Did
you know ?
•
Did you know Polar bears actually have black skin? The polar
bear's hair appears white to us because the rough inner surfaces
of the hollow hairs reflect visible light. Ultraviolet light from
the sun travels down the core of each hair where it is soaked up
and stored by the bear's black skin. |
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•
Many people think that Mount Everest, at 8,848m, is the tallest
mountain on Earth. However, Mauna Kea, an inactive volcano off the island
of Hawaii, is actually taller. Although only 4,205m (13,800ft) of Mauna
Kea stands above sea level, it is in fact over 10,000m (6.2 miles) tall
if measured from the ocean floor to its summit. (bbc - Blue Planet)
•
The oceans cover 71 per cent of the Earth's surface and contain
97 per cent of the Earth's water. Less than 1 per cent is fresh water,
and 2-3 per cent is contained in glaciers and ice caps. (bbc - Blue Planet)
•
Earth is the only planet in our solar system to have oceans.
•
At least 123 freshwater species became extinct during the 20th
century. These include 79 invertebrates, 40 fishes, and 4 amphibians.
(There may well have been other species that were never identified.)
•
At the deepest point in the ocean the pressure is more than 8 tons
per square inch, or equivalent to one person trying to support 50
jumbo jets. (Ocean Planet)
• If all the land in the world was
flattened out, the Earth would be a smooth sphere completely covered by
a continuous layer of seawater 2,686 metres deep.
• If the ocean's total salt content
were dried, it would cover the continents to a depth of 5 feet. (Ocean
Planet)
•
The
deepest known point in the ocean is the Mariana Trench which reaches depths
of over 36,000 feet (11,000 meters).oxfam.org.uk
•
The
2nd deepest known point in the ocean is the Tonga Trench in the western
part of the Pacific Ocean reach depths in excess of 10,000 metres (32,800
feet).
•
The
speed of sound in water is 1,435 m/sec - nearly five times faster than
the speed of sound in air.
•
Ocean
water and ice make up almost 98 percent of all the water on Earth.
•
Each
year, three times as much rubbish is dumped into the world's oceans as
the weight of fish caught.
•
The
valley glaciers of Greenland produce some 12,000 to 15,000 sizable icebergs
every year.
•
The
Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean, containing more than twice the volume
of water as the Atlantic Ocean.
•
Hydrothermal
vents, fractures in the sea floor that discharge hot seawater laden with
hydrogen sulphide, support the only ecosystem known to run on chemical
energy rather than energy from the sun, including mussels, large bivalve
clams, and huge tube worms.
•
Sound travels five times faster in water than in air. For
example, in 1960, scientists set off depth charges off the coast of Australia
and 2-1/2 hours later the explosion was heard under the water in Bermuda. (ocean98.org)
•
80% of all life on earth is found under the ocean surface. (ocean98.org)
•
The
average depth of all oceans is about 2.3 miles.
•
The
average temperature of all oceans is about 39 degrees F (3.8 degrees C).
• The oceans provide the biggest source
of wild or domestic protein in the world. Each year some 70 to 75 million
tons of fish are caught in the ocean. Fish (fin and shell) are the
world’s largest single source of animal protein, exceeding production
of beef, sheep, poultry or eggs.
• Algae, the first plants on earth,
developed in the sea 3.5 million years ago and give off oxygen as they
produce food, as other plants do. Today, algae produce over half
of the oxygen that we breathe. (ocean98.org)
•
The
largest ocean is the Pacific, followed by the Atlantic and the Indian.
•
More than half of the world’s animal groups are found only in the
sea.
•
There are more species of fish than mammals, reptiles and birds combined.
•
Scientists
estimate that 80 percent of all life on earth is found under the ocean’s
surface.
•
Life
in the sea developed more than three billion years ago. Land dwellers
appeared comparatively recently – 400 million years ago.
•
Seafood accounts for the largest percentage of human protein
consumption – 83 million metric tons/91 million tones consumed annually.
•
The ocean contains the largest biological structure on earth –
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.
•
Coral
reefs support 4000 species of fish, 700 species of coral and thousands
of plants and animals. (Project AWARE Foundation)
• Marine animals have a highly developed
system of chemical communication – many featuring receptors which
enable them to detect food or predators from a considerable distance.
• 98 per cent of species found in
the oceans live on or in the bottom.
• Seaweed is used in many household
items: photographic film, cotton thread, medicines, paint, face creams,
soup, and ice cream.
