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Where
did we go?
Our last
trip of the year was to Arrowhead Marsh near the Oakland Airport. This
is our own "backyard" a place to observe wildlife right
here in Oakland. Arrowhead Marsh is an island of wildlife habitat surrounded
by an urban landscape. The Oakland Airport is one mile west of the marsh.
The passing traffic on Interstate 880 and the jets flying over the marsh
creates constant noise pollution.
What
did we do?
Canoes
and Sloughs guides led our group through the marsh in canoes. Naturalists
and museum curators explained the history of Arrowhead Marsh and identified
plants and animals that live in the marsh habitat. |

Erik samples
the marsh mud after testing the waters salinity with a hydrometer.
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What
did we observe?
We
saw many different kinds of birds and lots of small fish swimming
in schools.
In early summer, you can view nesting birds, such as barn swallows
and terns.
A
large colony of nesting terns tried to ward off our canoes as we
approached their nesting sites. We spotted many herons and egrets
and even a flock of white pelicans flying overhead as we paddled.
Earlier in the spring, this area is full of migrating shorebirds
and waterfowl.
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In
early summer you can observe nesting birds, such as these barn swallows.
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After loading
all the canoes onto the trailer, we posed for a final group photograph.
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Important
facts about Arrowhead Marsh
Although Arrowhead Marsh looks like it has been around forever,
it was accidentally created by human activity a little more than
a hundred years ago. In the 1870s Chabot Dam was built in
the Oakland hills. The dam was poorly engineered and soon after
its completion a heavy rain destroyed the dams bypass. The
rain washed 22,000 cubic yards of mud (or the equivalent of 400
standard dump trucks) down the San Leandro creek. The deposition
of this sediment in south Oakland bay waters led to the creation
of Arrowhead Marsh. The name of the marsh is an appropriate one
as the marsh looks like an arrowhead from the air.
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Is
this native or exotic cordgrass? It is very difficult to distinguish
these two species apart.
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Today, Arrowhead
Marsh is an important habitat for estuary plants and animals. The salt
marsh harvest mouse and the clapper rail are two endangered animals that
depend on the conservation of Bay Area marsh habitats like Arrowhead Marsh.
Thousands of waterfowl make pit stops at Arrowhead Marsh during their
seasonal migrations. If you are lucky, you might see the small and cute
burrowing owls.
Despite the tremendous efforts to preserve and rehabilitate this important
marsh habitat, several problems are still unresolved. Noise pollution
from overhead jets and freeway traffic may deter many birds from Arrowhead
Marsh. Scientists are baffled about eradicating an exotic cordgrass plant
(Spartina alterna flora) that is displacing native marsh plants at a disturbing
rate. If this non-native cordgrass continues to spread unchecked, scientists
worry that the ecology of the marsh may be irreparably altered. So far,
no easy solution has presented itself. Removing non-native cordgrass is
expensive and wrought with legal problems. Furthermore, it is hybridizing
with native cordgrass species that makes it even more difficult to distinguish
these two similar looking species.
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Lets
Go!
To find out more about Canoes in Sloughs tours please visit:
www.savesfbay.org
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