7. One
Global Ocean
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter 7
2010 June. Under the Water -- Diving to see the Disaster. ABC News video with Philippe Cousteau Jr. (grandson of Jacques Cousteau) showing underwater views of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
2010 June 1. Deep Underwater, Oil Threatens Reefs. By John Collins Rudolf, NY Times. Excerpt: …“We flipped on the lights, and there was one of the largest coral reefs in the Gulf of Mexico sitting right in front of us,” said Erik Cordes, a marine biologist at Temple University and chief scientist on the vessel, the Ronald H. Brown.
...Nine months later, the warm thrill of discovery has cooled into dread. The reef lies just 20 miles northeast of BP’s blown-out well, making it one of at least three extensive deepwater reefs lying directly beneath the oil slick in the gulf. ...Studies on the effects of oil and chemicals on coral are limited to the shallow-water variety, however. Essentially no research has been conducted on their slow-growing deepwater cousins. So BP’s spill has prompted scientists to embark on a sudden crash course on the interaction of deep-sea biology with these toxins.
…“It might be locally catastrophic, particularly if there’s an oxygen-depleted mass that develops,” said Jeffrey Short, Pacific science director for Oceana, a conservation group, and a former research chemist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration specializing in oil pollution.
2010 May 18. Gulf Oil Again Imperils Sea Turtle. By Leslie Kaufman, The NY Times. Excerpt: …Now Thelma and others of her species are being monitored closely by worried scientists as another major oil disaster threatens their habitat. Federal officials said Tuesday that since April 30, 10 days after the accident on the Deepwater Horizon, they have recorded 156 sea turtle deaths; most of the turtles were Kemp’s ridleys. And though they cannot say for sure that the oil was responsible, the number is far higher than usual for this time of year, the officials said.
…The turtles may be more vulnerable than any other large marine animals to the oil spreading through the gulf. An ancient creature driven by instinct, it forages for food along the coast from Louisiana to Florida, in the path of the slick.
…Then came the blowout on the Ixtoc 1. The deepwater well dumped three million barrels of crude into the gulf, covering the beach at Rancho Nuevo. Nine thousand hatchlings had to be airlifted to nearby beaches. Although the role of the oil in killing the turtles was never confirmed, by 1985, there were fewer than 1,000 Kemp’s ridleys left.
2010 Feb 18. A Battle at Midway. By Greg Boustead, SEED Magazine. Excerpt: What happened to that disposable Solo cup—the one you used once at a work party—after you tossed it into the garbage? For that matter, what happens to any of the countless plastic products (shopping bags, coffee stirrers, water bottles, etc.) we use and then discard on a daily basis? Of course, conventional plastic doesn’t readily biodegrade; so where is it now? If you live in North America or Asia, there’s a chance that cup is trapped in a broad ocean current, known as a gyre, in the middle of the northern Pacific Ocean along with an untold number of other pieces of litter in what has been named the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
...Chris Jordan, a photographer whose work on visualizing impossibly large numbers we featured last week, traveled to the Midway Islands last year to document the Garbage Patch. What he returned with is visually shocking: a series of ghastly images of Albatross carcasses bursting with wholly undigested bits of plastic waste. The photographs quickly spread throughout the internet, bringing worldwide awareness to the potential threats of treating the ocean as a garbage disposal. Seed’s Greg Boustead recently caught up with the artist-cum-activist to talk about his trip, the art of capturing a nigh-invisible phenomenon, and what his pictures of grotesque, plastic-filled carcasses tell us....
2009 Nov. Video:
Saving Sea Turtles, One Nest at a Time.
By Shayla Harris, The NY Times. Global
warming and coastal development are decimating
Pacific sea turtle populations. In Costa
Rica, a group of one-time poachers is giving
baby sea turtles a chance at survival.
2009 Nov. Rubbish
in the Pacific. NY Times
slide show. In a remote patch of the Pacific
Ocean, hundreds of miles from any national
boundary, the detritus of human life is collecting
in a swirling current so large that it defies
precise measurement....
2009 Nov 9. Afloat
in the Ocean, Expanding Islands of Trash.
