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Pacific Ocean

We are currently updating our news sections. For up to date news, please visit our @MarineWatch Twitter feed on the Home page!

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.

International

We are currently updating our news sections. For up to date news, please visit our @MarineWatch Twitter feed on the Home page!

Damage to world’s oceans ‘to reach $2 trillion a year’

21 March 2012     Eco-Business

The cost of damage to the world’s oceans from climate change could reach $2 trillion a year by 2100 if measures to cut greenhouse gas emissions are not stepped up, a study by marine experts said on Wednesday. The study found that without action to limit rising greenhouse gas emissions, the global average temperature could rise by 4 degrees Celsius by the end of the century causing ocean acidification, sea level rise, marine pollution, species migration and more intense tropical cyclones. It would also threaten coral reefs, disrupt fisheries and deplete fish stocks.     For complete article, please visit here.


Global Sea Level Likely to Rise as Much as 70 Feet in Future Generations

19 March 2012 National Science Foundation

Even if humankind manages to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit)--as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recommends--future generations will likely have to deal with a completely different world. One with sea levels 40 to 70 feet higher than at present, according to research results published this week in the journal Geology.     For complete article, please visit here.


Australia: WOC, AAMA Organize “Oceans, Industry and Rio + 20″ Conference

19 March 2012     Dredging Today

The WOC/AAMA Workshop on “Oceans, Industry and Rio + 20” (Canberra, 4 April) will bring together the diverse ocean business community to provide input to the UN conference via the Australian Government delegation and the WOC. Shipping, fisheries, oil/gas, aquaculture, offshore renewable energy, tourism, dredging, mining, and other ocean industries are invited to the workshop to consider the Rio + 20 marine agenda issues that have major business implications.     For complete article, please visit here.

UN official stresses importance of ocean treaty in governing use of seas

13 March 2012     UN News Centre

The United Nations legal chief has stressed the importance of the global treaty governing the use of oceans and their resources and urged States that have not ratified it to do so this year, which marks the 30th anniversary of the opening for signature of the convention. For complete article, please visit here.


Shipping's Impact on World Oceans is Well Regulated Says ICS

28 February 2012     The Maritime Executive

When it comes to governing the oceans, shipping largely has its house in order – that is the view of the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) whose Chairman, Spyros M Polemis, took part in a major debate about oceans governance, in Singapore (Feb 23rd and 24th).     For complete article, please visit here.

New York May Ban Shark Fin Sales, Following Other States

 

21 February 2012     New York Times

On Tuesday, legislators in New York State announced a bill that, following the example of Western states, would ban the sale, trading, possession and distribution of shark fins, possibly as of 2013. California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington are enacting similar bans that were passed last year, while Florida, Illinois, Maryland and Virginia have legislation pending.     For complete article, please visit here.


ICCAT meeting concludes

22 November 2011    World Fishing & Aquaculture

The Commission reviewed the status of tuna stocks and by-caught shark species in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea based on the findings of the Standing Committee for Research and Statistics Scientific (SCRS), as well as compliance with ICCAT conservation and management measures.   For complete article, please visit here.

 

Experts identify world's most threatened sea turtle populations

6 October 2011     Saipan Tribune

Top sea turtle experts from around the globe have discovered that almost half (45 percent) of the worldís threatened sea turtle populations are found in the northern Indian Ocean. The study also determined that the most significant threats across all of the threatened populations of sea turtles are fisheries bycatch, accidental catches of sea turtles by fishermen targeting other species, and the direct harvest of turtles or their eggs for food or turtle shell material for commercial use.     For complete article, please visit here.

 

Stormy seas for Obama ocean policy

4 October 2011   Politico

House Democrats signaled Tuesday that they are looking to codify the national ocean policy that President Barack Obama instituted by executive order in 2009 — but Republicans aren’t going to make it easy. “It is time for our nation to have an ocean plan,” House Natural Resources Committee ranking member Ed Markey (D-Mass.) said at a hearing Tuesday morning. “By harmonizing the existing regulations that govern our coasts and oceans, this policy will allow developments to move ahead more quickly while creating jobs and improving the health of the oceans.”     For complete article, please visit here.


