麻豆传媒

 

Maiden voyage

- July 18, 2008

Jeff Barrell and Lin Lu raise the DalBlimp on a calm morning near Eastern Passage. (Jon Grant Photo)

When it was raised over the boardwalk at Eastern Passage at dawn, some people didn鈥檛 know what they were seeing鈥攚as the Hindenburg really flying over McCormick鈥檚 Beach?

鈥淥ne guy said he thought it was a UFO,鈥 says Jeff Barrell, a PhD student in Oceanography. Together with Professor Jon Grant, he outfitted a blimp-shaped helium balloon with expensive photography equipment and sent it soaring a few hundred metres in the air.

Compared to聽hiring a plane,聽the 鈥淒alBlimp鈥 is聽a much cheaper way for researchers to acquire much-needed aerial photography of eelgrass meadows in coastal areas. 麻豆传媒 four metres in length, the balloon is equipped with a global positioning system and a high-res digital camera, which is controlled by operators on the ground.

PHOTO ESSAY: The air show. (Photos by Jon Grant and Jeff Barrell)

鈥淲e use images from planes and satellites, but it鈥檚 tricky and expensive,鈥 says Dr. Grant, an expert on coastal zone management. 鈥淪o I thought, 鈥榟ow hard can it be to float a camera?鈥 Not hard at all, as it turns out.鈥

After the trial run in Halifax Harbour, they鈥檒l bring the blimp to the Acadian shore of New Brunswick where they鈥檙e doing research in collaboration with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.聽

Eelgrass beds are one of the best indicators of ecosystem health at the seashore. And that鈥檚 why their depletion鈥攂y almost 90 per cent over the past century along sections of the Atlantic coast鈥攊s cause for concern.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e like our rainforests,鈥 explains Dr. Grant. 鈥淚f they鈥檙e healthy, they鈥檙e very luxuriant and all kinds of things live there among the bright-green grasses. They provide shelter, food and even slow down water currents.鈥

Eelgrass beds grow in shallow bays and coves, tidal creeks and estuaries. They serve as the habitat, nursery grounds and food for mussels, crabs, scallops, fish, birds, and numerous other species of wildlife. Up close, the long blades of grass are often covered with tiny marine creatures. But from afar, the meadows show complex growth patterns, appearing as brilliant swirls of emerald green. Growth patterns and locations are important in understanding what controls eelgrass abundance, and thus its role as a landscape feature.

Their destruction is caused by human activities, such as aquaculture and nutrient run-off from farms and fish plants, which leads to poor water quality and algae blooms which choke out other forms of growth. The loss of this habitat has possibly contributed to the decline in some fisheries populations.

鈥淭he good news is that eelgrass beds can be restored and replanted,鈥 says Dr. Grant. 鈥淎nd we can make predictions about what beds are under threat and take appropriate action.鈥


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