August 2013

Did you know that the Great Lakes are the biggest freshwater source in the world? Lake Erie is the most productive for fishing of all the Great Lakes. Your support helps make our streams clean, clear and healthy so they can support this complex ecosystem. By donating to PCS, you help us reach our goals of restoring rivers that lead to Lake Erie beaches that promote fishable and swimmable conditions for generations.

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As told by Craig Krajeski, Maumee Corps Seasonal Internship Team Lead

I am very excited to be joining Partners For Clean Streams through the Maumee Corps Internship as a team leader. I view this internship as an excellent opportunity for me to gain valuable environmental field experience that will help me accomplish my career goal of becoming an environmental consultant. I believe this internship will also allow me to hone my leadership abilities and provide me with valuable knowledge in habitat restoration practices and plant identification skills. As a University of Toledo alumnus, I was particularly interested in this internship because of the positive impacts the habitat restoration work will have on the section of the Ottawa River that runs through UT’s campus. I believe the completion of this project will be incredibly beneficial to UT as it will make the Ottawa River more accessible and visible to those on campus. I have truly enjoyed the work we have already done this summer, and our team of interns is incredibly hard working and efficient in removing non-native invasive plant species from the banks of the Ottawa River and within Sylvan Prairie Park in Sylvania, Ohio. In the weeks to come, I am looking forward to working with my fellow interns in the removal of invasive non-native plants from Sylvan Prairie and the University of Toledo as we continue on in our habitat restoration efforts.

I graduated from the University of Toledo in May 2011 with a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Science and magna cum laude honors. While earning my degree, I took a strong interest in aquatic ecology and environmental issues affecting Northwest Ohio. Before joining Partners For Clean Streams and the Maumee Corps Internship I gained field and research experience through Dr. Hans Gottgens lab within UT’s Environmental Science department. Starting in July 2010 and through October 2010, I assisted a University of Toledo Master of Science student in sampling and data collection for his thesis researching freshwater mussels in three Northwest Ohio streams. While sampling in the field, I was responsible for recording and organizing all of the data that we collected. This data included water depth, sediment composition and compaction, and mussel species and shell dimensions. As I gained experience in the field, my duties expanded to identifying and measuring the live mussels we collected and searching sediment samples for juvenile mussels. Through this field work I gained experience using the Qualitative Habitat Evaluation Index (QHEI) which was used to score each site in which we sampled for mussels, and I recently completed a two day training class to become certified as a level 2 QHEI specialist. After the field season ended in 2010 and each site was thoroughly sampled for live mussels, I completed a personal research poster analyzing aspects of the data we collected & presented my findings at Posters at the Capitol 2011 in Columbus, OH. My research focused on correlating each sites’ mussel species diversity to its QHEI score and analyzing populations of a particular mussel species that was found in all three streams. The things I am learning during this internship are expanding and building off of my previous experiences. I have a better understanding of stream ecology, not just small parts but as a whole. I am very excited to combine this knowledge and apply it in my future career in stream ecology. I consider myself lucky.

Partners for Clean Streams Inc. is striving for abundant open space and a high quality natural environment; adequate floodwater storage capacities and flourishing wildlife; stakeholders who take local ownership in their resources; and rivers, streams and lakes that are clean, clear and safe