
From overfishing, to whaling, to pollution, the Defending Our Oceans
expedition has traveled the globe, documenting the many serious threats
facing our oceans today. The greatest hope of protecting and restoring
the health of our oceans is to create a network of marine reserves.
Studies of existing marine reserves prove that protected areas produce
up to 200 times as many fish, which grow larger and older than those in
unprotected waters, and help to restore depleted fish stocks.
While our oceans cover two-thirds of the planet, only 0.5 percent are
protected – compared to 13 percent of protected lands around the world.
We’re calling for a network of reserves to encompass 40 percent of our world’s oceans.
After
many years of work by many groups, and tremendous public support, two
of these important reserves have been created this year: The
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands National Monument and a California
network of 29 marine protected areas stretching more than 200 square
miles between Santa Barbara and San Francisco.
The Hawaiian
national monument is the largest marine conservation area on Earth,
encompassing 140,000 square miles, and protecting more than 7,000
species. The monument includes 4,500 square miles of relatively
undisturbed coral reef habitat. Promising new regulations further the
protection provided to this unique marine environment, and it is our
hope that additional regulations and the upcoming draft management plan
will continue to uphold the spirit of full protection for this pristine
area.
The Californian network of reserves was a historic
establishment of shoreline protection as well as the first
state-established network of marine protection.
Now that these
important first steps have been taken, we must continue down this road
towards true protections for all of our waters. The oceans and all that
depend on them are counting on us, and we have to take action, since
oceans protection truly does begin on land.