Maryland Coastal Bays Program

The Maryland Coastal Bays Program (MCBP) is one of the 28 United States National Estuary Programs created in the 1987 Amendments to the Clean Water Act. The program, organized by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, is a non-regulatory federal-state-local collaboration working to restore water quality and conserve the natural resources of the bay system adjacent to Ocean City, Maryland and Assateague Island. The partnership works with municipalities, non-profits, governmental agencies, and businesses; and helps develop, find funding for, and implement projects and programs aimed at improving the health of the estuary. The partnership either directly implements these projects, or administers and manages grants, holds educational workshops and highlights project results.[1]

Maryland Coastal Bays Program
AbbreviationMCBP
Founded1996
HeadquartersBerlin, Maryland
Region
Maryland Coastal Bays
Board Chair
Steve Taylor
Executive Director
Kevin Smith
Websitehttps://mdcoastalbays.org

The program operates the Maryland Coastal Bays Foundation (IRS EIN 52-2123356), a private, non-profit corporation which develops and implements a Comprehensive Conservation Management Plan for Maryland’s Coastal Bays and supports conservation and educational activities.[1]

The bays managed under the program are:

Water quality edit

In 2021 the program reported that overall water quality in the bays declined during 2019-2020, mainly associated with decline in seagrass and hard clams. Nutrient pollution in the bays were at moderate levels, and the program continues to monitor for harmful algal blooms (HABs), which are often caused by excess nutrients.[2]

Projects edit

The program has conducted environmental monitoring of HABs offshore from the bays, focusing on nutrient pollution and occurrences of Dinophysis, Karenia and Pseudo-nitzschia.[2]

In 2021 the program worked with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources to establish a nesting project for Common terns on an artificial island in Chincoteague Bay.[3][4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "The Mission". Berlin, MD: Maryland Coastal Bays Program. Retrieved 2022-08-19.
  2. ^ a b c Maryland Coastal Bays Report Card 2019-2020 (PDF) (Report). Maryland Coastal Bays Program. October 2021.
  3. ^ Rodewald, Amanda D. (2022-04-25). "In 50 years, the Baltimore oriole population fell by a third; will we risk losing more?". Guest commentary. The Baltimore Sun.
  4. ^ Fritts, Rachel (2022-05-01). "If You Build It, Will They Come? An Artificial Island May Be the Lifeline Maryland's Common Terns Need". The Maryland Natural Resource. Vol. 25, no. 2. Annapolis, MD: Maryland Department of Natural Resources.