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Fourth Annual Educators' Workshop Held at HammonassetMenunkatuck Audubon's fourth annual workshop for educators was held at Hammonasset Beach State Park on May 1, a beautiful spring day. Presented in collaboration with the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection and the Connecticut Sea Grant Extension Program, this daylong workshop attracted twenty-two participants (school teachers and nature center staff) from around the state. Participants met at the Meigs Point Nature Center at 8:30 am for our customary offerings of shade-grown coffee, fruit, bagels and muffins. And then it was time to begin! After an introduction by Diane Joy of the DEP's Kellogg Environmental Center, we separated into two groups. The morning sessions were "Salt Marsh Soils,"
led by Lisa Wahle, and "Salt Marsh Botany,"
led by Sandy Weiss, both DEP Project Search
environmental educators. Lisa provided us with
shovels and augers to study soil samples at
various locations in the park, including the
salt Sandy took us out into another, drier, part of the salt marsh. She showed us the different zones of the marsh: the tidal creeks, mud flats, low marsh, high marsh, and the upland edge. In the upland marsh were also pools and pannes. Each zone had plants growing that were specially adapted to their habitat. The session was spent identifying these plants and discussing the special adaptations that allowed them to survive in this salty environment.
After a break for lunch, we again headed out into the park. The afternoon sessions were "Observing Birds," led by Roger Lawson, an environmental educator with the DEP's Kellogg Environmental Center, and "Subtidal Exploration," led by Heather Crawford, coastal resource educator with the CT Sea Grant Extension Program. Roger stressed the importance of teaching students observation skills, rather than just learning the identity of the birds. We spent time noticing size, shape and plumage of birds, as well as their flight patterns, behavior, and where they were found. Heather set up her session on the beach. A
seine net dragged through the water gathered
marine creatures for closer study. Masses of
marine copepods, crustaceans no bigger than
sesame seeds, teemed in the containers. Small
comb and moon jellies undulated through the
water. Along the line of wrack, or debris brought
onto the beach with the tides, we discovered
seaweed as well as the shells of many species.
Heather discussed the natural history of some
of these species and various ways to collect
and study subtidal marine creatures. Back at the nature center, Diane had set up
Dr. Peter Pellegrino's computer program, "The
Living Seashore: An Interactive Guide to the
Invertebrates of Hammonasset Beach State Park."
Underwater video of marine invertebrates is
combined with an interactive computer program.
This program is available for use at the Meigs
Point Nature Center when the center is open
in the summer. As always, time was too short to cover everything
we would have liked. Aside from that, participants
were enthusiastic in their praise of the workshop
and the leaders. Menunkatuck would like to thank
the DEP and Sea Grant for helping to make this
day a success.
Submitted by Cindi Kobak
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