I don't know if there is actually a new focus on ocean conservation, as is declared by the New York Times Green Inc. blog title (but not really the post), or if we just want there to be (I know I do). And while it might be true that "the most growth in protected areas has occurred in the ocean" -- at less than 1% of the ocean closed to fishing, we still have a long way to go to meet the goal of having at least 10% of each of the world's ecological regions effectively conserved by 2010 as outlined by the Convention on Biological Diversity (interestingly, the Christian Book Distributors outranks the Convention in a Google search of "CBD"). So if there isn't a new focus on ocean conservation, there definitely should be...
- Log in to post comments
More like this
Image: Nagoya Congress Center plus Millenium Falcon reworked from original photo by Paula Pedrosa. link.
Originally made for a series of Nagoya COP10 primers at Boing Boing (1 | 2 | SB | 3 | 4)
I: SORTING OUT THE VERNACULAR
So what is up with this Nagoya thing? Well, it's a big international…
I'm crabby. Normally I'm a pretty easy-going dude, but right now I'm crabby and some of the stuff I'm reading on the internet lately is so stultifyingly stupid, I just can't contain myself any longer.
It's not unexpected for Dr. Communication-is-My-Field to belie his title with every word he…
In this post, I continue working through my thoughts in response to Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum's new book, Unscientific America. In this post, I focus on their discussion of the mainstream media and of the blogosphere. You might guess, given that I'm a member of the science blogosphere,…
The Riot for Austerity came about this way. In 2007, after the release of the IPCC report, and a number of books drawing attention to climate change, a friend of mine and I were discussing our frustration that no political organization was considering any kind of emissions cuts that even resembled…
since this article was referring to the United States you should know that 150,000 square miles of the 4.38 million square miles that the US controls are Marine Protected Areas, which come out to about 3.4%. My hope is that Obama gets us to 5% in his term. GO USA!
There's a long way to go before the consumers in the markets become aware of the impact of their purchases on the global environment. Many, many people I speak to are 100% certain that it's the trees alone that take in the carbon dioxide and are equally sure that the open oceans are populated by the same amount of life as the coastal shelves. Don't even get me started on what the South East Asian countries think is sustainable! More information is getting to them though, films and documentaries are slowly filtering down. Let's hope the moment of real awakening to what's going on doesn't come too late.
since this article was referring to the United States you should know that 150,000 square miles of the 4.38 million square miles that the US controls are Marine Protected Areas, which come out to about 3.4%. My hope is that Obama gets us to 5% in his term