First Global Map of Ocean Salinity Unveiled by NASA's Aquarius

23 September 2011     International Business Times

For the first time, a map of the salinity of the ocean surface has been produced by NASA's new Aquarius satellite, which began working only a month ago.     For complete article, please visit here.


Pew: Leaders Launch New Shark Conservation Effort

22 September 2011  PR Newswire

Bahamas, Colombia, Honduras, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Mexico, Micronesia, and Palau Commit to More Sanctuaries; International Action.  Leaders from eight countries launched an initiative today to prevent the extinction of sharks, symbolizing the latest development in the growing movement to safeguard the ocean's top predator. Members of the coalition committed to a declaration supporting the devlopment of sanctuaries that end commercial shark fishing in their national waters.     For complete article, please visit here


Clinton Global Initiative Members Join Forces to Combat Ocean Trash

20 September 2011   PR Newswire

Ocean Recovery Alliance Announces Progress on Global Alert Citizen Science Platform and Plastic Disclosure Project at Clinton Global Initiative 2011. For complete article, please visit here.


Controversies of ocean science in spotlight as world marine experts arrive in Aberdeen

21 September 2011     Fish Update

The World Conference on Marine Biodiversity has been brought to Scotland by the Universities of Aberdeen and St Andrews, and takes place at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre between September 26 and 30. Organisers expect lively debate and differing opinions on hot topics including the extinction of marine species, the impact on our oceans of climate change, the results of fishing policies and industry, and the conservation of sea mammals.    For complete article, please visit here.


Male Deep-Sea Squid are Bisexual, Prefer Mating in Dark: Report

21 September 2011   International Business Times

A recent footage from remote-controlled submersibles reveals that rare deep-sea male squid of Pacific Ocean are bisexual and prefer to mate in the dark.     For complete article, please visit here.

 

Clothing Sheds Microplastics Into Sea

19 September 2011   Chemical & Engineering News

Washing a fleece jacket may add to the fog of microscopic plastic floating in the oceans, according to a new study. Researchers report that the majority of these plastic particles probably washed off synthetic fabrics.   For complete article, please visit here.


NOAA, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service revise loggerhead sea turtle listing

16 September 2011   NOAA

NOAA and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a final rule today changing the listing of loggerhead sea turtles under the Endangered Species Act from a single threatened species to nine distinct population segments listed as either threatened or endangered.   For complete article, please visit here.

 

From gyre to laundry room: Method's sea trash recycling scheme

16 September 2011     Mother Nature Network: Matt Hickmann

Just in time for International Coastal Cleanup Day, Method announces a new recycled plastic laundry detergent bottle that will be partially composed of plastic waste collected from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.      For complete article, please visit here.


European Fisheries Commissioner, NOAA sign IUU agreement

8 September 2011     Fish Information and Services

European Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Maria Damanaki is currently visiting the US to strengthen co-operation between the US and the European Union (EU) on various sectors of maritime and fisheries policy.     For complete article, please visit here.

 

An Index for Ocean Health

15 August 2011     By Dylan Walsh, NYTimes Blog: Green

What is billed as the “Dow Jones of ocean health” is six months from release, and Ben Halpern is feeling the pressure. “We’re frantically wrapping up analyses,” Dr. Halpern, a research biologist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, said in a telephone interview. For complete article, please visit here.


10 million viruses in one drop of seawater

15 August 2011     George Foulsham, Futurity

Viruses fill the ocean and have a significant effect on ocean biology, according to a new study that reveals striking recurring patterns of marine virioplankton dynamics in the open sea.     For complete article, please visit here.

Hydrogen highway in the deep sea

10 August 2011     By Max Planck Gesellschaft , Eurek Alert  

Researchers discover hydrogen-powered symbiotic bacteria in deep-sea hydrothermal vent mussels.     For complete article, please visit here


Scientists name world's most important marine conservation hotspots

1 August 2011     By Alok Jha, The Guardian

Study reveals 20 sites that are key to ensuring the survival of marine mammals.     For complete article please visit here.