By Lindsey Hoshaw, NY Times. Excerpt:
...Light bulbs, bottle caps, toothbrushes,
Popsicle sticks and tiny pieces of plastic,
each the size of a grain of rice, inhabit
the Pacific garbage patch, an area of widely
dispersed trash that doubles in size every
decade and is now believed to be roughly
twice the size of Texas. But one research
organization estimates that the garbage
now actually pervades the Pacific, though
most of it is caught in what oceanographers
call a gyre like this one — an area
of heavy currents and slack winds that keep
the trash swirling in a giant whirlpool.
Scientists say the garbage patch is just one of five that may
be caught in giant gyres scattered around the world’s oceans.
Abandoned fishing gear like buoys, fishing line and nets account
for some of the waste, but other items come from land after washing
into storm drains and out to sea.
Plastic is the most common refuse in the patch because it is
lightweight, durable and an omnipresent, disposable product in
both advanced and developing societies. It can float along for
hundreds of miles before being caught in a gyre and then, over
time, breaking down.
But once it does split into pieces, the fragments look like confetti
in the water. Millions, billions, trillions and more of these
particles are floating in the world's trash-filled gyres....
2009 October 29. Dining
Out In An Ocean Of Plastic: How Foraging
Albatrosses Put Plastic On The Menu. ScienceDaily. Excerpt: The
North Pacific Ocean is now commonly referred
to as the world's largest garbage dump with
an area the size of the continental United
States covered in plastic debris. The highly
mobile Laysan albatross (Phoebastria immutabilis),
which forages throughout the North Pacific,
is quickly becoming the poster child for the
effects of plastic ingestion on marine animals
due to their tendency to ingest large amounts
of plastic.
...Dr. Lindsay Young of the University of
Hawaii and her colleagues examined whether
Laysan albatrosses nesting on Kure Atoll and
Oahu, Hawaii, 2,150 km away, ingested different
amounts of plastic by putting miniaturized
tracking devices on birds to follow them at
sea and examining their regurgitated stomach
contents. Surprisingly, birds from Kure Atoll
ingested almost ten times the amount of plastic
compared to birds from Oahu.
...The most common identifiable items they
found were paraphernalia from the fishing
industry such as line, light sticks, oyster
spacers, and lighters....Unfortunately, while
the albatross examined in this study were
able to purge themselves of the plastic by
regurgitating it, thousands of albatross die
each year as a result of ingesting plastic
debris. Plastic ingestion leads to blockage
of the digestive tract, reduced food consumption,
satiation of hunger, and potential exposure
to toxic compounds to name but a few of its
detrimental effects....
2009 October 8. NSF
Releases Online Multimedia Package on Marine "Dead Zones".
NSF Release 09-192. Excerpt:
The Earth currently has more than 400 so-called "dead zones"--expanses
of oxygen-starved ocean covering hundreds,
or even thousands, of square miles that become
virtually devoid of animal life during the
summer; the worldwide count of dead zones
is doubling every decade.
Most dead zones, such as the Gulf of Mexico's
notorious dead zone, are caused by pollution
that is dumped into oceans by rivers. But
every summer since 2002, the Pacific Northwest's
coastal waters--one of the--one of the U.S.'s
most important fisheries--has been invaded
by massive dead zones that are believed to
be caused by an entirely different and surprising
phenomena: changes in oceanic and atmospheric
circulation that may, in turn, be caused by
climate change....
2009 July. One
Ocean, Shaken and Stirred.
By Kathleen M. Wong,
ScienceMatters@Berkeley. Phytoplankton,
the algae which supports most
sea life, rely on wind, wave and current conditions
to fuel their own
growth. Berkeley professor Thomas Powell has
pioneered the study of
ocean cycles and their impacts on the marine
food web....
2009 June 18. Mekong
dolphins 'almost extinct'.
BBC News. Excerpt:
Pollution in the Mekong river has pushed freshwater
dolphins in Cambodia and Laos to the brink
of extinction, the conservation group WWF
has said. Only 64 to 76 Irrawaddy dolphins
remain in the Mekong, it says, and calls for
a cross-border plan to help the dolphins.
Toxic levels of pesticides, mercury and other
pollutants have been found in more than 50
calves that have died since 2003.
..."These pollutants are widely distributed
in the environment and so the source of this
pollution may involve several countries through
which the Mekong river flows," said WWF
veterinary surgeon Verne Dove in a press statement.
