William Shatner teams with Greenpeace to protect the Bering Sea

by Jackie Dragon

April 2, 2013

Today, Greenpeace launched a new video featuring the voice of William Shatner calling for the North Pacific Marine Fisheries Council to protect the Bering Sea canyons from industrial fishing.

Save Kipperfeatures a happy menagerie of domesticated animals–a fish named Kipper, a dog named Sparky, a bird named Boozer, and a cat named Fluffy–all of which have their homes shockingly destroyed by methods ranging from fire to a power saw.

TAKE ACTION NOW TO PROTECT THE BERING SEA!

As Bering Sea campaigner, I work with a coalition of conservation groups including Oceana, Alaska’ Big Village Network and Mission Blue, to protect this critical ocean ecosystem.

In the ocean, especially in the Bering Sea, habitat destruction by industrial fishing fleets is even more shockingly ruinous than a flaming cat tree or crushed dog house. Theres no rebuilding the ancient habitat that is being destroyed.

Alaskas Bering Sea is home to one of the most remarkable places in the world, an area so rich with life scientists call it the Green Belt. Here, the Grand Canyons of the Sea support an extraordinary ecosystem that includes fish, crab, skates, endangered sea lions, orcas, and humpback whales, but it all starts with the fragile corals and sponges on the sea floor.

Tragically, this amazing ecosystem is under serious threat from industrial fishing fleets that carve up the corals and sponges with their trawl nets. Bottom-tending fishing gear–especially trawl nets–destroys fragile corals and sponges that provide essential habitat, including spawning and nursery areas for fish, crab, and other marine species.

Despite repeated requests from conservationists to protect this canyon habitat from fishing impacts, the governing body responsible for the Grand Canyons of the Sea, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, has so far taken no action to curb fishing here or conserve this vital Green Belt ecosystem. The council has blamed its past inaction on a lack of scientific evidence, so Greenpeace has twice gone to the canyons with state of the art submarines and acoustic equipment to bring back the science the council has asked for.

The council will decide how it will proceed in a vote this June.

This will be the year the council decides either to consider the science and create a pathway to protect the canyons, or to ignore the science and continue the destruction.

TAKE ACTION NOW TO PROTECT THE BERING SEA!

Jackie Dragon

By Jackie Dragon

Jackie Dragon formerly served as a senior oceans campaigner at Greenpeace USA. Jackie has been campaigning to protect important places in the ocean since 2008. Her current focus is on the Bering Sea, where she fights to conserve the largest submarine canyons in the world from destructive industrial fishing practices.

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