Warnings: hagfish at 'high risk of extinction

1 August 2011    By Fish Information & Services

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources(IUCN) estimates that 20 per cent of hagfish (sea slugs or sea lampreys) are at "high" risk of extinction.     For complete article, please visit here.


Ongoing Global Biodiversity Loss Unstoppable with Protected Areas Alone: Study

28 July 2011   United Nations University   Science Newsline Nature

Continued reliance on a strategy of setting aside land and marine territories as "protected areas" is insufficient to stem global biodiversity loss, according to a comprehensive assessment published today in the journal Marine Ecology Progress Series.     For complete article, please visit here.


Scientists look at drilling sea floor to study "silent" quakes

29 July 2011     The Philippine Star

Scientists from around the world will gather on the east coast of New Zealand next week to discuss proposals to study "silent" earthquakes by drilling into the seabed.     For complete article, please visit here.


Ancient sea level rise studied

28 July 2011     United Press International

Sea levels were higher during Earth's last prolonged warming than they are now, with much of the water coming from Antarctica, a U.S. scientist says. "The implication of our results is that West Antarctica likely was much smaller than it is today," and responsible for much more of the sea level rise than many scientists have thought, he said. "If West Antarctica collapsed, that means it's more unstable than we expected, which is quite scary."     For complete article, please visit here.

South Africa to join global marine science research effort

19 July 2011     By Tamar Kahn, Business Day

SA is set to join a global network of marine scientists sharing resources to learn more about the migration patterns of fish and other ocean inhabitants.  For complete article, please visit here.

 

Loss of Large Predators Has Caused Widespread Disruption of Ecosystems

14 July 2011    Scripps Institution of Oceanography

The decline of large predators and other "apex consumers" at the top of the food chain has disrupted ecosystems all over the planet, according to a review of recent findings conducted by an international team of scientists and published in the July 15 issue of Science. For complete article, please visit here.


Whitehouse Highlights Threats to the Health of our Oceans

13 July 2011   

In Senate Speech, Whitehouse Discusses International Programme on the State of the Ocean Report.     For full speech, please visit here.


New study shows ocean's carbon catching ability under threat

12 July 2011   European Commission Cordis

The ocean is Earth's biggest tool in managing emissions, soaking up nearly one third of all human carbon emissions. But how long can the planet's largest carbon absorber keep this up for? Now, a team of international EU-funded researchers has analysed how climate change is affecting the ocean's capacity to guzzle up carbon emissions.     For the complete article, please visit here.


New federal policy aims to expand US fish farming

11 July 2011   By Rick Callahan, Associated Press

The federal government is moving to open up large swaths of coastal waters to fish farming for the first time in an effort to decrease Americans' dependence on imports and satisfy their growing appetite for seafood.     For complete article, please visit here.


Jellyfish Invasions Force Shutdowns at 3 Separate Nuclear Plants

7 July 2011   By Natalie Wolchover, MSNBC

A nuclear power plant on the coast of Israel was forced to shut down this week when its seawater cooling system became clogged with jellyfish. A similar incident temporarily disabled two nuclear reactors at the Torness power station on the Scottish coast last week. A week before, a reactor in Shimane, Japan was crippled by yet another jellyfish infiltration.

Amid speculation that warm waters and ocean acidification — both driven by climate change — are boosting jellyfish populations, are these three incidents signs of a growing trend?     For complete article, please visit here.

 

Open call for Go Blue Award nominations recognizing leaders in ocean conservation

1 July 2011   By Brittnany Miller, TCPalm

The Loggerhead Marinelife Center (LMC) is now accepting nominations for the 2011 Go Blue Awards, which are given annually to three individuals and a business that are making extraordinary contributions to promoting marine conservation. Nominations can be made through Aug. 15. A downloadable application is available at marinelife.org/bluefriends.     For complete article. please visit here.