..."Necropsy analysis identified a bacterial
disease as the cause of the calf deaths," Dr
Dove said in the WWF report. "This disease
would not be fatal unless the dolphin's immune
systems were suppressed, as they were in these
cases, by environmental contaminants," he
said.
Researchers found toxic levels of pesticides
such as DDT and environmental contaminants
such as PCBs during analysis of the dead dolphin
calves.
These pollutants may also pose a health risk
to human populations living along the Mekong
- who consume the same fish and water as the
dolphins - the group suggested.
High levels of mercury were also found in
some of the dead dolphins, which directly
affects the immune system making the animals
more susceptible to infectious disease....
2009 April 14. Coral
Transplant Surgery Prescribed for Japan. By Martin Fackler, The NY Times.
Excerpt:
SEKISEI LAGOON, Japan — Beneath the
waves of this sapphire-blue corner of the
East China Sea, a team of divers was busily
at work.
Hovering along the steep, bony face of a dying
coral reef, some divers bored holes into the
hard surface with compressed-air drills that
released plumes of glittering bubbles. Others
followed, gently inserting small ceramic discs
into the fresh openings.
Each disc carried a tiny sliver of hope for
the reef, in the shape of fingertip-size sprigs
of brightly colored, fledgling coral.
This undersea work site...is part of
a government-led effort to save Japan’s
largest coral reef, near the southern end
of the Okinawa chain of islands. True to form
in Japan, the project involves new technology,
painstaking attention to detail and a generous
dose of taxpayer money.
The project has drawn national attention,
coming after alarming reports in the last
decade that up to 90 percent of the coral
that surrounds many of Okinawa’s islands
has died off....
...“We have been replanting forests
for 4,000 years, but we are only just now
learning how to revive a coral reef,” said
Mineo Okamoto, a marine biologist at Tokyo
University of Marine Science and Technology,
who has led development of the palm-size ceramic
discs. “We finally have the technology.”
Critics, however, say the project might be
wasted effort. They say transplanting is futile
without addressing the problems that caused
the reefs to deteriorate in the first place,
like coastal redevelopment and chemical runoff
from terrestrial agriculture. There is also
the bigger problem of rising ocean water temperatures,
for which there may be no easy fix....
2009 Feb 25. Sylvia Earle: Here's how to
protect the blue heart of
the planet (TED Prize winner!) The
Ocean as life-support, a
life-support in trouble. How long will it
take before we really
understand that we cannot do whatever we want
to nature...
(18 minute video)
2009 March 16. Leatherback
Turtle Threatened By Plastic Garbage In
Ocean. ScienceDaily.
Excerpt: ...They're
descendants of one of the oldest family
trees in history, spanning 100 million
years. But today leatherback turtles,
the most widely distributed reptiles on
Earth, are threatened with extinction
themselves...
We've seen reference to the dangers plastic
poses to marine life..., but how clearly
have we received the message? Not well
enough according to a recent article in
the journal Marine Pollution Bulletin
co-authored by Dalhousie University's
Mike James.
“We wanted to see if plastics ingestion
in leatherbacks was hype or reality,” says
Dr. James, senior species at risk biologist
for Fisheries and Oceans Canada and adjunct
professor with Dalhousie’s Department
of Biology.
“It was a monumental effort that
looked back at necropsies over the last
century from all over the world,” he
explains. (Necropsies are post-mortem
examinations performed on animals.) “After
reviewing the results of 371 necropsies
since 1968, we discovered over one third
of the turtles had ingested plastic.”
...Once leatherbacks ingest plastic, thousands
of spines lining the throat and esophagus
make it nearly impossible to regurgitate.
The plastic can lead to partial or even
complete obstruction of the gastrointestinal
tract, resulting in decreased digestive
efficiency, energetic and reproductive
costs and, for some, starvation.
...“The frustrating, yet hopeful aspect
is that humans can easily begin addressing
the solution, without major lifestyle
changes,” says Dr. James. “It's
as simple as reducing packaging and moving
towards alternative, biodegradable materials
and recycling.”...
2009 March 8. Proof
on the Half Shell: A More Acidic Ocean Corrodes
Sea Life. By David
Biello, Scientific American. Excerpt:
The shells of tiny ocean animals known as
foraminifera—specifically
Globigerina bulloides—are shrinking
as a result of the slowly acidifying waters
of the Southern Ocean near Antarctica. The
reason behind the rising acidity: Higher carbon
dioxide (CO2) levels in the atmosphere, making
these shells more proof that climate change
is making life tougher for the seas' shell-builders.