•
Although the different species of sea horses can range in size
from less than an inch to over a foot, in most species, the males and
females are strictly monogamous and form a bond by repeating a greeting
dance every morning. Sea horses are unique because it is the male
that gives birth to hundreds of live young after 10 days to 6 weeks of
brooding them in a pouch on his belly. seahorse.mcgill.ca
• Tuna are the fastest swimming fish
in the ocean. An adult southernbluefin tuna can achieve speed bursts
of up to 70 kilometres per hour to 55 miles per hour and may weigh up
to 1,500 pounds. Prized for sushi in Japan, bluefins can bring as
much as $20,000 each at U.S. docks.(ocean98.org)
•
The oceans contain an estimated 1370 million cubic kilometres
of water.
•
Albatrosses have been recorded flying at a speed of 115
kilometres per hour.
• Recently
it has been proved that some albatrosses circumnavigate the world in forty-six
days:
• To
match the blue's tremendous size would take about 20 full-grown elephants.
The record for the largest creature on the planet that has ever lived
was a female Blue Whale killed off South Georgia in 1923. (sgisland.org)
•
The surface of Venus – millions of kilometres away and hidden by
clouds of sulphuric acid – has been better mapped than the Earth’s
sea bed.
•
It’s been estimated that the deep sea may contain as many as 10
million species that have not yet been described or named.
•
Six
out of every 10 humans live in coastal regions.
• The blue whale is the largest animal
that has ever lived. Feeding on euphausiids, small shrimp-like species,
blue whales grow to a length of 40 meters (131 feet) and a weight of 94,000
kg (103 tons). At birth, blue whale calves reach 24 feet long. (ocean98.org)
• After turtle hatchlings emerge from
their nests, the only time a sea turtle returns to land is for the female
to lay her eggs. Once male sea turtles emerge from their nests and
scamper down the beach as hatchlings, they never again return to land.
(NMFS Biological Opinion)
•
An estimated 10,000 marine species are transported in ships’ ballast
water between bio-geographic regions at any given moment worldwide.
•
Commercial whaling during the last century decimated most of the
world’s whale population. Estimates suggest that between 1925, when
the first whaling factory ship was introduced, and 1975, more than 1.5
million whales were killed. Whalers hunted one whale population after
another, moving from species to species as populations declined from exploitation.
After repeated requests from the world community, the International Whaling
Commission (IWC) agreed to a moratorium on commercial whaling that came
into effect in 1986.
• Several types of reef fish, such
as snappers and groupers, are protogynous hermaphrodites, which means
that are born as females and change sex, to become males, later in life.
Therefore, during their life span of anywhere between 25 and 50 years,
each fish has the opportunity to be both a male and a female. (fisheries.org)
Antarctica
•
Antarctica
is the 5th biggest continent and 10% of the earth's land area.
• Antarctica's total area is 14 million
km_. In summer, there is another 2.5 million km_ of sea ice, which increases
to 19 million km_ in winter, more than doubling the size of Antarctica!
• Only 2% of the land is not covered
in ice.
• Ice slowly builds up over millions
of years at the rate of 50 to 900 mm/year. There are about 24 000 000
km_ of ice altogether.
• Antarctic ice which at its thickest
reaches 5 km in depth, comprises almost 70% of the earth's fresh water.
If it all melted, sea levels would rise between 50 and 60 m.
• Antarctic glaciers are giant rivers
of ice that flow slowly towards the sea.
• Due to its ice cap Antarctica is
the highest continent, averaging 2300 m above sea level.
• The highest peak is Vinson Massif
at 4900 m.
• Antarctica has the lowest recorded
temperature; -90°C at Vostock in 1983. Inland, temperatures range
from -70°C in winter to -35°C in summer. Corresponding figures
for coastal regions are -30°C and 0°C.
• Antarctica is so cold because up
to 80% of incoming solar radiation is reflected back into space by ice
and snow. The other 20% is largely absorbed by the atmosphere or reflected
by clouds.
• Antarctica is the windiest place
on earth with gusts up to 327 km/hr having been recorded.
• Antarctica is the driest place on
earth. In some places like the Dry Valleys, it has not rained for thousands
of years.
• 270 million years ago, Antarctica
was part of Gondwanaland and probably covered with tundra, marsh and forests,
explaining why coal and petrified wood can still be found today. There
are also likely to be reserves of oil.
• Antarctica is the least known of
the earth's land masses; fewer than 200 000 people have ever been there.
Antarctica is the world's finest laboratory. Scientists from all over
the world come to study, among others, such things as the organisms that
live in this unspoiled ecosystem, the consequences of climate change and
clues to the origins of the universe.
Sea
Ice
FORMATION: Every year the sea ice in Antarctica increases
and decreases in a dramatic, ancient cycle. As much as 7.7 million square
miles (20 million square kilometers) of ice forms every winter. The formation
is the greatest seasonal phenomenon on Earth and it may double the size
of Antarctica each winter.
