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Question of the day: What are some examples of human impacts upon the oceans? What are some ways to alleviate these impacts?

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Presentation on theme: "Question of the day: What are some examples of human impacts upon the oceans? What are some ways to alleviate these impacts?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Question of the day: What are some examples of human impacts upon the oceans? What are some ways to alleviate these impacts?

2 Case Study: Depleting Bluefin Tuna Stocks –Being fished at 4 times the sustainable level –Economic value places it in danger –Conservation measures protect the species –Overfishing Harvesting of fishes faster than they can reproduce 30% of worldwide fishes 80% of commercial fish stocks in US If overfishing and pollution aren’t curbed, populations of all harvested seafood species will be gone by 2048

3 Blue Fin Tuna video clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsbx6d QuRhQ&safe=activehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsbx6d QuRhQ&safe=active

4 Human Impacts on the Ocean Fisheries and aquaculture Marine shipping Marine pollution Coastal development Offshore mining Global climate change In 2008, less than 4% of ocean remained unaffected by human activities; 41% serious harm

5 Human Impacts on the Ocean Marine Pollution and Deteriorating Habitat –Paradox: ocean provides food but is used as dumping ground –Pollution increasingly threatens fisheries –80% of ocean pollution comes from land activities

6 Human Impacts on the Ocean

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8 Overfishing World Fisheries –Valuable food resources 90% of world’s catch is fishes, 6% is clams, oysters, squid, octopus, and other mollusks 3% is crustaceans: lobsters, crabs, shrimp 1% is marine algae –World’s Annual Harvest 1950 - 19 million tons 2004 - 95 million tons

9 Overfishing Problems and Challenges for the Fishing Industry –No nation has legal claim to open ocean Resources are susceptible to overuse and degradation (Tragedy of the Commons) –Many species have been harvested to the point where their numbers are severely depleted Unstable for marine species that rely on them as part of food web At least 75% of world’s fish stocks are exploited, overexploited or depleted –Growing human population requires protein –Technological advances allows efficient catch, removing all fish from an area – 25% of all is bycatch (unintentionally caught, then discarded)

10 What a Scientist Sees

11 Human impacts past 5 years HW check and discussion

12 Aquaculture Impacts Aquaculture –Fish farming: growing of aquatic organisms for human consumption Fresh and marine water HDCs harvest more from open ocean Developing nations harvest more from aquaculture –Abundant supply of cheap labor –Limit to harvest is the area available for farming Fish farms have dense populations –Lots of polluting waste –Cause net loss of wild fish (raised fish tend to be carnivorous) –Ocean ranching: deep-water, off-shore aquaculture Doesn’t harm coastline, but less oversight

13 Aquaculture cage farming

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15 Ocean Dumping Shipping, Ocean Dumping, Plastic Debris –Millions of ships dump oily ballast and waste –MARPOL bans marine pollution from shipping industry Not well enforced –Ocean Dumping Ban Act Cities used to dump sewage into ocean, disease- causing organisms contaminated shellfish –Plastic waste Doesn’t degrade, just breaks up into smaller pieces Pacific Garbage Patch, 2009, 2x size of Texas Plastic pieces entangle marine mammals and birds Filter feeders ingest plastic pieces, carriers of PCBs

16 Crazy Ocean Dumping Stories Wired Science video clip

17 Plastics and Debris Great Pacific Garbage Patch Video clip from Wired Science

18 Coastal development Coastal Development –Alters or destroys coastal ecosystems: Mangroves, salt marshes, sea grass beds, coral reefs –Coastal areas overdeveloped, highly polluted, overfished –Coastal management plans are inadequate Biggest problem is human population size 60% of world’s population lives within150 km (93 mi) of coastline As much as 75%, by 2025

19 Human Impacts on Coral Reefs –25% of world’s corals are at high risk Silt washing downstream from clear-cut forests is smothering reefs High salinity from freshwater diversion projects Overfishing of top predators Damage by tourists Pollution from ocean dumping and coastal pollution Bleaching = stressed corals expel zooxanthellae

20 What a Scientist Sees- Coral Bleaching

21 Coral Bleaching

22 Offshore Extraction of Mineral and Energy Resources –Large deposits of minerals lie under the sea floor Manganese nodules - –mining would adversely affect sea life and market value would not cover expense of mining –Disputes over deposits under international waters Petroleum - –Major source of energy –Major threat to fishing

23 Manganese deposits

24 Oil Spills Student research and presentations

25 Climate Change –Incomplete understanding, unanticipated effects There could be a disruption of the ocean conveyor belt, which transports heat around the globe Climate warming could shut down conveyor belt within a decade –Could cause major cooling in Europe –Major warming in other parts of the world –Would not sequester CO 2 into ocean  more CO 2 in atmosphere  more warming  more weakening of belt

26 Global Climate Change 1.What are some of the harmful environmental effects associated with the fishing industry? With aquaculture? 2.How does the widespread use of plastics contribute to ocean pollution? 3.How might the effect of global climate change on the ocean alter the global climate?

27 STOP

28 Addressing Ocean Problems Learning Objectives: 1.Describe international initiatives that address problems in the global ocean 2.Explain goals associated with correcting ocean problems in the future

29 Addressing Ocean Problems Problems are complex and require complex solutions –UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) - 1994 - 157 countries have ratified Protecting ocean resources –UN fish stocks agreement - 1995 Regulates marine fishing –Fishery Conservation and Management Act - 1977 Protect essential fish habitat for 600 species Reduce overfishing, rebuild populations, minimize bycatch Fishing quotas, restrictions on fishing gear, limits on number of fishing boats, closure of fisheries during spawning

30 Addressing Ocean Problems Future Actions – US Commission on Ocean Policy-2004 report Create a new ocean policy to improve decision making- –Consolidate agencies Strengthen science and generate information for decision makers –Need for high quality research Enhance ocean education to instill in citizens a stewardship ethic –Environmental education should be part of the curriculum at all levels, including strong marine component

31 Addressing Ocean Problems Future Actions –Establishment of “no-take” reserves –Substantial reduction of fishing fleet –Remove subsidies of fishing industry –Adopt an ecosystem-based approach to manage ocean environments Focus on preserving the health and function of the entire marine ecosystem Establish networks of fully protected marine reserves Less than 5% of US marine environments have been protected, with great success

32 Addressing Ocean Problems

33 Case Study The Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico –N and P runoff from Mississippi river Algae grow rapidly, dead algae sink to bottom and decompose, deplete water of O 2 (hypoxic zone) –Only anaerobic bacteria thrive there –March to September, worst June-August –Climate change is making dead zones worse, even without runoff Threaten biodiversity and coastal fisheries

34 Case Study

35 Global Climate Change 1.Which international treaties aim to protect ocean resources? 2.What are the main goals recommended by the US Comission on Ocean Policy?


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