The San Juan Island Conservation District and your Conservation Land Bank want to thank everyone who came out and celebrated Orca Recovery Day with us last Saturday. Our October 19th celebrations spanned two islands, with approximately 50 volunteers coming together to support natural areas and the endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales that grace the Salish Sea.

Cattle Point Interpretive Area, San Juan Island

Sierra photo 1SJI Conservation District hosted their second Orca Recovery Day, joined by over 30 volunteers, to help plant over 400 native prairie wildflowers and grasses within the marine riparian zone at Cattle Point Natural Resources Conservation Area, managed by the Department for Natural Resources (DNR). Canada thistle (an invasive Asteraceae) was replaced with Viola adunca, Festuca romeri, Grindelia integrfolia, Cerastium arvense, and Anaphalis margaritacea, native species all grown in The Salish Seeds Project nursery. These host plants will add to a healthy shoreline habitat that supports local insect populations – part of the web that puts food on the table for Southern Resident Orca. Sierra Photo 2This restoration project is a part of a larger effort, lead by DNR, to conserve native nearshore ecosystems for threatened and endangered species. Participants heard from Samuel Barr of Samish Nation, Katie Jones from Center for Whale Research, Deborah Giles from University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology and Wild Orca, Jess Newly from Friends of the San Juans, Janet Thomas from Orca Relief, and Frances Robertson from The Marine Resources Committee.

 

Turtleback Mountain Preserve, Orcas Island

Acorn planting FamilyVolunteers joined Land Bank staff in our first Orca Recovery Day event to help plant 400 Garry oak acorns and 1,300 native wildflowers within the Garry oak restoration area off the Morning Ridge Trail on Turtleback Mountain. Garry oak savannahs and native grasslands are some of the rarest habitats in Washington and are home to a high diversity of native plants, birds, butterflies, and other animals. The October 19th planting included native wildflowers found in Garry oak ecosystems, such as great camas (Camassia leichtlinii), spring bank violet (Viola adunca), and Canada goldenrod (Solidago canadensis). web version of Erin stuffing dibble holesNative seeds are sown into “plugs”at The Salish Seeds Project nursery on San Juan Island. This head start gives them a better chance at establishing themselves in competition with non-native species.