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Pacific island to buy piece of Fiji as climate plan
13 March 2012 New Scientist
Caught between a devil of a choice and the deep blue sea, the Pacific nation of Kiribati intends to buy land on Fiji's main island as a long-term measure to cope with rising sea levels. President Anote Tong said last week that the purchase of some 25 square kilometres on Viti Levu, approved by his cabinet, was an investment at this stage. "Relocation is our last resort," he said, adding that effects of climate change are already hindering the nation's economic development. For complete article, visit here.
Researchers Examine Monitoring Systems for Offshore Wind Energy Impacts
15 February 2012 Environmental Protection
The Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center at Oregon State University has received a three-year, $600,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to develop a multi-sensor array to record the interactions – including impacts – of birds and bats on the blades, platforms and towers of wind turbines. For complete article, please visit here.
New No Fishing Zones for California
3 January 2012 Santa Barbara Independent
After more than four years of meetings, votes, controversy, and public pleas both for and against the idea, January 1, 2012 marked the official roll-out date for 36 brand new state-sanctioned marine protected areas (MPAs) dotting the Pacific Ocean between Point Conception and the Mexico border. Designed first and foremost as a tool of protection for underwater ecosystems, the MPAs create a variety of new recreational and commercial fishing regulations for certain strategic areas throughout state waters. For complete article, please visit here.
Deep-Sea Yeti Crab Farms Food on Its Arms
5 December 2011 Wired
A thousand feet below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, a yeti crab “farms” a colony of bacteria on its claws. To help them grow, it waves its pincers over methane and sulfide vents, fertilizing the bacteria and making them good enough to eat. For complete article, please visit here.
Research on Mexican marine reserve shows flourishing fish
4 December 2011 North County Times
Fish are flourishing in a Mexican marine reserve, offering a glimpse of what similar sanctuaries could do off the coast of California, says a scientist with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Octavio Aburto Oropeza, a postdoctoral researcher with the institution, studied Cabo Pulmo National Park, a 27-square-mile reserve in the southern end of the Gulf of California, where a "no-take" policy on fishing has allowed groupers, sharks and other top predators to grow bigger and more plentiful. For complete article, please visit here.
Algae blooms' sudden spread stumps scientists
27 November 2011 The San Francisco Chronicle
Marine scientists are trying to find out why previously unknown blooms of toxic algae are suddenly proliferating along the California coast, killing wildlife and increasing the risk of human sickness. For complete article, please visit here.
Can Smartphones Help Stop Illegal Fishing in California?
30 September 2011 Government Technology
When venturing into the waters along California’s 1,100 miles of coastline, at times it can be difficult to determine which areas are protected — where fishing and other recreational activities are restricted or limited. For complete article, please visit here.
Philippines, Vietnam agree to protect Spratlys marine ecosystem
10 October 2011 The Philippine Star
The Philippines and Vietnam have agreed to protect the fragile marine ecosystem in the West Philippine Sea from threats of overexploitation, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said yesterday. The DFA said the agreement was made to address illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing in accordance with the national laws of both countries. For complete article, please visit here.
Nitrate pollution in Pacific Ocean studied
22 September 2011 United Press International
Rising nitrate levels in the northwest Pacific Ocean could alter the makeup of marine plants and influence marine ecology, U.S. and Korean researchers say. For complete article, please visit here.
Waste Haulers Strike Over Ban on Sea Dumping
22 September 2011 Korea Real Time
Some parts of the country are suffering from the overpowering stench of uncollected wastes as the nation’s sea-dumping companies – 19 in total – have been on strike since August 29. They’ve protesting a decision announced by the Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs earlier in August that a ban on dumping wastes in the sea will finally go into full effect next year. For complete article, please visit here.
At sea with the inspectors
22 August 2011 Bill Moore, Nelson Mail
This is the third mission to the West Coast this hoki season. Its goal is for the navy to assist the Ministry of Fisheries with fisheries protection duties, providing for at-sea boarding and overt surveillance of the hoki fishery on the Coast. For complete article, please visit here.
Biodiversity: Marine life rebounds in Baja ocean preserve
15 August 2011 By Bob Berwyn, Summit County Citizens Voice
Conservation efforts have paid big dividends for residents of a small coastal town in Baja, where local no-take fishing regulations have helped sea life make a dramatic recovery in the last 10 years. For complete article, please visit here.
Network of cables brings researchers to Pacific City to study ocean floor
19 July 2011 Tillamook Headlight Herald
At-sea cable installation will continue through August. By 2013 Ocean Observatories Initiative data will become available worldwide, in real-time, via the Internet. For complete article, please visit here.
$4 Million Awarded to South Coast MPA Baseline Program
18 July 2011 Santa Barbara Independent
The Ocean Protection Council has awarded $4 million to support initial monitoring of the newly designated South Coast marine protected areas (MPAs). For complete article, please visit here.
Scientists aglow after big discovery during tsunami
16 July 2011 By JIm Bord, Star Advertiser
Researchers using a camera on Maui have photographed the glow from atmospheric pressure disturbances generated by the March 11 tsunami, raising hopes that the technique could be used to predict the arrival of future waves. For complete article, please visit here.
Taiwan fisherman to be asked to bring in sharks intact
10 July 2011 By Jamie Wong, Focus Taiwan
Taiwan will next year become the first Asian country to ban fishermen from bringing in dismembered sharks, as part of efforts to prevent finning, a local report said Sunday. For complete article, please visit here.
