
Scuba Diving club,
Southern California
New Jersey
State Deploys Decommissioned Subway Cars in Artificial Reefs
4th of Five Rounds of 50 Cars Splashed at Deep Water Reef Site
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(03/121)
TRENTON --- The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) dropped
a fourth round of 50 subway cars today at the Garden State North Reef Site for
use in the state's artificial reef program. The decommissioned subway cars are
part of 250 acquired from the New York Transit Authority (NYTA).
"Our artificial reef program provides tremendous
benefits to fishermen, divers, and our shore economy," said DEP
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell. "As a pilot project, research at reef
sites that include these subway cars will enhance our understanding of marine
ecosystems."
Past studies of artificial reefs suggest that subway cars
may be colonized by up to 200 species of fish and invertebrates. Reefs have 800
to 1,000 times more biomass than open ocean. Artificial reefs can also form
important nurseries for juvenile fish.
DEP deployed the first 50 subway cars at Cape May Reef on
July 3, followed by 50 cars at Deep Water Reef off Ocean City on July 16 and 50
cars at the Atlantic City Reef on July 25. The remaining 50 subway cars will be
allocated to the Shark River Reef off of Monmouth County.
The 1.1-square mile Garden State North Reef Site is
approximately 6.5 miles offshore from Harvey Cedars in Ocean County and currently
is comprised of almost 37,000 cubic yards of vessels, tanks, specially-designed
"reef balls" and other materials.
Since 2001, NYTA's artificial reef program has deployed over
1,000 decommissioned "Redbird" subway cars at reefs in Delaware,
South Carolina, Virginia and Georgia. NYTA bears all costs associated with
cleaning the cars and transporting them to the reefs.
Each Redbird car is approximately 51 feet in length and nine
feet in width and height. Prior to deployment, NYTA strips each car of all
tanks, plastic, degradable materials, and grease to avoid contamination of the
marine ecosystem.
DEP has formed an independent committee to oversee a
multi-year monitoring program at the subway car sites that will study water
quality, fisheries and biota, and the durability of the reefs. The committee
will convene early this fall for an initial review of the subway car
deployment.
Prior to the committee's final report, the state is
implementing a moratorium on placement of any additional artificial reef
material, with the exception of rock, concrete, and ships and barges.
Contact: Peter Boger
(609) 984-1795
Related Links
4th
Deployment of Subway Cars
5th
Deployment of Subway Cars
How Reef Structures Benefit Marine Life
"State Deploys Decommissioned Subway Cars in Artificial Reefs" (NJDEP News Release)
http://www.nj.gov/dep/newsrel/releases/03_0095.htm
New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife-Artificial Reef Program
http://www.njfishandwildlife.com/artreef.htm
New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife
http://www.njfishandwildlife.com
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Posted September 6, 2003
Press release September 3, 2003