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[To bad we humans cant save the crabs and then not eat

them. Rick.]

 

 

Appetizing Ads Aim to Serve, Protect Crabs

 

Sun Mar 27, 7:55 AM ET

 

Add to My Top Stories - Los Angeles Times

 

By Justin Dickerson Times Staff Writer

 

WASHINGTON — The latest public education campaign from

the Chesapeake Bay Program promotes awareness of the

need to save the bay's famous blue crabs — in order to

eat them.

 

One television ad begins with water running down a

storm drain as a narrator warns that spring rains can

carry excess fertilizer into sewers and rivers to the

bay, causing crabs to " suffocate slowly from lack of

oxygen. "

 

Then a crab fills the screen, lying still as waves

wash over it. " No crab should die like this, " the

announcer says.

 

" They should perish in some hot, tasty, melted

butter, " he continues, dipping a morsel of crabmeat

into a bowl and eating it.

 

The television spots, billboards and print ads,

targeting the taste buds of diners throughout the

Washington area, began this month and will run until

mid-April. Each ad in the $620,000 campaign — which

encourages, for the sake of the crustaceans, waiting

until fall to fertilize lawns — emphasizes the bay's

primary role as the source of seafood for the region.

The crabs' mating season is from May to October.

 

With the slogan " Save the Crabs … Then Eat 'Em, " the

campaign packs an unexpected punch from an

organization whose typical news releases are about

cleanups or dam removals.

 

" The bay really begins in our backyards, and that's

why we're trying to reach people on their home turfs, "

said Christopher Conner, a spokesman for the

Chesapeake Bay Program, which is part of the

Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites).

 

" For many people in Washington, the only time they get

to experience the bay is when they sit down at a

restaurant. We want them to realize that what they're

having comes from Chesapeake Bay, " he said.

 

Recent blue crab harvests are well below the long-term

average of 73 million pounds a year, according to the

Chesapeake Bay Program — in part because the crab's

habitat is being destroyed by the chemicals in

fertilizers. In 2003, the program's statistics

indicate, the harvest declined to about 48 million

pounds, close to a historic low.

 

Judy Landers, who is managing the Chesapeake education

campaign, says it isn't a " hug-a-tree, save-a-whale "

environmental promotion.

 

" Our campaign emphasizes that [local residents] can

have healthy, attractive lawns while helping to

protect the bay and its wonderful seafood, " Landers

said.

 

" And we're giving them a good excuse to procrastinate "

on some yard work, she added.

 

As a solution for those who insist on fertilizing

their lawns this spring, the program offers a list of

lawn service professionals who have the equipment and

training to care for lawns the bay-friendly way.

 

Chris Forth, regional technical manager for TruGreen

ChemLawn, said his company strictly limited the

amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus in its fertilizer.

When the fertilizer is applied, he said, his employees

make sure it is well-absorbed into the lawn so there

is no runoff that will end up in the streams and

rivers that empty into the bay.

 

Excess amounts of nutrients such as nitrogen and

phosphorus contribute to the loss of the blue crab's

habitat by stimulating the overgrowth of algae and

other plant life. That blocks sunlight from reaching

the underwater grasses that provide crabs with

shelter, food and nesting areas.

 

Too much algae also reduces the levels of dissolved

oxygen in the deeper waters of the bay, forcing crabs

from their preferred habitats and killing smaller

organisms on which the crabs feed.

 

Wayne Bridges, manager of the Crab Claw restaurant in

St. Michaels, Md., on the Eastern Shore of the

Chesapeake, is grateful that the public is taking an

interest in helping the bay — and in eating the

region's sweet-tasting crab.

 

 

 

" It's just an ongoing problem, and it's good to see

that somebody's taking a little action, " he said.

 

Conner said his organization found in a recent survey

that although 90% of people living in the Chesapeake

Bay watershed area were concerned about pollution in

the bay, few knew they could make a difference.

 

The Chesapeake Bay Program has been trying for 20

years to move the public to action and hopes that

humorous ads — one notes that " no appetizers were

injured in the making of this lawn " — and partnerships

with restaurants will stir more than the consumer's

stomach.

 

" It's a lighter approach to a serious issue, " Conner

said. " It's about getting people engaged, reaching

them through their seafood. "

 

Not everyone is a fan of the ads.

