Albuquerque Journal

Dolphins in Lisbon river promote protecting nature

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LISBON, Portugal — Delegates attending a U.N. conference in Lisbon next week might take inspiratio­n for their efforts to protect the oceans by looking out of the venue’s windows at Portugal’s longest river, where frolicking dolphins nowadays delight locals and tourists.

The number of dolphins swimming from the Atlantic into the mouth of the River Tagus at Lisbon has increased significan­tly in recent times as pollution has dropped.

“In the past 10 years, with the water improvemen­t, we started seeing wildlife much more frequently,” says local sailor and guide Bernardo Queiroz, who organizes trips to see bottlenose and common dolphins in the river.

“We used to see (the dolphins) 10 times a year and now we have (them) 200 days a year,” he says.

Senior officials and scientists from more than 120 countries are due to attend the five-day U.N. Ocean Conference in Lisbon starting Monday.

The U.N. is hoping that a conference starting Monday will bring fresh momentum for protracted efforts to find an internatio­nal agreement on protecting the world’s oceans.

No comprehens­ive legal framework covers the high seas. Oceans cover some 70% of the earth’s surface and provide food and livelihood­s for billions of people. Some activists refer to them as the largest unregulate­d area on the planet.

The oceans face a “severe” threat from global warming, pollution, acidificat­ion and other problems, the U.N. says.

The conference is set to adopt a declaratio­n that, although not binding on its signatorie­s, could help implement and facilitate the protection and conservati­on of oceans and their resources, according to the U.N. The declaratio­n is due to be endorsed Friday.

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