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Programs
Education
Among the numerous grant requests considered by the Sonoma County
Fish and Wildlife Commission each year many support public education,
often in conjunction with other programs including hatchery activities,
research, and habitat improvement.
An example of such funding supported
the western Sonoma County Salmon
Creek Middle School's Environmental Education and Watershed
Restoration Program. This multi-year ridge top to creek watershed
restoration project enhances the health of the Salmon Creek watershed
while simultaneously providing students, with teachers and other
volunteers, the opportunity to combine the restoration with curricula
linking the
restoration efforts to math and science academic studies.

Redwood ecology at headwaters of
Salmon Creek with Brock Dolman
photo by Laurel Anderson |
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Studying macro-invertebrates
with John Parodi from STRAW
photo by Laurel Anderson |
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Supporting this program, the Sonoma County Fish
and Wildlife Commission granted $1,800.00 for the purchase
of water quality sampling equipment, irrigation equipment, plant
supplies,
and curricula materials.

Water quality testing on a reach
of Salmon Creek
photo by Laurel Anderson
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Restoration
with Gold Ridge
Resource Conservation District
photo by Carole Lane
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Habitat Restoration
Additionally, the Sonoma County Fish and Wildlife Commission appropriated
$8,000.00 to the Bay Institute, STRAW (Students and Teachers Restoring
a Watershed) Project at Montgomery High School, Santa Rosa, in their
education and restoration of Spring Creek, a tributary of Santa Rosa
Creek, which flows into the Russian River.
The STRAW Program consisted of:
- Four days of STRAW professional development
for teachers
- Classroom visits and instruction from STRAW staff
to assist in developing watershed studies to prepare the students for
restoration activities
- Materials and supervision for the student-involved
restoration of approximately 100 feet of Spring Creek, bordering Montgomery
High
- Post restoration maintenance and student educational
activitie

Students attending Occidental Arts and Ecology Center's June,
2000 Basins of Relations Community Watershed Training, learn about
Dutch Bill Creek habitat restoration from Doug Gore using rock weirs.
In the past the Sonoma County Fish &Wildlife Commission has
funded both the Basins of Relations training and the installation
of numerous creek restoration structures, such as rock weirs and
digger logs. photo by Brock Dolman
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STRAW - Montgomery High
Spring Creek restoration
photo by Laurel Anderson |
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Research
California Department of Fish and Game Shellfish Health Lab employee Christy
Juhasz examines the shell of a Sonoma coast red abalone
for the presence of microscopic pests. The Nikon microscope
and fiber optic light source were purchased with funds provided
by the Sonoma County Fish and Wildlife Commission.
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photo by Thea Robbins |
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Law Enforcement
A portion of the Sonoma County Fish and Wildlife Commission grant
funds are allotted to foster law enforcement for the benefit of Sonoma
County fish and wildlife. The California Department of Fish and
Game has received grants for the purchase of much-needed equipment
that cant be realized with established budgets. Examples include
night vision scopes, primarily for use in monitoring illegal, nighttime,
abalone harvest along the Sonoma County coast.
In addition, the Sonoma County Fish and Wildlife Commission granted
$4,000.00 to the Sonoma Coast State Beach, providing Sonoma Coast
Rangers with optics and computing tools for long-range fish and wildlife
surveillance operations. The spotting scopes enable rangers to accurately observe
violations from a distance while building their case. The computing equipment
permits the rangers to upload information gained during contacts to other rangers
and wardens working abalone enforcement along the coast via the Abtrac program.
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