 

Karin Robertson, head of the Fish Empathy Project for

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals in

Norfolk, Va., said that although promoting awareness

about pollutants in the Chesapeake Bay was a worthy

cause, promoting the consumption of fish was wrong —

not only because of animal cruelty issues, but because

of contaminants, such as mercury and lead, in aquatic

life.

 

" It's simply not safe for people to consume fish, " she

said.

 

Gary Waugh, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of

Conservation and Recreation, said one purpose of the

ads was to get more people involved in the restoration

of the bay.

 

" We've been trying to pull together some campaign that

reaches those folks, but when you start talking to

people about algae blooms, you kind of just see their

eyes glaze over, " he said.

 

Despite a warm reception to the campaign, Waugh isn't

expecting a complete change in behavior. But he is

optimistic.

 

" This needs to be something that can be ongoing, " he

said. " We're hoping to see some change that will

warrant us trying to move forward with this. "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

thanks for this Rick, I a forwarding this to my nature group.

blessings,

Chanda

-

" Rick Stevens " <ecology1st2004

<ecology1st2004

Monday, March 28, 2005 4:49 AM

Appetizing Ads Aim to Serve, Protect Crabs

 

 

>

>

> [To bad we humans cant save the crabs and then not eat

> them. Rick.]

>

>

> Appetizing Ads Aim to Serve, Protect Crabs

>

> Sun Mar 27, 7:55 AM ET

>

> Add to My Top Stories - Los Angeles Times

>

> By Justin Dickerson Times Staff Writer

>

> WASHINGTON - The latest public education campaign from

> the Chesapeake Bay Program promotes awareness of the

> need to save the bay's famous blue crabs - in order to

> eat them.

>

> One television ad begins with water running down a

> storm drain as a narrator warns that spring rains can

> carry excess fertilizer into sewers and rivers to the

> bay, causing crabs to " suffocate slowly from lack of

> oxygen. "

>

> Then a crab fills the screen, lying still as waves

> wash over it. " No crab should die like this, " the

> announcer says.

>

> " They should perish in some hot, tasty, melted

> butter, " he continues, dipping a morsel of crabmeat

> into a bowl and eating it.

>

> The television spots, billboards and print ads,

> targeting the taste buds of diners throughout the

> Washington area, began this month and will run until

> mid-April. Each ad in the $620,000 campaign - which

> encourages, for the sake of the crustaceans, waiting

> until fall to fertilize lawns - emphasizes the bay's

> primary role as the source of seafood for the region.

> The crabs' mating season is from May to October.

>

> With the slogan " Save the Crabs . Then Eat 'Em, " the

> campaign packs an unexpected punch from an

> organization whose typical news releases are about

> cleanups or dam removals.

>

> " The bay really begins in our backyards, and that's

> why we're trying to reach people on their home turfs, "

> said Christopher Conner, a spokesman for the

> Chesapeake Bay Program, which is part of the

> Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites).

>

> " For many people in Washington, the only time they get

> to experience the bay is when they sit down at a

> restaurant. We want them to realize that what they're

> having comes from Chesapeake Bay, " he said.

>

> Recent blue crab harvests are well below the long-term

> average of 73 million pounds a year, according to the

> Chesapeake Bay Program - in part because the crab's

> habitat is being destroyed by the chemicals in

> fertilizers. In 2003, the program's statistics

> indicate, the harvest declined to about 48 million

> pounds, close to a historic low.

>

> Judy Landers, who is managing the Chesapeake education

> campaign, says it isn't a " hug-a-tree, save-a-whale "

> environmental promotion.

>

> " Our campaign emphasizes that [local residents] can

> have healthy, attractive lawns while helping to

> protect the bay and its wonderful seafood, " Landers

> said.

>

> " And we're giving them a good excuse to procrastinate "

> on some yard work, she added.

>

> As a solution for those who insist on fertilizing

> their lawns this spring, the program offers a list of

> lawn service professionals who have the equipment and

> training to care for lawns the bay-friendly way.

>

> Chris Forth, regional technical manager for TruGreen

> ChemLawn, said his company strictly limited the

> amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus in its fertilizer.

> When the fertilizer is applied, he said, his employees

> make sure it is well-absorbed into the lawn so there

> is no runoff that will end up in the streams and

> rivers that empty into the bay.

