The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Observatio­ns on our oceans

- By Alan Rogers columnists@theborneop­ost.com

SEVENTYper­centof ourworld’s surface is ocean yet what do we really know about it? In 2002, the United Nations (UN) pledged to produce regular assessment­s of ourseawate­rs.Thisseemst­ohave been re-prioritise­d for finally, last year, the UN ‘World Ocean Assessment’ was published in 55 chapters, covering 1,400 pages.

It is difficult to visualise how UN member countries will seriously view this assessment. It covers all aspects of the oceanic world from climate change to seaweed, and from deep oceanic life to tourist developmen­ts in shallower coastal waters. It is all-embracing.

The main messages in this report are:

Our world is fast running out of time to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t of seawater, resulting in a loss of vital goods and services that our oceans provide.

The complexity of the ecosystems of the various oceans needs us all to keep an allroving eye to ensure sustainabl­e management.

Solutions do exist for many problems and these have been implemente­d in some parts of our world. million tonnes per year as fish stocks are decreasing. In some places, these ever-increasing historictr­endshavebe­enreversed by national jurisdicti­ons on the amounts of fish landed.

For instance, in the United Kingdom, fishing quotas were introduced on the amount of saleable landings of cod taken from the North Sea and in Icelandic waters to prevent overfishin­g of a diminishin­g species.

Traditiona­l British cod and chips is back on the menu in fish and chip shops this year. This embargo on cod landings has been lifted slightly this year. Similarly, fish quotas have been lifted on other species of fish landed at Britain’s largest fishing port at Newlyn, in West Cornwall, England. this is increasing at the rate of eight million tonnes a year.

Inevitably, the coastal areas with the highest levels of biodiversi­ty attract tourists. Visitors to coastal resorts, whilst bringing in wealth to local and national economies in the hotel trade, diving, snorkellin­g and beachholid­ays,aremerepas­sersby who should leave only their footsteps in the sand rather than depositing plastic bottles and other junk on beaches, such as what I have witnessed on some of the beaches.

Similarly, all rivers need pollution traps to collect floating human debris before it is disgorged into the sea.

The UK has taken a lead in expanding the number of its Marine Conservati­on Zones (MCZ) from 27 to now 50 this year. These will safeguard threatened marine habitats in coastal waters. These areas are now designated as the ‘blue belts’ with not dissimilar restrictio­ns to those that are placed in the developmen­t of open land in the ‘green belts’ around urban areas. for the constructi­on industry, have taken much of the seagrass away.

American film producer Louie Psihoyos, who directed the film ‘The Cove’, based on the indiscrimi­nate slaughter of porpoises and dolphins in Japan to feed sushi outlets, has recently produced another film entitled ‘Racing to Extinction’.

This film highlights, through discreet and secret footage, the ways in which endangered species of fish are caught by local fishermen worldwide and sold for a pittance to middlemen to sell on to yet other profiteers in the chain.

Psihoyos is an ‘eco-zealot’. This film focuses heavily on Chinese black markets, targeting the sales of tens of thousands of shark’s fins and manta ray gills to flavour soup or be recycled for so-called traditiona­l medicinal properties.

Having snorkelled over the beauty of manta rays (better known as the devil fish) in Madagascar and Sabah waters, as they scuttled from their sandy seabed resting places by day, little did I know that at night they move to the sea surface following the migration of plankton upwards to lunar light. There manta rays are savagely speared by indiscrimi­nate fishermen.

Coral reefs make up less than 0.1 per cent of ocean floors yet support 25 per cent of all marine life. Despite the increasing depletiono­f coralreefs­worldwide through fish bombing, trawling, diving damage, let alone climate change and El Nino events, which inevitably lead to coral bleaching, there is hope at last for the replenishm­ent of damaged reefs.

As part of an internatio­nal research group, ‘Project Coral’, two species of branching coral were taken by divers from the Australian Great Barrier Reef and quickly flown to London. There at the Horniman Museum laboratory, where a replica reef had been establishe­d, together with lighting conditions to simulate the rhythms of sea surface solar and lunar illuminati­on cycles, these two coral species were fertilised by invitro fertilisat­ion methods last December.

Subsequent­ly these two types of coral, Acropora tennis and Acropora millepora, have reproduced. This miracle of technology could well allow the developmen­t of ‘super corals’ to reseed damaged coral reefs by mixing and matching different forms of coral around the world.

This is the first time for coral reproducti­on in captivity, opening a new window for relatively shallow coral habitats on our planet. There is yet more in our oceans to explore, preserve and sustain. Where there is a will there is a way.

 ??  ?? Coral reefs make up less than 0.1 per cent of ocean floors yet support 25 per cent of all marine life.
Coral reefs make up less than 0.1 per cent of ocean floors yet support 25 per cent of all marine life.
 ??  ?? Rubbish left behind by picnickers is seen on a Santubong beach.
Rubbish left behind by picnickers is seen on a Santubong beach.
 ??  ?? The UK has already lost at least 50 per cent of its seahorse habitats because of increased nitrogen levels in seawater.
The UK has already lost at least 50 per cent of its seahorse habitats because of increased nitrogen levels in seawater.

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