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Breaking new water: Ocean Green partner Rissa Citizen Science begins work at new site in Tromsø

Local non-profit is getting people into the water and into kelp restoration


Clearing urchins from bigger spaces, watching kelp forests return and bringing fish and other species along as well. These are the things Delphin Ruché, founder of Tromsø-based non-profit Rissa Citizen Science, talks about when asked what his goals are.


And those ambitions are being realised. Ruché, supported by a small army of volunteers, has been working on a 150-meter-long jetty in the city for some time, removing urchins from one side, watching life replace barrens. After success along a jetty in Tromsø, Ocean Green’s citizen science partner Rissa Citizen Science has broken new ground – or new water perhaps – in Telegrafbukta.


The team’s first real expedition at Telegrafbukta, a wide beach and local recreation area, saw nine volunteers join Ruché in removing more than 5,000 urchins, though he stresses that it’s not about the numbers. Instead it is about the return of essential kelp forests, the boost to biodiversity, the science and the community.

An antidote of positivity

Rissa CS work at Telegrafbukta builds on the success it has already had along a jetty in the city, where urchin removal along just one side highlights in stark contrast the difference between an urchin barren and what a returning kelp forest looks like. Speaking to those who have taken part in that restoration, the sense of community really comes through.


‘You go out there and it’s just this really positive experience – almost an antidote to the huge problems we’re facing on climate. Whether you’re in the water or just making waffles, it’s fun and you’re making a difference for your community,’ says Jamie Hollander, an American who was in Tromsø on a Fulbright Norway research scholarship to investigate methane emissions from glacial and permafrost landscapes in Svalbard.


‘I do climate science, I study the carbon cycle and melting glaciers. It’s easy to get lost in the feeling that there’s not a lot we can do. But in getting involved in Rissa CS, you’re seeing the difference as you’re making it. You start to recognise people and develop this feeling that you're working towards something together.’


Ruché says the project simply would not be possible without the volunteers that Rissa CS works with.


‘Lots of people come but it’s not just that,’ he says. ‘People are coming back and this is creating a community with a sense of belonging in sharing this adventure and of having achieved something – and that is fantastic.’


While the purpose of each meet up is urchin removal, the set up makes Rissa CS’ work accessible for all. Hollander did go into the water for example – something she describes as an incredible but challenging experience for her – but ultimately felt her skills were best used on land, in particular at the waffle maker.


Ruché also talks about the many ways people can get involved. There are parents who come along with their kids for example, with Ruché explaining that ‘we use a remote operated vehicle, or ROV, for people who are too young to go in the water, so they can still explore and have fun, they see what the others are seeing in the water.’

Diving in

But to remove the urchins, some people do have to go into the water. Ruché says there is no need for previous diving experience, with most people freediving or snorkelling close to shore. ‘We have a lot of people who have never been in the water before – they’re not marine biologists, they’re not divers. But they’re curious – they want to see the situation for themselves and to experience being in the cold water.’


There are also some experienced divers in the community. One is Michael Paul Morreau, a lecturer in philosophy at The Arctic University of Norway, and a New Zealander who arrived in Tromsø via the US. He found out about the work Rissa CS does after attending a lecture on Norway’s kelp problem as a representative of a local diving club. ‘We have a very similar problem in New Zealand, caused by over fishing,’ he notes.


Even as an experienced diver, Morreau says urchin removal helps hone your skills: there’s a lot to learn around buoyancy, technique and positioning. And like Hollander, he talks about the community spirit as being a real draw. Everyone has their role, from providing warm drinks to people leaving the freezing fjord to those who help carry gear or, like Hollander, work the waffle grill. Armed with a dry suit, Morreau plays his part, diving in deeper ‘areas where the snorkelers might struggle’.

The need for a large-scale solution

The urchin-kelp battle is a long fight. Morreau talks of removing maybe 500 an hour ‘or more if I get mad because one pierced a glove,’ he jokes. Ruché has easily removed 1,000 on a quick check up at the jetty without any volunteers to support the work. And the work is constant. As part of the Ocean Green project, Rissa CS represents the consortium’s citizen science work – which includes educating people on the need to restore Northern Norway’s kelp forests and getting them into the water to help in the removal process as well as monitoring biodiversity below water. But more urchins need to be removed – and faster.


‘What’s needed for long-term restoration is a large-scale solution,’ explains Dagny-Elise Anastassiou, chief impact officer at Ava Ocean and project lead for Ocean Green. ‘And this solution must be something that works in shallow waters, that can handle tides and large changes in weather, that can go on uneven, large rocky areas, on bedrock, on sand. At the same time, it must be gentle enough and bring minimal disruption.’


Ava Ocean is currently adapting the technology it developed to gently harvest scallops from the Barents Sea – a fishery closed for 30 years due to over fishing. ‘This technology will allow the scale needed to make a real and lasting difference in the urchin-kelp fight,’ says Anastassiou, ‘though we’ll always need organisations like Rissa CS to keep banging the drum to make sure that people understand just how valuable our underwater ecosystems are.’



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