Floating wetlands (created by National Aquarium) with Mallard ducks, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Planted with native species, floating wetlands help clean water, and provide habitat for marine life.
In 2019, the Maryland Park Service, in addition to maintaining the State's Parks, conserved 300 acres of habitat for pollinators and, in an effort to improve water quality, administered stormwater projects.
Floating wetland (created by National Aquarium) in Patapsco River, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Eight environmental literacy standards have been required curricula in Maryland schools since 2011.
Skyline from Federal Hill, Baltimore, Maryland, May 2008. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Skyline, townhouses & marinas on Patapsco River (view from Canton), Baltimore, Maryland, May 2002. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Some county and municipal governments also oversee local agencies concerned with the environment. Montgomery County, for example, has a Department of Environmental Protection, while the Bureau of Environmental Services in Howard County also oversees some planning functions. In Frederick County, Sustainability and Environmental Resources focuses on sustainability and watershed management, and offers practical ways to protect the environment and conserve energy.
Eastern Box Turtle (Terrapene c. carolina), Glen Burnie, Maryland, October 2009. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Charles McC. Mathias Laboratory, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, Maryland, April 2018. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Mr. Trash Wheel, mouth of Jones Falls, Baltimore, Maryland, April 2016. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Male Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), near Tawes Garden, Department of Natural Resources, Annapolis, Maryland, April 2017. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
The Maryland Coastal Bays Program, along with the Integration and Application Network of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, and the Department of Natural Resources, produce annual report cards on the health of Maryland's bays. The Chesapeake Bay and Watershed received an overall health score of 44%, a C-, on its 2019 Report Card, a decline from 47% in 2018. The ratings are based on seven health indicators for the overall Chesapeake Bay and five indicators for the Watershed. While the Chesapeake Bay is in moderate health, its Watershed scored 60%, a B-, a sign of good health, in its first rating. Maryland's coastal bays received an "incomplete" grade on the 2018 Coastal Bays Report Card due to data collection problems for hard clams and seagrass, but the report showed that water quality has declined.
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