The following story about the collapse of fisheries and the change in the Ocean's chemistry was published in the Epoch Times on 9 April, 2013.
Gerry is a Malaysian based marine ecologist, Research Fellow and Advisor to the National University of Malaysia, and marine consultant to the Andaman Resort, Langkawi.
“There has long been a belief that the sea, at
least, was inviolate, beyond man’s ability to change and to despoil. But this
belief, unfortunately, has proved to be naïve”
(Rachel
Carson, The Sea Around Us 1951)
I
had the immense pleasure of meeting the lady that changed the world and launched
the conservation movement through her books when I was only 16. Rachel Carson
had already written Silent Spring and
The Sea Around Us when I was at my
most impressionable. My career in marine science was her fault; and each day I
thank her.
I
have often said to my students that because I couldn’t be an astronaut, I set
out to explore ‘inner-space’ and was going to discover the water planet. All I
needed to do this was some diving gear and a lot of enthusiasm. Travelling
there was simple! Had humans evolved on the Moon and decided to settle here
they would have called this “Water” and not “Earth”.
There
is about 1.4 billion cubic kilometres of water spread across 70.8% of the
planet’s surface and 97.2% of that water is ocean. The blood that flows through
our veins is little more than seawater and we refer to it as “life blood” for
good reason. About 70% of the oxygen we breathe is produced by the tiny plants
that float in the sea (phytoplankton).
Our
climate is driven by ocean currents and recent (2009) studies suggest that
these may now change due to global warming, melting the Arctic, and causing
flooding that will effect a quarter of the world’s population.
Ecologists
talk about biodiversity; about the richness of species in a given area. More
kinds of living things make a healthier planet. The sea supports an incredible
variety of life; an estimated 80% of all the known life on Earth. And yet, we
spend much more money on outer space research than we do on understanding the ‘inner-space’
just offshore.
Why
are we so disinterested in rising sea level when 60% of the world’s humans live
within 60 km of the ocean? Why do we dump 450 billion cubic metres of poisonous
and non-biodegradable waste in the sea each year?
Most
of the world’s fisheries are food fisheries supplying roughly 40% of the
protein consumed by nearly two-thirds of the world’s population. Some 38
million people make all or most of their living from fishing, landing about 90
million tonnes of fish per year.
But
our oceans are in crisis! The FAO estimates that 70% of commercial fisheries
have already collapsed or are now collapsing. Sadly, many of these will never
recover and will be lost forever. Top predators like tuna, shark, and swordfish
have been reduced to a mere 10% of their original numbers and some species are
facing probable extinction. I have been told that Malaysian fisheries have
removed about 95% of their stocks. Each year we kill and discard globally 30
million tonnes of accidentally caught (bycatch) marine life including dolphins,
turtles, crabs, and juvenile fish. In Australia ’s north 92% of the catch
is of no use to fishermen. As we remove these animals from the food-web we
drive down biodiversity and strangle the ocean’s ecological processes.
Coral
reefs are now the world’s most endangered ecosystem. These tiny underwater
‘islands of life’ are under threat from human activities and especially from
acidification. As we burn more and more fossil fuels we add to the growing
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and change the pH (acidity) of the
sea.
The
acid threshold for coral is reached when the atmosphere exceeds 350 parts per
million of CO2. Tragically that happened about 1988 and by October, 2012 was
391 ppm. The present levels are higher than any time in the last 800 thousand
years and probably in the last 20 million years.
Growing
acidity in the oceans has a disastrous effect on marine life. It is predicted
to fall from pH 8.1 (now) to below pH 7.3 in the year 2300. A long way off? No
need to be concerned?
At
pH 7.7 we will reach the lethal limit for all shell forming molluscs and reef
corals; their shells and skeletons will simply dissolve and they will die. That’s
right coral reefs and marine life with shells will die! When will this happen?
The shocking answer is that scientific studies are all pointing to 2065.
Between now and then there will be huge disruptions of the ecological food web
as species begin to drop out. From about 2065 on we can expect the rapid and
catastrophic collapse of most stocks of marine life. The ecosystem will simply
fail.
This
situation is now the most pressing environmental issue we face and as a marine
scientist I believe it is the most pressing issue on the planet. I am not alone
and have been joined in my concerns by 155 senior marine scientists from 26
countries who recently signed the Monaco Declaration (The Royal Society, 6 July
2009), highlighting the twin threat of growing ocean acidification and global
warming.
What
astonishing creatures we are! The warning bells have been ringing since Rachel
Carson published her wonderful book in 1951. During the last 60 years there have
been more scientists alive and doing research than all the scientists that have
lived before. And still we race blindly down the road to the ocean’s destruction
and possibly our own.
Thirty million tonnes of marine life are caught accidentally
and killed each year. Some fish are kept but everything else will be lost.
What a great story! We really have to act now to save the ocean.
ReplyDeleteHow sad we have done this.
ReplyDelete