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Join Us for Our WaterWatch Lecture Series!
Zoom Presentations & 2 Live Events
Wednesdays, January 15 – March 5, 2024

7:00pm

Join the NSRWA and Mass Audubon for this winter’s eight-part educational 2025 WaterWatch Lecture Series. Stay engaged with nature this winter with weekly presentations by a diverse range of presenters and themes. Each lecture is on Wednesday evening from 7-8pm with a few minutes at the end for Q&A. The program begins on January 15 and ends on March 5.

All lectures will be available on Zoom for FREE. However, the first and last lectures can also be attended in person! Separate registration pages are available for those events. You will also find the separate links for the two in-person registrations in the lecture description. Each lecture will be recorded with videos at the bottom of this page.

Register for the 2025 WATERWATCH LECTURE SERIES (FREE)

Purchase tickets for the PROBLEM TO PLATE – GREEN CRABS EVENT – $20

Get tickets for TRIVIA NIGHT AT STELLWAGEN BEER COMPANY (FREE)

2025 PRESENTATION SCHEDULE

January 15: Problem to Plate – Green Crabs – Join us for our kick off lecture in-person at Mullaney’s Harborside Seafood in Scituate to learn about green crabs while eating a few! Invasive species like Green Crabs pose a problem to our coastal ecosystems and fisheries. Come find out more about these tasty crustraceans and how people are solving this problem by eating them! Mullaney’s will provide samples of different Green Crab recipes to try while scientists and food professionals share their research and stories of this invasive species. Tickets for this event can be found HERE – $20

January 22: Rainbows on the Wing: Dragonflies and Damselflies – With Blake Dinius, Entomologist Extension Educator of Plymouth County. Swooping, soaring, and perching, dragonflies have been on our planet for an estimated 250 million years, ancient rulers are their tiny realms. An estimated 160 species of animals within Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) can be found in Massachusetts. We will discuss the ecology of dragonflies: their adaptations, needs, and obstacles. Join our adventure!

January 29: A History of the Indian Head River – NSRWA’s Kezia Bacon will present an overview of the Indian Head River’s history, beginning in pre-Colonial times, and extending into the 21st century. Topics will include early settlers on the river; bridges, mills and factories; tributaries and fisheries; the Indian Head’s many tributaries; and issues concerning the river today.

February 5: The Blue Line Method: How to Catch (and Release) Wild Trout – Join Vincent Battista, epidemiologist, conservationist, and the interim president of South Shore Fly Casters, to learn about brook trout. Brook trout (S. fontinalis) are a cherished native game fish that has responded brilliantly to local conservation efforts. In Southern New England, there is a long tradition of targeting wild brookies in small creeks and streams where conventional angling methods are neither efficient (e.g. dry flies) nor particularly sustainable (e.g. live bait). This talk will review methods for safely targeting, catching, and releasing wild brook trout in our local “hidden gem” streams.

February 12: Conservation Advocacy 101 – Join Mass Audubon’s Director of Adult Education and Accessible Programs, Lucy Gertz, as she introduces ways to understand people’s pathways to environmentalism, how to build people’s competence and confidence for environmental action, and how individuals can be effective, positive game changers in their communities and beyond. She’ll discuss motivation and influences, skills development, empowerment, and the celebration of effective conservation work done well.

February 19: Marine Mammals on the South Shore: Whale and Dolphin Conservation’s Marine Animal Rescue and Response Team – Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) is the leading global charity dedicated to the conservation of whales and dolphins. They use education, policy, and science to further their vision of a world where every whale and dolphin is safe and free. Their Marine Animal Rescue and Response (MARR) team acts as first responders for stranded marine mammals (seals, whales, and dolphins) from Plymouth to Weymouth. Join us to learn more about WDC, marine mammals on the South Shore, and what to do if you see a stranded marine mammal.

February 26: A Coastal Waterbird Program Update – Join Mass Audubon’s Community Science and Coastal Resilience Manager, Gina Purtell, to hear how the Coastal Waterbird Program has played a key role in the protection and management of the most threatened coastal waterbird species in our state for almost four decades. The program monitors and protects more than a third of the state’s breeding Piping Plovers, approximately half of our state’s Least Terns, and about a third of its American Oystercatchers. We will celebrate the recent updates of this important effort.

March 5: WaterWatch Series Trivia Night at Stellwagen Beer Company – Join NSRWA and Mass Audubon staff at Stellwagen Beer Company in Marshfield for a fun night of celebration and trivia. Share your knowledge of general watershed facts, natural history and environmental topics. We’ll highlight a bit of content covered throughout the 2025 WaterWatch Lecture Series. You needn’t consider yourself an expert! Tickets for this FREE event can be found HERE.

 

Watch Videos from Past Lectures Here

VIDEO RECORDINGS 

Eating Our Way to a More Sustainable Coast

Wind Farms Off Our Coast

Shad: America’s ‘Founding Fish’

What Good are Mosquitoes? A Fresh Perspective on the World’s Most Hated Insect

Canaries in a Coal Mine: Bird Migration and Climate Change

Ghost Gear in Our Coastal Waters; Its Impacts, and What’s Being Done About It

North and South River Marshes and the Legacy of the 1898 Portland Gale

Making Salt Marshes More Climate Resilient

Slavery and Black Life in North River Communities, 1673-1865

Snowy Owls

PFAS in Our Waters

Know Thy Neighbor: A Brief Look at the History, Culture, and Teachings of the Mattakeeset People

How to Go Electric!

Expand Your Seafood Options with Unfamiliar Fish

Your Guide to Hiking the South Shore

Introduction to Duxbury Beach Reservation with Cristin Luttazi

Reading the Winter Landscape with Mass Audubon and the NSRWA

Salt Marshes of the South Shore with Mass Bays, NSRWA, and the National Wildlife Refuge System

Insect Decline with Plymouth County Entomologist Blake Dinius

Birding the Southeast Watersheds with Mass Audubon and the NSRWA


Amazing Arthropods! with Plymouth Co. Entomologist Blake Dinius

Exploring Wonder: A Child’s View of Nature with the SSNSC

A Beachcombers Guide to Winter with NSRWA Ecologist Sara Grady

An Introduction to Birdwatching with Mass Audubon’s Doug Lowry

Reading the Landscape with the SSNSC

Owls; In Search of Strigiformes with Mass Audubon’s Doug Lowry

Join the City Nature Challenge! The world’s biggest biodiversity study with the SSNSC

A Guide to Your Very Own River Adventure

Forest Foragers! Geocaching the South Shore with NSRWA’s Brian Taylor

Barstow’s Two Oaks and the Upper North River Shipyards

Eating Green Crabs to Save Our Clams and Estuaries?

Plastic Ocean

From Single Use to Zero Waste: What’s New with Recycling

What’s Up with the Whales

Sea Run Brook Trout

Firefly Watch: Citizen Science from Your Back Porch

The History of the Gurnet Light and Fort Andrew