...The researchers found that modern G. bulloides
could not build shells as large as the ones
their ancestors formed as recently as century
ago. In fact, modern shells were 35 percent
smaller than in the relatively recent past—an
average of 17.4 micrograms compared with 26.8
micrograms before industrialization. (One
microgram is one millionth of a gram; there
are 28.3 grams in an ounce.)
"We don't yet know what impact this will
have on the organisms' health or survival," [says
study co-author William Howard, a marine geologist
at ACE], but one thing seems clear: the tiny
animals won't be storing as much CO2 in their
shells in the form of carbonate. "If
the shell-making is reduced, the storage of
carbon in the ocean might be, as well."
That's
bad news for the climate, because the ocean
is responsible for absorbing at least one
quarter of the CO2 that humans load into the
air through fossil fuel burning and other
activities—and it is the action
of foraminifera and other tiny shell-building
animals, along with plants like algae that
lock it away safely for millennia....
2009 January 19. Growing
Taste for Reef Fish Sends Their Numbers
Sinking. By Jennifer Pinkowski,
The New York Times. Excerpt:
...The fierce appetite for live reef fish
across Southeast Asia — and increasingly in mainland
China — is devastating populations in
the Coral Triangle, a protected marine region
home to the world’s richest ocean
diversity, according to a recent report
in the scientific journal Conservation Biology.
Spawning of reef fish in this area, which
supports 75 percent of all known coral species
in the world, has declined 79 percent over
the past 5 to 20 years, depending on location,
according to the report.
Overfishing in general, and particularly of
spawning aggregations that occur when certain
species of reef fish gather in one place in
great numbers to reproduce, may be the culprit,
says Yvonne Sadovy, a biologist at the University
of Hong Kong who wrote the report along with
scientists from Australia, Hong Kong, Palau
and the United States.
...Since the 1980s, Hong Kong has been the
epicenter of the live fish trade. That trade
has greatly expanded in the last decade to
an $810 million business, according to the
Worldwide Fund for Nature, which monitors
the market. Rising wealth in mainland China
may be a contributing factor to the increase
in the trade with the demand for exotic fish
especially high in Shanghai and Beijing. Destinations
popular with Chinese tourists are seeing an
increase, too....
...Even locals unaffiliated with the tourist
trade are aware of the surge. Across the
street from the Port View, Malays at the
famous Night Market speak with awe about
the Chinese tourists who spend “a thousand ringgits a week
just eating fish.”That’s about
$280....
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter 7
TOP |
|
GSS
Losing Biodiversity Up-To-Date Homepage
Chapters
- Seeking Biodiversity
- The Trail Back
From Near Extinction
- The Origin
of Species
- The Puzzle
of Inheritence
- Soil: The
Living Skin of the Earth
- Field Trip:
Predatory Bird Research Group
- One Global
Ocean
- Champions
of a Sustainable World
NOAA's
National Marine Sanctuary Program has
a new website designed to assist
the general public in learning
about America's 13 National Marine
Sanctuaries and the Northwest Hawaiian
Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve
as well as provide resources for
teachers to support ocean literacy
in America's classrooms. The site
also provides access to NOAA's "Dive
into Education Marine Science Program," designed
to provide K-12 teachers with professional
development using hands-on, standards-based,
ocean science activities. ...Visitors
to the web site can pilot the "Deep
Worker" submersible in Monterey
Bay's kelp forests or learn about
a year in the life of a Northern
Elephant seal. Another feature
is a virtual sanctuary tour, with
opportunities for watching underwater
video clips and exploring image
galleries...
Coral Reef Photo Monitoring Survey
Image Archive http://reefreliefarchive.org -
an excellent source of photo coral
reef photos; see e.g. Rock Key catalogs
to see photographic chronological
survey of an Elkhorn coral reef in
the Florida Keys. Also Catalog Sand
Key buoy 10. Submitted by Craig Quirolo,
Reef Relief - Key West Fla/New Plymouth
Bahamas
European Community on Protection
of Marine Life - http://www.ecop.info/ -- List
of projects and campaigns working
on the preservation of the marine
biosphere and the biodiversity of
the oceans.
Nature
Conservancy Global Marine Initiative |