Sharks Caught in the Jaws of Tuna Fisheries

30 June 2011   PRNewswire-USNewswire

Governments will soon have a chance to help conserve populations of oceanic whitetip sharks, which have declined so much in the eastern Pacific that catch numbers have been reduced to almost zero.

Next week, governments will gather in La Jolla, California for the annual meeting of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC), a regional fisheries management organization (RFMO) responsible for managing tuna fisheries across an area totaling approximately 68 million square kilometers (26 million square miles).

For complete article, please visit here.

 

Warming oceans cause largest movement of marine species in two million years

29 July 2011   By Richard Gray, The Telegraph (UK)

Warming ocean waters are causing the largest movement of marine species seen on Earth in more than two million years, according to scientists.

For complete article, please visit here.


Killer Whales' Ears Inspire New Undersea Microphones

28 June 2011   By Charles Q. Choi, TechNewsDaily Contributor, Live Science

By copying the ears of killer whales, scientists have designed underwater microphones that could one day help track migrating whales, guide robots toward leaking undersea oil wells and monitor exotic cosmic particles plunging into the ocean.

For complete article, please visit here.


Iceland-Hong Kong trade deal on aphrodisiac sea cucumbers

28 June 2011   Ice News

The EFTA and Hong Kong have signed a free-trade agreement, which will effectively allow Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland to use Hong Kong as a de-facto home market when exporting to other parts of Asia.

For complete article, visit
here.

 

El Niño-Southern Oscillation and other climate patterns play a major role in 2010; 2010 one of the two warmest years on record

27 JUNE 2011   National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Worldwide, 2010 was one of the two warmest years on record according to the State of the Climate which NOAA released today. The peer-reviewed report, issued in coordination with the American Meteorological Society, was compiled by 368 scientists from 45 countries. It provides a detailed, yearly update on global climate indicators, notable climate events and other climate information from every continent.

This year’s report tracks 41 climate indicators ― four more than last year ― including temperature of the lower and upper atmosphere, precipitation, greenhouse gases, humidity, cloud cover, ocean temperature and salinity, sea ice, glaciers, and snow cover. Each indicator includes thousands of measurements from multiple independent datasets that allow scientists to identify overall trends.

For complete article and copy of report, please visit here.

 

Pacific species migrating through warmer Northwest Passage

28 June 2011   By Tristin Hopper, National Post

Set loose by an ice-free Northwest Passage, an invasion force of Pacific sea creatures are moving east to Atlantic waters.

Researchers at the U.K.-based Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science have called the discovery of a microscopic west coast plant on the east coast a “harbinger of an inundation of the North Atlantic with foreign organisms.”

“The Arctic is getting easier to navigate … organisms that don’t even swim are getting through,” says Eric Solomon, director of conservation strategy at the Vancouver Aquarium.

This week, British researchers announced that the plant, extinct along the East Coast for more than 800,000 years, has begun to reappear there after migrating through the Arctic Ocean. It marks the first time an organism has completed a trans-Arctic crossing in modern times without a set of fins.

For complete article, please visit here.

 

Multiple ocean stresses threaten "globally significant" marine extinction

21 June 2011  International Programme on the State of the Oceans

A high-level international workshop convened by IPSO met at the University of Oxford earlier this year. It was the first inter-disciplinary international meeting of marine scientists of its kind and was designed to consider the cumulative impact of multiple stressors on the ocean, including warming, acidification, and overfishing.

The 3 day workshop, co-sponsored by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), looked at the latest science across different disciplines.

The 27 participants from 18 organisations in 6 countries produced a grave assessment of current threats — and a stark conclusion about future risks to marine and human life if the current trajectory of damage continues: that the world's ocean is at high risk of entering a phase of extinction of marine species unprecedented in human history.

In Brief: Most, if not all, of the five global mass extinctions in Earth's history carry the fingerprints of the main symptoms of global carbon perturbations (global warming, ocean acidification and anoxia or lack of oxygen; e.g. Veron, 2008).