KRILL: In the winter vast swarms of krill feed on the
algae that grow under the sea ice. Researchers are studying this in detail
on this voyage.
CLIMATE: Antarctic sea ice has a huge effect on world
climates. It reflects solar heat back into space, making Antarctic air
colder, while reducing heat loss from the water below the ice.
Forms
of Sea Ice
GREASE ICE: Grease ice forms as winter approaches, when
the sea begins to cool. Ice crystals form in plates, giving the water
an oily sheen.
PANCAKE ICE: As the temperature lowers, the grease ice
connects and forms a crust, which is then broken up by winds or waves
into pancake ice—separate floating disks.
PACK ICE: Eventually the pancake ice disks crowd together
and thicken. Waves break the mass into pack ice.
ICEBERGS: Icebergs calve off from ice shelves that float
along the continent shores.
Types
of Icebergs
Tabular
- A flat-topped iceberg. Most show horizonal banding. Usually
width is greater than 5 times height.
Domed - An iceberg which is smooth and rounded on top.
Pinnacled - An iceberg with a central spire, or pyramid,
may have additional spires.
Wedged - An iceberg with flat surfaces steep on one side
and gradually sloped to the water on the other forming a wedge shape.
Drydocked - An iceberg which is eroded such that a U-shaped
slot is formed near, or at, water level with two or more pinnacles or
columns.
Blocky - A flat-topped iceberg with steep sides.
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Whale
Facts
•
Japan's expanded programme will result in annual catches that
are more than half the total cumulative catches for scientific research
by all nations in the past half century. (Nature, Vol.435/16 June, 2005)
• Japan's scientific whaling now targets
Minkes, Brydes, Sei, Sperm, Fin and Humpback whales. The program has vastly
expanded since JARPA 1 commenced in l987-88 Antarctic season.
• Humpback whales are listed internationally
as vulnerable.
• Fin whales are listed as endangered.
Very little is known about the status of Fin whales in the Southern Ocean.
• There is major scientific concern
over the targeting of species that were subject to massive over-exploitation
during earlier whaling which remain well below their pre-exploitation
levels.
• There is no valid estimate of Southern
Hemisphere Minke Whales ((IWC) In fact, this whale population may have
suffered a precipitous decline over the past decade. (IWC).
• The implications of this decline
in abundance for ecologically related species, in particular other cetaceans
and the state of the Antarctic marine ecosystem have not been examined.
(IWC Res. 2003-3)
• Humpbacks targeted by Japan come
from small, highly depleted populations that breed in the tropical South
Pacific. Their demise will impact on small Pacific nations, which rely
on whale watching for a major input to their economies. (Fiji, Samoa,
Cook Islands, Tonga)
• Whales caught in Japan's special
permit operations provide over 3,000 tonnes of edible products per year
that are sold for commercial purposes; Revenue from the commercial sale
of whale meat is estimated to be around $US 50 million annually. Increased
whaling as proposed under JARPA 2 will see a significant rise in this
figure.
Global
warming
• There is little doubt that the planet
is warming. Over the last century the average temperature has climbed
about 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.6 of a degree Celsius) around the world.
The spring ice thaw in the Northern Hemisphere occurs 9 days earlier than
it did 150 years ago, and the fall freeze now typically starts 10 days
later.
The 1990s was the warmest decade since the mid-1800s, when record-keeping
started. The hottest years recorded: 1998, 2002, 2003, 2001, and 1997.
• The multinational Arctic Climate
Impact Assessment (ACIA) report recently concluded that in Alaska, western
Canada, and eastern Russia, average temperatures have increased as much
as 4 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit (3 to 4 degrees Celsius) in the past 50 years.
The rise is nearly twice the global average. In Barrow, Alaska (the U.S.'s
northernmost city) average temperatures are up over 4 degrees Fahrenheit
(2.5 to 3 degrees Celsius) in 30 years.
The United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projects
that global temperatures will rise an additional 3 to10 degrees Fahrenheit
(1.6 to 5.5 degrees Celsius) by century's end.
• Over the last million years the
Earth has fluctuated between colder and warmer periods. The shifts have
occurred in roughly 100,000-year intervals thought to be regulated by
sunlight. Earth's sunlight quota depends upon its orbit and celestial
orientation.
But changes have also occurred more rapidly in the past—and scientists
hope that these changes can tell us more about the current state of climate
change. During the last ice age, approximately 70,000 to 11,500 years
ago, ice covered much of North America and Europe—yet sudden, sometimes
drastic, climate changes occurred during the period. Greenland ice cores
indicate one spike in which the area's surface temperature increased by
15 degrees Fahrenheit (9 degrees Celsius) in just 10 years.
