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Greenpeace activists take action against a Swedish cod trawler, the 
Glomfjord. The vessel continued trawling in the proposed marine 
reserves despite Greenpeace's appeal to voluntarily refrain from 
fishing in the area. Greenpeace is calling for the creation of a 
marine reserve, to protect the ecosystem, and allow for the recovery 
of fish stocks.

Greenpeace is calling for the creation of a global network of marine reserves to protect 40% of our seas and oceans.

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The world’s oceans, once thought to contain inexhaustible resources, are under increasing threat. In recent years, scientific study after scientific study has pointed to the fact that human activities and fishing in particular have been putting extreme pressure on marine ecosystems to the point that profound ecosystem changes are being experienced in many parts of the world.

In November 2006, an international group of ecologists and economists, led by Professor Boris Worm of Dalhousie University, published a study in Science that brought the extent of this degradation into stark relief. Looking at marine biodiversity on a global scale, the study shows that loss of marine biodiversity is drastically reducing the ocean’s ability to produce seafood, resist diseases, filter pollutants and rebound from stresses such as over-fishing and climate change. The team’s projection that all commercial and seafood species are on the brink of collapse was shocking enough to make news headlines across the world.

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Authors: Richard Page
Date published: 15 May 2007
Format: Adobe PDF
Number of pages: 4
ISBN:
Size: 1 Mb