It is these three factors — the 'deadly trio' — which are present in the ocean today. In fact, the current carbon perturbation is unprecedented in the Earth's history because of the high rate and speed of change. Acidification is occurring faster than in the past 55 million years, and with the added man-made stressors of overfishing and pollution, undermining ocean resilience.

For complete article, please visit here.

 

Microbes change the chemistry of deep ocean vents

21 June 2011 By Scott Johnson, Ars Technica

Hydrothermal vents on the sea floor have been full of surprises, starting with their unexpected discovery in the late 1970s. Entire communities thrive in the complete absence of sunlight, extracting energy from the unique chemistry of the vents. We’ve also learned that hydrothermal vents play an important role in marine chemical cycles. At times in the past, changes in hydrothermal circulation have even switched the dominant form of carbonate precipitate in the ocean from calcite to a form higher in magnesium called aragonite.

Most of the focus thus far has been on the high-temperature (up to 320°C), focused vents of television documentary fame. But recent research is showing that lower-temperature (10-80°C) sites where discharge is more diffuse are just as interesting, and have a few surprises of their own.

Research at hydrothermal vents has long been limited by the difficulty of obtaining water samples and the constraints of analysis that typically has to be performed in a lab far removed from the sea floor. A team of researchers operating from a submersible has deployed new devices that can measure chemistry and flow rate in situ, and have been able to study the vents along the Juan de Fuca ridge off the coast of Washington in much greater detail.

For complete article, please visit here.

Southern Ocean

We are currently updating our news sections. For up to date news, please visit our @MarineWatch Twitter feed on the Home page!

Team Tracks a Food Supply at the End of the World

12 March 2012 NY Times

Dr. Bernard and her team, known at Palmer as “The Psycho Krillers,” are studying the feeding patterns of Antarctic krill, the small, bug-eyed shrimplike crustaceans that are the central diet for whales, penguins, seals and seabirds. She is one of a growing number of scientists concerned about the effects of a kind of gold rush, as fishing companies race to the Southern Ocean to catch krill and turn it into animal feed and lucrative omega-3 dietary supplements. For complete article, please visit here.


New Alliance calls for World’s Largest Marine Reserves around Antarctica

31 October 2011   Tasmanian Times

A new coalition of environmental and conservation groups, the Antarctic Ocean Alliance (AOA), called on the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) meeting in Hobart this week to establish the world’s largest network of marine reserves in the oceans around Antarctica.  For complete article, please visit here.


NRC Panel Recommends Implementing Antarctic Observation Network

9 September 2011     The Antarctic Sun

Remote observatories generating gigabytes of data on the weather from Antarctica's vast ice sheets, powered by nothing more than wind and sun. An array of buoys and gliders bobbing and cruising through the Southern Ocean. Satellites using ever more powerful sensors to peer through disintegrating ice shelves.  It's a possible vision from 20 years hence offered by a committee of scientists and experts tasked with identifying and summarizing future research priorities in the Antarctic.     For complete article please visit here.


Dolphin deaths close shark fishery

24 September 2011     The Sydney Morning Herald

A key shark fishery has been closed for six months because authorities found that more than 45 dolphins had died there in the past year. The Australian Fisheries Management Authority yesterday took the rare step of shutting gill nets out of a swath of Southern Ocean, near Kangaroo Island.     For complete article, please visit here.


Map tracks Antarctica on the move

19 August 2011     Jonathan Amos, BBC News

Scientists have produced what they say is the first complete map of how the ice moves across Antarctica.     For complete article, please visit here.


Ancient sea level rise studied

28 July 2011     United Press International

Sea levels were higher during Earth's last prolonged warming than they are now, with much of the water coming from Antarctica, a U.S. scientist says. "The implication of our results is that West Antarctica likely was much smaller than it is today," and responsible for much more of the sea level rise than many scientists have thought, he said. "If West Antarctica collapsed, that means it's more unstable than we expected, which is quite scary."     For complete article, please visit here.


