AGM 2012 – February 15th at 7pm

Please note that our Annual General Meeting will be held on Wednesday, February 15th at 7pm in the Port Moody Recreation Centre, with a guest speaker following the meeting.

 

Our guest speaker this year is Assistant Professor John Moore, who has a passion for wild salmon. He will be discussing the dynamics of coastal ecosystems, how systems function, and how human activities impact that function. He works primarily in stream and lake systems with a focus on food webs, evolutionary, ecosystem, food-web, and community ecology viewpoints.

His current research seeks to understand how species interactions and disturbances drive ecosystem processes, community dynamics, and evolution in freshwaters, asking questions such as what are the consequences of species additions or extinctions? How are human activities altering disturbance regimes? What are the causes and ecological consequences of population dynamics of Pacific salmon, an ecologically and culturally important group of species?

Dr. Moore aims to do research that has conservation and management implications and believes that a deep understanding of the ecological consequences of human activities is needed to properly weigh management trade-offs. For more information, please look online at http://www.sfu.ca/biology/faculty/jwmoore/Research.html

Dr. Jonathan W. Moore, Assistant Professor, is Liber Ero Chair of Coastal Science and Management, Department of Biological Sciences/Resource and Environmental Management, at Simon Fraser University

2011 Shoreline Cleanup success !

Thanks so much to all of our 162 volunteers that worked so hard to help clean Noons Creek and the surrounding shoreline during the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup that we held on Saturday, September 10th, 2011.

Thanks to our sponsors, Gallaghers Cafe of Newport Village, and Thrifty’s Foods of Suter Brook.  We also had an unexpected donation of food and drinks from the Coquitlam Canadian Superstore – thanks !

Totals

164     Volunteers  (compared to approximately 50 volunteers last year)

2,430  Total items collected  (compared to 2,000 last year)

213     Total kilogrammes collected  (compared to 82 kg’s last year)

26      Bags of garbage collected

 

Shoreline and Recreational Activities

80     Bags (paper)

211   Bags (plastic)

41     Balloons

69     Beverage Bottles (plastic)

161   Glass beverage bottles

210   Beverage cans (we included juice boxes here because there wasn’t a separate box)

99     Caps, Lids

42     Clothing, Shoes

95     Cups, Plates, Forks, Knives, Spoons

402   Food Wrappers / Containers

14     Pull Tabs

3       6-Pack Holders

3      Shotgun Shells / Wadding

78    Straws, Stirrers

21    Toys

 

Ocean / Waterway Activities

2   Bait Containers / Packaging

0   Bleach / Cleaner Bottles

2   Buoys / Floats

0   Crab / Lobster / Fish Traps

1   Crates

4   Fishing Line

0   Fishing Lures / Light Sticks

0   Fishing Nets

0   Light Bulbs / Tubes

0   Oil / Lube Bottles

0   Pallets

17  Plastic Sheeting / Tarps

10  Rope

14  Strapping Bands

 

Smoking-Related Activities

695 Cigarettes / Cigarette Filters

5    Cigarette Lighters

9    Cigar Tips

62  Tobacco Packaging / Wrappers

 

Dumping Activities

0  Appliances (refridgerators, waters, etc)

1  Battery

54  Building Materials

9    Cars / Car Parts

1    55 Gallon Drum
5    Tyres

 

Medical / Personal Hygiene

3  Condoms

4  Diapers

0  Syringes

3  Tampons

 

Litter Items of Local Concern

54  Building material

14  Dog poop bags

1    Ziploc bag of drugs

Lots of glass and styrofoam

 

We love our volunteers !  Thanks again from Sandra Niven, Ben Mackereth, Dave Bennie, and Mike Vigurs

Co-Ordinators, Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup, Shoreline Park and Noons Creek, Port Moody

Fin Clipping – volunteers needed (July 18 and 19, 2011)

July 18, 2011 10:00 amtoJuly 19, 2011 3:00 pm

Fin Clipping

Fin Clipping

We’ll be doing fin clipping at our Noons Creek Hatchery and we need lots of volunteers on Monday, July 18th from 10am – 3pm and Tuesday, July 19th from 9am – 3pm.

This is an ideal youth / student activity and we are happy to provide a record of hours upon request. Volunteers can spend an hour or all day.
Please note that this is a weather dependent activity and if it’s too hot we won’t be able to go ahead – this will be decided by the DFO (Fisheries and Oceans Canada) on the day. If you’re unsure, please call the hatchery on 604-469-9106.

Bulbs for Sale

From Tuesday, May 24th, 9am – 10.30am each day until sold out:

Hyacinths, Tulips and Daffodils are on sale at the Noons Creek Hatchery, 300 Ioco Road (beside the Ice Hockey Rink) until sold out.  $5 per (large) bag of Daffodils and $10 per (large) bag of Hyacinths and Tulips.

