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Filed: Country: Philippines
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Posted

By Stephen Leahy, IPS News

Oceans span nearly three quarters of the Earth's surface and despite this vast size hardly a square kilometre has been untouched by humans.

Researchers released the first-ever global map of human impacts on oceans in the journal Science. Impacts ranged from fishing to pollution to ship transportation.

"There really aren't any areas without human impacts," said Kimberly Selkoe, a principal investigator on the project and a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Hawaii.

"The most shocking message here is that we don't actually have a lot of data on human impacts," Selkoe told IPS.

Scientists could only use available data -- and there isn't any information on illegal fishing, climate change impacts, marine debris, and historical fishing impacts, among many others. Scientists could only get data on less than 10 percent of the total ocean-going ship traffic.

"Even then there is hardly an area of the ocean that isn't criss-crossed by ship tracks on our map," Selkoe said.

The study reports that the most heavily affected waters in the world include large areas of the North Sea, the South and East China Seas, the Caribbean Sea, the east coast of North America, the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Bering Sea, and several regions in the western Pacific. The least affected areas are largely near the poles.

Past studies of human impacts on the ocean -- rarely conducted on a global scale -- have focused largely on single activities or single ecosystems in isolation. In this study scientists examined the cumulative influence of human activities across the entire ocean.

"Our results show that when these and other individual impacts are summed up, the big picture looks much worse than I imagine most people expected. It was certainly a surprise to me," said lead author Ben Halpern, Assistant Research Scientist at National Centre for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) at the University of California at Santa Barbara.

An important new finding is that human influence on the ocean varies dramatically across ecosystems. The most heavily affected areas include coral reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves, rocky reefs and shelves, and seamounts. The least impacted ecosystems are soft-bottom areas and open-ocean surface waters.

The remotest parts of open ocean are still far from pristine.

An estimated 100 million tonnes of trash is floating in the middle of the North Pacific. This vast sea of plastic garbage stretches for thousands of kilometres -- north of Hawaii to Japan -- covering an area twice that of the U.S. Everything from fishing gear to water bottles to plastic bags are found here says Bill Macdonald of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation -- a Long Beach, California-based non-profit environmental organization. Oceanographer Charles Moore, discovered this garbage patch in the 1990s and started the Foundation to do research on the problem of marine debris.

"It's getting worse and worse over the years," Macdonald told IPS.

The Foundation's solar-powered research vessel Alguita is currently in the middle of the plastic flotilla taking samples. Cleanup is impossible, not only because of the huge volume of debris, but also because lots of marine creatures like shellfish and algae latch onto the floating islands of plastic, Macdonald says.

The Alguita has discovered that tendrils of debris extend up to 100 meters below the surface, according to Macdonald.

Not only does plastic kill marine animals that eat it or get tangled in it and drown, but it also damages and degrades their habitat. Plastic pellets are also magnets for toxic chemicals, becoming, in effect, poison pills.

Most plastics do not biodegrade. Unless removed, they will remain in the sea for hundreds of years, breaking up into ever-smaller particles. "In Hawaii on isolated beaches that no one cleans up, two-foot deep sand is actually 80 per cent plastic bits now," says Macdonald.

Selkoe and her colleagues hope their ocean maps will be used to create protection zones to conserve areas that are relatively pristine and route ship and fishing activities away from them. Using the oceans sustainably is vital to ensure we can continue to benefit from the services they provide -- including food, waste processing, beach cleaning, flood control, and carbon dioxide absorption from the atmosphere.

"My hope is that our results serve as a wake-up call to better manage and protect our oceans rather than a reason to give up," Halpern said.

http://alternet.org/module/printversion/77501

Posted

Steven,

Join the Navy and see the seas first hand. I think you will realize that Leahy is an idiot. Just look at the USA. Are our waters cleaner now than 30 years ago?

LS

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



barack-cowboy-hat.jpg
90f.JPG

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted

interesting article...i'm taking an introductory course to map-making now, it's really cool..

::There’s a laugh in my eyes::

There’s a waltz in my walk

And it’s been such a long time

Since there was hope in my talk

If you never knew

What it is that’s new.. it’s you

‘Cause when your hands are in mine

You set a fire that everyone can see

And it’s burning away

Every bad memory

To tell you the truth

If it’s something new.. baby it’s you

It’s you in the morning

It’s you in the night

A beautiful angel came down

To light up my life

The world’s a different place

Where nothing’s too hard to say

And nothing’s too hard to do

Never too much to go through

To tell you the truth

Everything that’s new.. baby it’s you

It’s you in the morning

It’s you in the night

A beautiful angel came down

To light up my life

My life, my life

Ohh

So if I get to grow old (oh if I get to grow old)

With many years behind me (many years behind me)

There’s only one thing I want (aahh)

One thing I need beside me

For all that you are

For everything you do

For all that you’ve done

Just for showing me the truth

::It’s you...It’s you...Baby it’s you::

--Westlife

...alhamdullah...rabbina ya khallena le ba3d fil donya wa fil akhra...ameen...

Posted
Steven,

Join the Navy and see the seas first hand. I think you will realize that Leahy is an idiot. Just look at the USA. Are our waters cleaner now than 30 years ago?

LS

Lucky,Steve doesnt get out much.

"I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine."- Ayn Rand

“Your freedom to be you includes my freedom to be free from you.”

― Andrew Wilkow

Posted (edited)

Not after the latest oil spill in SF lol water not so clean anymore. :unsure:

Edited by evdogg412

Citizenship

Event Date

Service Center : California Service Center

CIS Office : San Francisco CA

Date Filed : 2008-06-11

NOA Date : 2008-06-18

Bio. Appt. : 2008-07-08

Citizenship Interview

USCIS San Francisco Field Office

Wednesday, September 10,2008

Time 2:35PM

Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted
Not after the latest oil spill in SF lol water not so clean anymore. :unsure:

It probably wasn't so clean before that either.

Bacteria will eventually break down and eat oil. It's the stuff that bacteria won't eat that you really have to worry about. Tastey stuff like heavy metals, dioxins, PCB's, etc.

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Posted (edited)

Last commercial fishing trip I took from Hawaii to Midway [Northwest of Hawaii] we ran a day dodging bottles, trash and buoys.

There was trash as far as you could see in a huge area about 400 miles to 500 miles NW of Hawaii.

Could not troll at all as the lures got fouled with all kinds of junk almost instantly.

That was 18 years ago!!!!

Edited by Haole

K1 denied, K3/K4, CR-1/CR-2, AOS, ROC, Adoption, US citizenship and dual citizenship

!! ALL PAU!

 

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