Researchers Provide Detailed Picture of Ice Loss Following the Collapse of Antarctic Ice Shelves

25 July 2011     PR Newswire

An international team of researchers has combined data from multiple sources to provide the clearest account yet of how much glacial ice surges into the sea following the collapse of Antarctic ice shelves.     For complete article, please visit here


Underwater Antarctic volcanoes discovered in the Southern Ocean

11 July 2011   By Athena Dinar

Scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) have discovered previously unknown volcanoes in the ocean waters around the remote South Sandwich Islands. Using ship-borne sea-floor mapping technology during research cruises onboard the RRS James Clark Ross, the scientists found 12 volcanoes beneath the sea surface – some up to 3km high. They found 5km diameter craters left by collapsing volcanoes and 7 active volcanoes visible above the sea as a chain of islands.     For complete article, please visit here.


Antarctic krill help to fertilize Southern Ocean with iron

4 July 2011   By Athena Dinar

A new discovery reveals that the shrimp-like creature at the heart of the Antarctic food chain could play a key role in fertilising the Southern Ocean with iron – stimulating the growth of phytoplankton (microscopic plant-like organisms). This process enhances the ocean's capacity for natural storage of carbon dioxide. For complete article, please visit here.


Ocean Currents Speeding Melting Glaciers

29 June 2011   By Joshua S. Hill, Planet Save

New research has shown that strong ocean currents running under the West Antrarctic’s Pine Island Glacier Ice Shelf are eating away at the ice from below, contributing to the rapid decline in the shelf’s mass, thus increasing the amount of meltwater running into the oceans.
For complete article, please visit here

Indian Ocean

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Fishermen demand protection of marine species

16 March 2012     The Times of India

The Odisha Traditional Fish Workers' Union (OTFWU) is demanding mobile marine reserves in the Odisha coast to protect sea turtles, dolphins and other marine species. "The mobile marine reserves should use tracking devices to follow endangered animals like sea turtles and close the areas with the highest populations of the species to trawlers and industrial fishermen during peak seasons," president of OTFWU Narayan Haldar told media persons here recently.     For complete article, please visit here.


Scientists link upward trend in pollution to increased intensity of Arabian Sea tropical cyclones

28 November 2011   National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

A 'brown cloud' of pollution over the Indian Ocean resulting from human activities has led to stronger tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea, according to an international team of scientists.   For complete article, please visit here.


Indian Ocean Region: A Haven for Crab Species!

28 November 2011   ZME Science

Indian Ocean continues to enthrall the scientists who take pleasure to unravel the hitherto unknown animal species lurking in the region which incidentally triggers monsoon spells across the globe every year. Many biologists, including Indian scientists, had undertaken several voyages on the Indian Ocean and succeeded in their mission to detect many new species including crabs over the years.    For complete article please visit here.


Malaysia latest signatory to conservation of marine turtles

25 September 2011     Borneo Post

Malaysia has become the latest signatory to the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the Conservation and Management of Marine Turtles and their habitats within the Indian Ocean and South-East Asia (IOSEA) region, a milestone which WWF-Malaysia (World Wide Fund for Nature-Malaysia) believes will offer hope to the protection of these endangered species.     For complete article, please visit here.


WARNING LETTER: “Killing hostages is now part of the rules”

30 July 2011     By Rob Almeida, gCaptain

This Warning Notice, published by the International Sailing Federation (ISAF), is intended for Yacht Skippers considering a passage through the Gulf of Aden, its approaches and the Indian Ocean north of 12 degrees south and west of 78 degrees east. It is the third such notice to be published on this subject and reflects the latest situation as at June 2011.     For complete article, please visit here.


Deep sea fishing nets $2,074,400 for Tanzania

15 June 2011

By Daniel Msangya
The Citizen Correspondent

Tanzania obtained $2,074,400 from deep sea fishing in the Indian Ocean, MPs were told yesterday.
The revenue was collected during this financial year as fees from 71 registered and licensed vessels operating in Tanzania waters.

But lately fishing in the Indian Ocean has been affected by pirates, the deputy minister for Fisheries and Livestock Development, Mr Benedict Ole Nangoro, told the parliament in Dodoma. He said the pirates made it difficult to register between 120 to 150 marine companies which wanted to invest in the fishing sector. Had they done so, he explained, the nation’s revenue could have doubled.

