Beach Cleanup, Survey and Water Monitoring Aquatic Park
Aquatic Park Berkeley 80 Bolivar Dr,, Berkeley, CA, United StatesJoin Shark Stewards and the students with the Cal Surfrider Foundation for another cleanup, brand survey and water monitoring.
Join Shark Stewards and the students with the Cal Surfrider Foundation for another cleanup, brand survey and water monitoring.
Save the date for the 54th Annual Festival of Whales happening March 7-9, 2025!
Join Shark Stewards at our booth and win an opportunity for a shark safari with us!
Join Shark Stewards on one of our cleanup and marine debris data collection days at Aquatic Park, Berkeley, meeting at the North Circle.
We will also be demonstrating the water sampling and data collection techniques applied in our current study of the water quality in the Aquatic Park lagoon.
Join Shark Stewards Southern California team cleaning up the beach at Junipero Beach, Long Beach.
Join shark conservationists and experts on a unique opportunity to search for, and document sharks including: swell sharks, horn sharks, bat rays, soupfin sharks and sevengill sharks in the La Jolla Cove State Marine Reserve (and possibly Point Loma).
Earth Day Water Monitoring, Plastic Survey and Cleanup, Berkeley Aquatic Park-
Join Shark Stewards at the Berkeley Bay Fest and learn about our Aquatic Park shark and water quality monitoring for Earth Day!
oin our youth science mentors at the OUSD STEM Science Science Fair.
Learn about shark anatomy, behavior and physiology at the Shark Stewards booth MAY 7, 2025
JOIN SHARK STEWARDS at the SCUBA SHOW LONG BEACH!
Long Beach Convention Center Long Beach, California
Sharktober Farallon Island Adventure
It’s Sharktober! Join Shark Conservationist and Naturalist David McGuire and other wildlife specialists celebrating sharks in a life-changing experience searching the Gulf of the Farallones for whales, wildlife and our finny friends.
Join us exiting beneath the Golden Gate on the US Coast Guard certified vessel AMIGO, for amazing photo and wildlife opportunities and crossing 28 miles across the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary on a modern day Natural History expedition.