the science of hydrology, the exactness of how a salt marsh is flooded by the tide and how freely ocean water is able to move in and out of the marsh area. Specialized plants and animals have adapted to survive in particular areas of the marsh, and this defines the entire marsh food web and complex ecosystem.

Solutions to correct this situation include the repairing stone culverts that have collapsed and restricted the flow of water under elevated roadbeds, digging shallow ditches to help drain areas, removing substrate to elevate land mass and replanting areas with salt marsh grasses. These are all important jobs for humans to take on.

While studying and drawing a different animal each week, students learn about its habits and the problems challenging the survival of its population. Each species has a different story to tell. Students use their artwork to share these stories, build awareness and advocate for species and habitat conservation.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES AND MEASUREMENT BENCHMARKS

Increase in environmental literacy: Students take a pre-survey and a post-survey to assess their acquisition of new knowledge.

Mastery of drawing skills: Students demonstrate their skill development through the completion of seven sequential drawing projects.

Social and emotional advancement: Teachers observe the students as they present themselves on-screen, noticing improvements in mood, social comfort within the group, discussion participation, self-expression and overall self-confidence.

Salt Marsh Nature Drawing is the fifth course in the Nature Drawing series created and taught by The Empowerment Factory. Developed in partnership with the RI Department of Environmental Management, the bilingual teaching materials support the lesson structure in presenting the salt marsh habitat and seven Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) living there:

Saltmarsh Sparrow Ammodramus caudacutus

Bay Underwing Catocala badia

Northern Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys terrapin terrapin

Bay Scallop Argopecten irradians

Atlantic Marsh Fiddler Crab Uca pugnax

Striped Kilifish Fundulus majalis

Atlantic Brant Branta bernicla

Almost all Nature Drawing courses are taught virtually, and the format has been highly successful in terms of attendance, student engagement and project quality and completion. While this course meets Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and Social Emotional Learning Standards (SEL), it places an emphasis on critical environmental science learning.

Contact The Empowerment Factory about bringing Nature Drawing into your school or classroom: theempowermentfactory.org, howdy@empowermentfactory.org, 401-365-1010.

The Last Straw

Patch news recently reported that a local senator has introduced bill S202 to limit plastic in Rhode Island. The bill attempts to follow suit to a straw law that went into effect in California on January 1. Although completely in support of reducing plastic waste, I disagree with this king of legislation. There is little doubt that straws litter the nation’s shorelines and have disastrous consequences for marine life. What I take issue with is pinning the responsibility and the penalty on restaurants: “Establishments in violation of the law would receive a notice of violation for the first and second offenses.”

EcoRInews reports “Restaurants may offer straws made of paper, pasta, sugar cane, wood, or bamboo. Each violation incurs a $25 fine, not to exceed $300 in a year. The state director of health would enforce penalties.”

Restaurants do not toss litter into waterways and onto beaches; careless individuals do. The senator argues that curtailing the use of plastic straws in restaurants will encourage consumers to think twice about their own footprint. It will, if waitresses politely explain the Last Plastic Straw Challenge, which encourages bars and restaurants to eliminate plastic pollution at the source by only providing plastic straws upon request. This law is requiring restaurants to educate their customers.

Many Rhode Island restaurants are already doing this of their own conscious free will, and the movement is catching on. Food server, Lori Rinkel, got permission from the manager of Tickets restaurant, in Middletown, to post a sign that says “Please consider going strawless! The ocean thanks you!” Rinkel does not put a straw in any drink ever that she serves. “If someone asks for a straw, I ask them if they really need it, and probably go overboard by telling them that it takes 200 years for that straw to decompose, and it never really does and that we use 500 billion straws a day in the U.S. alone. Then I usually tell them, ‘I am going to get fired over straws!’ The majority of my customers are thankful of the information, and I tell them ‘This is one simple thing you can do to help our environment, it is so easy.’”

There was a campaign in Newport this summer called #strawlessbythesea. Most of the restaurants on Broadway joined in. Campaigners updated Instagram with the corporate companies that are getting away from plastic straws, including McDonalds, Disney World and Starbucks, to name a few. Meg’s Aussie Milk Bar on Bellevue Avenue in Newport takes a slightly different tack, offering reusable stainless steel straws and straw cleaning brushes for sale at the cash register. With all this recent activism, people are starting to say “No straw, please,” when ordering water and drinks.

S202 was referred to the Senate Committee on the Environment and Agriculture, and a hearing date has yet to be announced. Do we really need a straw law? I do hereby summon the Straw Man. The term straw man generally means a person or an argument that is set up to be knocked down, usually to make a point. I invite you to take a shot, or stand behind him. Share your thoughts in the comments section of this blog.

Learn more about real Plastic Waste Reduction Heroes… btw, the straws featured in the artwork above are plant-based and biodegradable.