Elizabeth Rose
'07
Save the Bay Internship
Providence, Rhode Island
Summer 2006
This summer I interned for Save the Bay, an environmental organization
based out of Providence, Rhode Island. Their goal is to restore and
maintain the Narrangansett bay and its watershed. My title was habitat
restoration intern. I was in charge of monitoring four different sites
around the state. Every other week I, along with one other intern,
would go out to each site and take salinity measurements throughout the
marsh. In order to take salinity measurements, I would extract salt
water from the ground around the well and then put the sample on a
refractometer, which gives salinity measurement readouts. I would then
record the data. A healthy marsh generally would measure in the high
twenties and low thirties for parts per million of salt. Most of the
measurements I received when monitoring would fall between 0 and 25
ppm. The main reason for the marshes’ degradation is development, which
cuts off the natural flow of salt water into the marsh. As a result of
low salinity levels, an invasive species named phragmites grows freely.
The plant spreads quickly and is a dominant species, meaning it
restricts growth of natural marsh plants and often kills them.
Other than field work, I was responsible for inputting the data that
the other interns and I had collected into excel documents. I then
compared the data we collected to data from past years. With the
comparison I sometimes created graphs and charts to demonstrate either
the progress or further degradation of the given marsh.
Another project I worked on was to look at various environmental
organizations and see what kind of information they had published about
climate change. This was in order to help Save the Bay publish
information on what people could do to curb global warming and reduce
climate changes’ effect on the Narrangansett bay.