>

> Excess amounts of nutrients such as nitrogen and

> phosphorus contribute to the loss of the blue crab's

> habitat by stimulating the overgrowth of algae and

> other plant life. That blocks sunlight from reaching

> the underwater grasses that provide crabs with

> shelter, food and nesting areas.

>

> Too much algae also reduces the levels of dissolved

> oxygen in the deeper waters of the bay, forcing crabs

> from their preferred habitats and killing smaller

> organisms on which the crabs feed.

>

> Wayne Bridges, manager of the Crab Claw restaurant in

> St. Michaels, Md., on the Eastern Shore of the

> Chesapeake, is grateful that the public is taking an

> interest in helping the bay - and in eating the

> region's sweet-tasting crab.

>

>

>

> " It's just an ongoing problem, and it's good to see

> that somebody's taking a little action, " he said.

>

> Conner said his organization found in a recent survey

> that although 90% of people living in the Chesapeake

> Bay watershed area were concerned about pollution in

> the bay, few knew they could make a difference.

>

> The Chesapeake Bay Program has been trying for 20

> years to move the public to action and hopes that

> humorous ads - one notes that " no appetizers were

> injured in the making of this lawn " - and partnerships

> with restaurants will stir more than the consumer's

> stomach.

>

> " It's a lighter approach to a serious issue, " Conner

> said. " It's about getting people engaged, reaching

> them through their seafood. "

>

> Not everyone is a fan of the ads.

>

> Karin Robertson, head of the Fish Empathy Project for

> People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals in

> Norfolk, Va., said that although promoting awareness

> about pollutants in the Chesapeake Bay was a worthy

> cause, promoting the consumption of fish was wrong -

> not only because of animal cruelty issues, but because

> of contaminants, such as mercury and lead, in aquatic

> life.

>

> " It's simply not safe for people to consume fish, " she

> said.

>

> Gary Waugh, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of

> Conservation and Recreation, said one purpose of the

> ads was to get more people involved in the restoration

> of the bay.

>

> " We've been trying to pull together some campaign that

> reaches those folks, but when you start talking to

> people about algae blooms, you kind of just see their

> eyes glaze over, " he said.

>

> Despite a warm reception to the campaign, Waugh isn't

> expecting a complete change in behavior. But he is

> optimistic.

>

> " This needs to be something that can be ongoing, " he

> said. " We're hoping to see some change that will

> warrant us trying to move forward with this. "

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

 

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

hey Rick, you should come join the nature group too.

Jiraph was the shot in the arm we needed and we are a bit more chatty. We

could really use your input!! Anyone here who wants to chat about nature

related stuff with nature minded people, come join us, please.

Nature_Trekkers

Blessings,

Chanda

-

" Rick Stevens " <ecology1st2004

<ecology1st2004

Monday, March 28, 2005 4:49 AM

Appetizing Ads Aim to Serve, Protect Crabs

 

 

>

>

> [To bad we humans cant save the crabs and then not eat

> them. Rick.]

>

>

> Appetizing Ads Aim to Serve, Protect Crabs

>

> Sun Mar 27, 7:55 AM ET

>

> Add to My Top Stories - Los Angeles Times

>

> By Justin Dickerson Times Staff Writer

>

> WASHINGTON - The latest public education campaign from

> the Chesapeake Bay Program promotes awareness of the

> need to save the bay's famous blue crabs - in order to

> eat them.

>

> One television ad begins with water running down a

> storm drain as a narrator warns that spring rains can

> carry excess fertilizer into sewers and rivers to the

> bay, causing crabs to " suffocate slowly from lack of

> oxygen. "

>

> Then a crab fills the screen, lying still as waves

> wash over it. " No crab should die like this, " the

> announcer says.

>

> " They should perish in some hot, tasty, melted

> butter, " he continues, dipping a morsel of crabmeat

> into a bowl and eating it.

>

> The television spots, billboards and print ads,

> targeting the taste buds of diners throughout the

> Washington area, began this month and will run until

> mid-April. Each ad in the $620,000 campaign - which

> encourages, for the sake of the crustaceans, waiting

> until fall to fertilize lawns - emphasizes the bay's

> primary role as the source of seafood for the region.

