Monterey Herald

Thank you for sharing our journey

- By Dan Haifley

For the past 14 weeks, the Santa Cruz Sentinel and the Monterey Herald ran columns by Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Superinten­dent Dr. Lisa Wooninck, along with Leon Panetta, Sam Farr, Fred Keeley, and me, who serve on the board of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Foundation and were involved with the sanctuary's designatio­n.

Finding Sanctuary's 14 parts were written about the history of and current projects for the sanctuary in tribute to its 30th anniversar­y and the 50th year of the act that establishe­d today's system of 15 marine sanctuarie­s and two marine national monuments in U.S. waters and Great Lakes.

Marine sanctuarie­s promote ocean health

The ocean produces half the world's oxygen produced by plant life, generates weather, absorbs excess atmospheri­c carbon, and supplies food. But it is under stress. Fifteen national marine sanctuarie­s and two marine national monuments in a system establishe­d 50 years ago by Congress provide a way to relieve that stress by protecting marine life, ecosystems and maritime heritage areas including shipwrecks and Native American sacred sites. Some 620,000 square miles of ocean and Great Lakes waters are now protected and while impres

sive, it is a fraction of our over 4 million miles of federal waters. Today, nomination­s are open for new sites.

Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary has a profession­al team that conducts research, education, and protection for productive waters that absorb excess carbon from climate change, produce oxygen, and support habitats for species including blue whales, California sea otters, birds, invertebra­tes, deep sea creatures, and fish. Its 6,094 square miles include Monterey Submarine Canyon which plunges 11,800 feet deep off Moss Landing, and Davidson Seamount,

added in 2009, whose 7,500-foot-high summit is 4,000 feet below the surface, 75 miles west of San Simeon.

The series

Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Superinten­dent Dr. Lisa Wooninck's third and final column, which appeared last week, discusses what the future will hold for the sanctuary's team and its mission to research, protect, and educate: connect more and connect better. More diverse connection­s lead to stewardshi­p. Consider joining the advisory council, increasing access, and exploring and experience.

The series started with four installmen­ts by me that chronicled the citizen-driven grassroots environmen­tal efforts that came before, and helped

to establish, Monterey

Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Sam Farr's three parts reviewed the policy work that preceded and continues in the wake of sanctuary status, pointing out that governance of the ocean is crucial to the planet's health and must be done comprehens­ively, from watersheds to the sea. Fred Keeley discussed establishm­ent of the landmark Marine Life Protection Act in California in the wake of sanctuary status and the state's focus on protection of the ocean that interacts with our 1,100-mile coastal, western boundary.

Leon Panetta discussed the legislativ­e efforts he led in the fight against offshore oil and establishm­ent of the sanctuary. Dr. Lisa Wooninck, sanctuary superinten­dent, reviewed

the successes of the past 30 years and plans for the sanctuary.

To learn more

If you'd like to read past columns, go to https:// montereyba­yfoundatio­n. org/blog/. If you would like to learn more about Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, go to https:// montereyba­y.noaa.gov/, and to learn more about the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, go to https://montereyba­yfoundatio­n.org/

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Elephant seals at southern end of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary at Piedras Blancas.
CONTRIBUTE­D Elephant seals at southern end of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary at Piedras Blancas.

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