• Where do scientists find clues to
past climate change? The tale is told in remnant materials like glacial
ice and moraines, pollen-rich mud, stalagmites, the rings of corals and
trees, and ocean sediments that yield the shells of microscopic organisms.
Human history yields clues as well, through records like ancient writings
and inscriptions, gardening and vintner records, and the logs of historic
ships.
• Rising temperatures have a dramatic
impact on Arctic ice, which serves as a kind of "air conditioner"
at the top of the world. Since 1978 Arctic sea ice area has shrunk by
some 9 percent per decade, and thinned as well. Over the very long term,
Greenland's massive ice sheet holds enough melt water to raise sea level
by about 23 feet (about 7 meters). ACIA climate models project significant
melting of the sheet throughout the 21st century.
Vast quantities of fresh water are tied up in the world's many melting
glaciers. When Montana's Glacier National Park was created in 1910 it
held some 150 glaciers. Now fewer than 30, greatly shrunken glaciers,
remain. Tropical glaciers are in even more trouble. The legendary snows
of Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro 19,340-foot (5,895-meter) peak have melted
by some 80 percent since 1912 and could be gone by 2020.
• Sea levels have risen and fallen
many times over the Earth's long geological history. Average global sea
level has risen by 4 to 8 inches (10 to 20cm) over the past century according
to the IPCC.
The IPCC's 2001 report projects that sea level could rise between 4 and
35 inches (10 to 89cm) by century's end. Such rises could have major effects
for coastal dwellers. A 1.5-foot (50-centimeter) sea level rise in flat
coastal areas would cause a typical coastline retreat of 150 feet (50
meters).
Worldwide some 100 million people live within 3 feet (1 meter) of mean
sea level. Rises of just 4 inches (10 centimeters) could promote flooding
in many South Sea islands, while in the U.S. Florida and Louisiana are
at risk. The Indian Ocean nation of Maldives has a maximum elevation of
only 8 feet (2.5 meters). Construction of a sea wall around the capital,
Male, was driven by vulnerability to the rising tides.
• The ocean's circulation system,
known as the ocean conveyor belt, moderates global temperatures by moving
tropical heat around the planet. Global warming could alter the balance
of this system, via an influx of freshwater from melting ice caps for
example, creating unforeseen and possibly fast-paced change.
Climate models suggest that global warming could cause more frequent extreme
weather conditions. Intense hurricanes and storm surges could threaten
coastal communities, while heat waves, fires and drought could also become
more common.
• Since the 1860s, increased industrialization
and shrinking forests have helped raise the atmosphere's CO2 level by
almost 100 parts per million—and Northern Hemisphere temperatures
have followed suit. Increases in temperatures and greenhouse gasses have
been even sharper since the 1950s.
Water vapor is the most important greenhouse gas. Carbon dioxide, methane
and nitrous oxide also contain heat and help keep Earth's temperate climate
balanced in the cold void of space. Human activities, burning fossil fuels
and clearing forests, have greatly increased concentrations by producing
these gases faster than plants and oceans can soak them up. The gases
linger in the atmosphere for years, meaning that even a complete halt
in emissions would not immediately stop the warming trend they promote.
• In the Arctic the impacts of a warming
climate are being felt already. Coastal Indigenous communities report
shorter periods of sea ice, which fails to temper ocean storms and their
destructive coastal erosion. Increased snow and ice melt have caused higher
rivers while thawing permafrost has wreaked havoc with roads and other
infrastructure. Some communities have had to move from historic coastline
locations.
Sea ice loss is devastating for species that have adapted to the environment,
such as polar bears and ringed seals in the Arctic and Antarctic penguins.
• Studies show that many European
plants now flower a week earlier than they did in the 1950s and also lose
their leaves 5 days later.
Biologists report that many birds and frogs are breeding earlier in the
season. An analysis of 35 nonmigratory butterfly species showed that two-thirds
now range 2 to 150 miles (3.5 to 240 kilometers) farther north than they
did a few decades ago.
• By 2050, rising temperatures exacerbated
by human-induced belches of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases
could send more than a million of Earth's land-dwelling plants and animals
down the road to extinction, according to a recent study.
• Coral reefs worldwide are "bleaching".
losing key algae and resident organisms, as water temperatures rise above
85 degrees Fahrenheit (29.5 degrees Celsius) through periods of calm,
sunny weather. Scientists worry that rapid climate change could inhibit
the ability of many species to adapt within complex and interdependent
ecosystems.
