OCEAN CITY REEF PROJECT

The Ocean City Reef Foundation, Inc. was established in 1996 by parties interested in supporting artificial reef development off Ocean City Maryland. The Foundation’s initial purpose was to serve as a source of non government funding to supplement the Maryland State Reef Program so that timely responses could be made when materials of opportunity became available. When the State of Maryland terminated its reef program June 31, 1997, the Town of Ocean City assumed responsibility for the permits that are needed for reef construction. The Town assumed this responsibility under the condition that no Town revenues would be spent on the program. This meant that the Foundation had to assume the program management and operational duties that were previously done by the State. The foundation consists of a six-person board of directors and an executive director who is responsible for the day to day activities associated with the program. The City Environmental Engineer, Jenelle Gerthoffer is the liaison between the board of directors and the Town and she may be reached at 410-289-8825.

The Ocean City Reef Foundation was certified in 2001 by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service as a 501c3, tax exempt, non profit organization. Donations that are made to the foundation are tax deductible.

STATEMENT OF PURPOSE

The Ocean City Reef Foundation is Dedicated to Sustained Improvement of Recreational Fishing and Diving in Maryland’s Coastal Waters through Habitat Management, Public Education and Conservation of Natural Resources.

THE REEF PROGRAM

Most of the ocean-floor off Maryland consists of gradually undulating shoals and troughs comprising sand, broken shell over mud or clay. This relatively simple landscape is inhabited by organisms capable of burrowing into the bottom sediments for shelter (eg., clams and worms); those that carry their own defenses (eg., sea robins, rays and skates); or are nomadic schooling animals that either filter food from the water, such as menhaden, or grub food from the bottom, such as drum, dogfish, skates and rays.

When solid structures are encountered, a much more diverse population of animals can be accommodated. In tropical waters structured communities are, typically associated with coral reefs. In the Mid Atlantic, structured communities are associated with rocky outcropping, wrecks and live bottoms. Rocky bottom is rare off Maryland and once prolific live bottom areas have been severely reduced due to industrialized harvest practices. Shipwrecks support important fisheries off our coast but these wrecks are disintegrating with the passage of time and are not being replaced rapidly enough to offset the decline. Shipwrecks also are environmentally unhealthy and often occur at inconvenient locations. A managed reef program provides a means for placing a structured habitat at optimum locations with minimum adverse environmental and social impacts.

Our program uses any environmentally acceptable material to start the reef construction process.
The key factors in accepting material are that they are:

• free of oil, floatable items such as wood or light plastic, toxic materials and any other items that will not benefit marine resources reasonably,
• durable (we use a 20-year projected period for the material remaining intact as a guideline),
• stable enough on the bottom at selected locations to stay within the boundaries of permits, with a suitable substrate for a fouling community,
• have suitable structural qualities to provide shelter for reef fish and invertebrates.

Materials that have been used include, but are by no means limited to:

• ships, boats, barges, a submarine and other vessels
• concrete rubble and damaged culverts
• military tanks and combat vehicles
• specially designed concrete, precast reef units
• former underwater communications cable
• heavily ballasted tire units
• heavy scrap steel and iron pipe and other large items

We prefer to use specifically designed and proven reef habitat modules when funding is available.

All these materials serve as the starting point for a reef community. Fouling animals such as barnacles, mussels, sponges and coral use the new material as a foundation to create a living reef which is no different from other so-called natural reefs. These in turn host populations of fish, lobsters, crabs and shrimp that feed on the reef and is food for other critters.