Chile bans shark finning
8 July 2011 By Elizabeth Weise, USA Today
Chile on Wednesday became one of a growing group of nations that ban the practice of shark finning, in which the fins are cut from living sharks at sea and then the sharks are thrown back into the water to die.
For complete article, please visit here.
Settlement Reached to Protect Endangered Leatherback Sea Turtles in West Coast Waters
5 July 2011 By Catherine Kilduff, Center for Biological Diversity
A settlement filed today in federal court between conservation groups and the National Marine Fisheries Service requires the government to make a final rule protecting critical habitat for the endangered leatherback sea turtle by Nov. 15, 2011. As proposed, the rule will protect sea turtles in part of the area off the coasts of California, Oregon and Washington. If made final, it would represent the first sea turtle critical habitat ever designated in ocean waters off the continental shelf.
For complete article, please visit here.
Hsunhu No. 7 deployed to enhance fishing boat inspection
4 July 2011 Focus Taiwan
Taipei, July 4 (CNA) A deep-sea patrol vessel was deployed in the Pacific Ocean Monday as part of an ongoing effort to beef up Taiwan's protection and inspection of its fishing boats, according to the Council of Agriculture (COA).
Tsay Tzu-yaw, deputy director-general of the COA's Fisheries Agency, said Hsunhu No. 7, a 1,800-ton deep-sea patrol vessel, has been deployed to patrol the waters of the Central and Western Pacific Ocean, the second time Taiwan has deployed vessels this year.
For complete article, please visit here.
Chinese Submersible That Can Dive 7,000 Meters Ocean Depth
4 July 2011 RTT News
China has launched a scientific mission involving various tests using its manned deep-diving submersible which will make a 5,000-meter dive in the Pacific Ocean.
During the dive, 'Jiaolong' will undergo several operational tests in which it will take photos, shoot video, survey seabeds and take samples from the ocean floor, says Jin Jiancai, Deputy Director of the submersible's diving test program team.
For complete article, please visit here.
Settlement Reached to Protect Endangered Leatherback Sea Turtles in West Coast Waters
5 July 2011 By Catherine Kilduff, Center for Biological Diversity
A settlement filed today in federal court between conservation groups and the National Marine Fisheries Service requires the government to make a final rule protecting critical habitat for the endangered leatherback sea turtle by Nov. 15, 2011. As proposed, the rule will protect sea turtles in part of the area off the coasts of California, Oregon and Washington. If made final, it would represent the first sea turtle critical habitat ever designated in ocean waters off the continental shelf.
Little eels, big bucks, huge lure
30 June 2010 By Ann S. Kim The Portland Press Herald
Sky-high prices for elvers lured a huge number of fishermen to coastal rivers this spring, including some willing to risk fines for a chance to be paid up to $1,200 per pound for the immature American eels.
For complete article, please visit here.
La Niña's Exit Leaves Climate Forecasts in Limbo
29 June 2011 By Alan Buis
The comings and goings of El Niño and La Niña are part of a long-term, evolving state of global climate, for which measurements of sea surface height are a key indicator. For the past three months, since last year's strong La Niña event dissipated, data collected by the U.S.-French Ocean Surface Topography Mission (OSTM)/Jason-2 oceanography satellite have shown that the equatorial Pacific sea surface heights have been stable and near average. Elsewhere, however, the northeastern Pacific Ocean remains quite cool, with sea levels much lower than normal. The presence of cool ocean waters off the U.S. West Coast has also been a factor in this year's cool and foggy spring there.
For images and complete article, please visit here.
Migration patterns of Pacific predators uncovered
27 June 2011 By Natalia Real, Fish Information Services
A study published this week summarises the results of a 10-year tagging programme called the Tagging of Pacific Predators (TOPP). The researchers found that two stretches of the North Pacific Ocean are luring a range of marine predators in predictable seasonal trends.
Ian Jonsen, a research associate and adjunct professor in the Department of Biology at Dalhousie University and co-lead investigator of the Future of Marine Animal Populations Project (FMAP), and lead author of the study Barbara Block at Stanford University as well as several other US researchers concluded a two-year study entitled, "Tracking apex marine predator movements in a dynamic ocean" published in Nature.
Under the TOPP programme, 4,306 tags were deployed on 23 species in the North Pacific Ocean, yielding data that covers 265,386 days -- an astonishing scale by industry standards.
For complete article, please visit here.t;/p>
Hard cap for king salmon in Alaska
22 June 2011 By Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune
Minnesota sends thousands of anglers to Alaska each summer, many intent on catching king salmon, also called chinook salmon. These are the big salmon, in some cases 30 pounds and more, that historically have been the real money fish for the Alaska sportfishing economy, particularly its fishing camps and other outfitters.
But Alaska's king salmon have been under considerable pressure in recent years from commercial pollock trawlers, who catch kings incidentally. As a result, it's believed, the king run in the Yukon and other western Alaskan rivers has diminished significantly.
Now the federal board that regulates offshore fishing around Alaska has moved to protect king salmon in the Gulf of Alaska, setting a hard cap on June 12 for a king salmon bycatch in those waters of 25,000 fish, effective in 2012. This follows a 60,000-fish cap of Bering Sea bycatch kings in 2009.
For complete article, please visit here.

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