> The crabs' mating season is from May to October.

>

> With the slogan " Save the Crabs . Then Eat 'Em, " the

> campaign packs an unexpected punch from an

> organization whose typical news releases are about

> cleanups or dam removals.

>

> " The bay really begins in our backyards, and that's

> why we're trying to reach people on their home turfs, "

> said Christopher Conner, a spokesman for the

> Chesapeake Bay Program, which is part of the

> Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites).

>

> " For many people in Washington, the only time they get

> to experience the bay is when they sit down at a

> restaurant. We want them to realize that what they're

> having comes from Chesapeake Bay, " he said.

>

> Recent blue crab harvests are well below the long-term

> average of 73 million pounds a year, according to the

> Chesapeake Bay Program - in part because the crab's

> habitat is being destroyed by the chemicals in

> fertilizers. In 2003, the program's statistics

> indicate, the harvest declined to about 48 million

> pounds, close to a historic low.

>

> Judy Landers, who is managing the Chesapeake education

> campaign, says it isn't a " hug-a-tree, save-a-whale "

> environmental promotion.

>

> " Our campaign emphasizes that [local residents] can

> have healthy, attractive lawns while helping to

> protect the bay and its wonderful seafood, " Landers

> said.

>

> " And we're giving them a good excuse to procrastinate "

> on some yard work, she added.

>

> As a solution for those who insist on fertilizing

> their lawns this spring, the program offers a list of

> lawn service professionals who have the equipment and

> training to care for lawns the bay-friendly way.

>

> Chris Forth, regional technical manager for TruGreen

> ChemLawn, said his company strictly limited the

> amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus in its fertilizer.

> When the fertilizer is applied, he said, his employees

> make sure it is well-absorbed into the lawn so there

> is no runoff that will end up in the streams and

> rivers that empty into the bay.

>

> Excess amounts of nutrients such as nitrogen and

> phosphorus contribute to the loss of the blue crab's

> habitat by stimulating the overgrowth of algae and

> other plant life. That blocks sunlight from reaching

> the underwater grasses that provide crabs with

> shelter, food and nesting areas.

>

> Too much algae also reduces the levels of dissolved

> oxygen in the deeper waters of the bay, forcing crabs

> from their preferred habitats and killing smaller

> organisms on which the crabs feed.

>

> Wayne Bridges, manager of the Crab Claw restaurant in

> St. Michaels, Md., on the Eastern Shore of the

> Chesapeake, is grateful that the public is taking an

> interest in helping the bay - and in eating the

> region's sweet-tasting crab.

>

>

>

> " It's just an ongoing problem, and it's good to see

> that somebody's taking a little action, " he said.

>

> Conner said his organization found in a recent survey

> that although 90% of people living in the Chesapeake

> Bay watershed area were concerned about pollution in

> the bay, few knew they could make a difference.

>

> The Chesapeake Bay Program has been trying for 20

> years to move the public to action and hopes that

> humorous ads - one notes that " no appetizers were

> injured in the making of this lawn " - and partnerships

> with restaurants will stir more than the consumer's

> stomach.

>

> " It's a lighter approach to a serious issue, " Conner

> said. " It's about getting people engaged, reaching

> them through their seafood. "

>

> Not everyone is a fan of the ads.

>

> Karin Robertson, head of the Fish Empathy Project for

> People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals in

> Norfolk, Va., said that although promoting awareness

> about pollutants in the Chesapeake Bay was a worthy

> cause, promoting the consumption of fish was wrong -

> not only because of animal cruelty issues, but because

> of contaminants, such as mercury and lead, in aquatic

> life.

>

> " It's simply not safe for people to consume fish, " she

> said.

>

> Gary Waugh, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of

> Conservation and Recreation, said one purpose of the

> ads was to get more people involved in the restoration

> of the bay.

>

> " We've been trying to pull together some campaign that

> reaches those folks, but when you start talking to

> people about algae blooms, you kind of just see their

> eyes glaze over, " he said.

>

> Despite a warm reception to the campaign, Waugh isn't

> expecting a complete change in behavior. But he is

> optimistic.

>

> " This needs to be something that can be ongoing, " he

> said. " We're hoping to see some change that will

> warrant us trying to move forward with this. "

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

 

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