Clarifying, he said license fees differed depending on duration, origin of the fishing vessels and type of fishing.
He gave an example of a foreign vessel undertaking purse sein type of fishing that is charged $12,000 quarterly or $35,000 per annum. He said the registration fee stands at $2,000 per vessel.

“A Tanzanian fishing vessel using the same style of fishing is charged only $4,500 quarterly or $8,000 annually in addition to $4,300 as registration fee per vessle,” said Mr Nangoro.

For full article, click here.

Arctic Ocean

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Alaska's mysterious orange goo actually just another fungus among us

18 August 2011     Craig Medred, Alaska Dispatch

More than a week after a so-called "orange goo" hit beaches near the village of Kivalina in Northwest Alaska, causing an Internet stir, scientists have concluded it wasn't really a goo after all. It just sort of looked that way.

The substance in question is a fungal spore of the type that usually causes plant rust, a disease that causes a rust-like appearance on leaves and stems.     For complete article, please visit here.

 

Russia's Arctic 'sea grab'

14 August 2011     By Fred Weir,  The Christian Science Monitor


Russia is expected within months to claim to the United Nations its right to annex about 380,000 square miles of the Arctic.     For complete article, please visit here.


Arctic Sea Routes Opening Up For China

21 July 2011     China Briefing

The use of Arctic shipping routes is doubling this year as global warming makes it more convenient to traverse the Arctic Ocean when servicing Russia, Europe and Eastern China.     For complete article, please visit here.

 

Long-distance swims may cause polar bear problems

20 July 2011     By Dan Joling, Associated Press

Polar bears forced to swim longer distances because of diminished sea ice off Alaska's coast may be paying a price in lost cubs or precious calories, according to a study by the U.S. Geological Survey.     For complete article, please visit here.

Collapsing Coastlines

16 July 2011   By Daniel Strain, Science News

How Arctic shores are pulled a-sea.  For complete article, visit here.

 

Arctic may be ice-free within 30 years

11 July 2011   By John Vidal, The Guardian

Sea ice in the Arctic is melting at a record pace this year, suggesting warming at the north pole is speeding up and a largely ice-free Arctic can be expected in summer months within 30 years.  For complete article, please visit here.


Rush for Arctic's resources provokes territorial tussles

6 July 2011   By Terry Macalister,  Guardian

US, Canada, Russia, Denmark and Norway are becoming embroiled in disputes over boundaries on land and at sea.

Two nations on opposite sides of the Nato military alliance divide –Russia and no-repeat; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;">Norway – have signed a deal over who owns what in the Barents Sea. But there are plenty of other territorial tussles going on – some between good friends.

For full article, please visit here.

Cryosat mission delivers first sea-ice map

21 June 2011 By Jonathan Amos, BBC News

This is the best view we have yet had of the thickness of sea-ice across the entire Arctic Ocean basin.

It is the first fully processed map from Europe's new Cryosat spacecraft.

It only covers the months of January and February, but the UK team behind the data says it can now roll out the information on a continuous basis.

The extent of Arctic sea-ice has become a major issue in recent years, with summer melting appearing to outstrip what many climate models had predicted.

But a proper assessment of the status of the sea-ice requires knowledge also about its thickness - something scientists have only recently had the tools to measure from space.

To view map and complete article, please visit here.

 

Arctic warming to boost rise of sea levels

3 May 2011 By Alister Doyle, Washington Post

OSLO — Global sea levels will rise faster than expected this century, partly because of quickening climate change in the Arctic and a thaw of Greenland’s ice, an international report said Tuesday.

The rise would add to threats to coasts from Bangladesh to Florida, low-lying Pacific islands and cities from London to Shanghai. It would also raise the cost of building tsunami barriers in Japan.

Record temperatures in the Arctic will add to factors raising world sea levels by up to 5.2 feet by 2100, according to a report by the Oslo-based Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), which is backed by the eight-nation Arctic Council.

For complete article, please visit here.

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