CASH ONLY, please – we don’t have credit card facilities

Port Moody Ecological Society – Celebrating 20 years of environmental awareness and stewardship
300 Ioco Road, Port Moody, BC V3H 2V7 Tel: (604) 469-9106
Located to the right of the Port Moody Recreation Centre and Ice Hockey Rink

World Water Day – March 22, 2011

March 22, 2011
8:00 amto8:00 pm

World Water Day 2011

This is the first time in human history that most of the world’s population live in cities: 3.3 billion people…and the urban landscape continues to grow.
The objective of World Water Day 2011 is to focus international attention on the impact of rapid urban population growth, industrialization and uncertainties caused by climate change, conflicts and natural disasters on urban water systems.

AGM – Blue Whales expert, Dr. Andrew Trites, Beaty Biodiversity Museum

February 16, 2011
7:00 pmto8:31 pm
Blue Whale

Beaty Biodiversity Museum

 

At the Annual General Meeting of the Port Moody Ecological Society on Wednesday evening, February 16, the guest speaker will be Dr. Andrew Trites from UBC whose team assembled the blue whale skeleton on display at the UBC Beaty Biodiversity Museum.  Trites will talk about the endangered blue whale, the largest mammal on earth.  Despite their massive size, the food they eat is miniscule.  Blue whales feed by gulping large quantities of sea water and filter out tiny nutritious krill with their baleen.  Once, blue whales were hunted almost to extinction but hunting in Canada ceased in 1966.  Every spring and fall, a few blue whales still migrate past Vancouver Island.  Trites, who is Director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the UBC Fisheries Centre, also carries out research on some Stellers sea lions which are kept at the Reed Point Marina in Port Moody.  In his presentation, he will briefly describe this research which is focused on determining what these sea lions eat and how that might explain why their populations have essentially vanished in the Gulf of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.  Following Trites’ presentation, Ashley Graham from the City of Port Moody will provide a brief description of the results of the fish inventory conducted in the Port Moody arm of Burrard Inlet this past year.  The Port Moody Ecological Society, along with the Burrard Inlet Marine Enhancement Society and others, was a partner in this project.
 
            This year, the Port Moody Ecological Society will be celebrating its 20th anniversary.  The Society was established in 1991 under the direction of its founding President Rick Simpson, with the goals of raising both salmon and ecological awareness.  In addition to rearing coho and chum salmon at their hatchery on Noons Creek, the Society offers school programs on Estuary Exploration and Salmon Science.  It hosts the popular Fingerling Festival in Port Moody on the first Saturday of May at which children have an opportunity to release young chum salmon into Noons Creek.  The meeting, free and open to the public, will be held at the Port Moody Recreation Centre (next to the City Hall/Library Complex) in Multipurpose Room 2 (upstairs and to the left).  Doors open at 6:30 pm with refreshments; the meeting will commence with a short AGM at 7 pm followed by the guest presentations.  For more information, see www.noonscreek.org or phone 604-937-3483

The public are invited to join our private tour of the UBC Beaty Biodiversity Museum on Saturday, February 26th, meeting at the museum at 10.45am.  Car pooling may be available – please call Sandra on 604-931-6971 for details.  Cost is $15 including the guide and taxes – children under 4 free.

Canoe Cleanup – Saturday, November 6th

November 6, 2010
10:00 amto3:00 pm

Click here for Poster:  Canoe Cleanup of Rocky Point

The Port Moody Ecological Society is proud to support this important event.

Come out and enhance the habitat for salmon and other wildlife by removing garbage from the waters of Rocky Point – on canoes!

Hosted by: Capilano University Outdoor Recreation Management Program students/canoe guides Chelsea Kennedy and Gareth Wheatley

Time slots of two hours each, starting at 10am and finishing at 4pm.

Location: Rocky Point, Port Moody, BC

Parking available and bus transportation is nearby

Map of Rocky Point

Register online by e-mailing canoecleanup@gmail.com and nominate your two preferred time slots

Canoes, paddles, PFD’s are provided thanks to Ridge Wilderness Adventures (http://www.ridgewilderness.com/) and Rocky Point Sailing Association (www.rpsa.ca)

Volunteers can participate free or by donation (all proceeds will go to the Wildlife Rescue Association)

Gloves, garbage bags, grabber tools provided by the Port Moody Ecological Society

Please bring grabber tools if you have them as we have limited supplies

Waivers will be provided on-site

Event will run no matter of the weather, so make sure to dress appropriately. Suggestions for dress include:

  • Warm toque
  • Gloves/mitts
  • Gum boots (or shoes you don’t mind getting wet)
  • Warm wool socks
  • Warm fleece sweater (stay away from cotton)
  • Rain jacket and pants
  • Dry change of clothes