• The effects of a warming globe may
not be entirely negative. Heating costs could decline for those in colder
climates, while vast marginal agricultural areas in northern latitudes
might become more viable. Arctic shipping and resource extraction operations
could also benefit—summer sea ice breakup in Hudson Bay already
occurs two to three weeks earlier than it did half a century ago. (national
geographic)
GhostNet's
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•
In 1978 a 3500 meter section of lost driftnet was found floating
in the North Pacific. 1500 meters of the net was recovered and contained
the rest remains out their.
• A 75 meter section of driftnet recently
caught more than 150 rotten salmon, 99 seabirds (including albatrosses,
tufted puffins, shearwaters and northern fulmars) & other assorted
fish.
• In 1985, a Japanese drifnet vessel
recovered four sections of lost net which were 30 to 86 meters long. All
sections were found to have live and dead animals entangled, including
yellowtail, pomfret, two hammerhead sharks, three blue sharks, an ocean
sunfish and a fur seal.
• In the Sea of Cortez, in Mexico,
it is commonplace for manta rays to die after becoming entangled in ghostnets.
• In the 1980's it was estimated that
approximately 30,000 northern fur seals die each year after becoming entangled
in marine debris, which consisted mainly of lost or abandoned fishing
gear.
In the Wider Caribbean Region, tens of thousands of sea turtles die each
year after becoming entangled in active or abandoned fishing gear.
• During 2001, a multi-agency effort
consisting of 3 ships and 18 divers removed nearly 70 tons of debris during
270 ship days at sea. clearing only two atolls in the 1200-mile Hawaiian
Archipelago.
• In March and April, 2005 arial surveys
over the subtropical convergence zone in the north Pacific showed around
2,000 individual pieces of debris were detected in three overflights of
specific areas. These pieces included over 100 nets or pieces of net.
One of these was 200-300 m of drift net with floats intact. A number were
balls of net up to 10 m across.
• According to the WWF, an estimated
600km of ghostnets exist in Hong Kong. This translates into one ghostnet
per 150km of the sea around Hong Kong.
• During 2002 to 2003, an estimated
1,096 tones of marine life was killed by ghostnets in Hong Kong!
• In 2005, Approximately 40 voluntary
staff members joined the WWF at Ho Hai Wan Center and helped remove a
total of 2 tonnes of ghostnets from the sea. Through their efforts, at
least 133 marine creatures, including 60 crabs, 21 sea cucumbers, sea
stars, shrimps, etc., were saved.
Australia's
marine environment
•
Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, Australia
has rights and responsibilities over some 16 million km2 of ocean –
more than twice the area of the Australian continent.
•
Australia’s unique marine environments contain: the world’s
largest areas and highest species diversity of tropical and temperate
seagrasses; some of the largest areas of coral reefs; the highest diversity
of mangrove species; exceptional levels of biodiversity for a wide range
of marine invertebrates; and high levels of endemism in our temperate
and sub-Antarctic waters.
•
More than 1500 new species have been discovered in Australian
waters in the past 10 years.
•
Australia is home to more than half of the shark and ray species
in the world.
•
Australia’s marine environments are under increas-ing pressure
from threats such as unsustainable fishing; introduced marine pests and
diseases; unsustainable tourism and recreation; climate change; pollution
and sedimentation; and some forms of mining.
•
80 per cent of Australians live and work within 50 kilometres of the coastline.
•
The
Great Barrier Reef extends for 2000 kilometres and is visible from the
Moon.
• An
estimated 3.36 million Australians, aged 5 years or older, went recreational
fishing at least once during the year 2001-2002, representing a national
recreational fishing participation rate of 19.5%.
•
Between 200 and 400 introduced marine species, including the Northern
Pacific seastar, European shore crab and Japanese kelp, are believed to
inhabit Australian waters.
•
A new introduced species becomes established every three to six
months in Australia’s busy Port Phillip Bay in Victoria.
•
Between 1997 and 1999, Port Phillip Bay’s Northern Pacific
seastar population increased from negligible to 30 million and is now
estimated at around 100 million.
•
In 2002 the Great Barrier Reef experienced a mass bleaching event
that was more severe than the event of 1998, making the bleaching event
of 2002 the worst ever recorded for the GBR.
•
Australia has one of the largest marine jurisdictions in the world:
an area more than twice that of our land mass
• An enormous range of economic and
recreational opportunities exist, while the oceans around Australia play
a major role in controlling world and regional climate
• Extending from the tropics to the
Antarctic, only about 20 per cent of Australia’s seafloor has been
physically mapped (CSIRO – Oceans department)
The
5 oceans.
Pacific
Ocean:
The Pacific Ocean is the largest of the world's five
oceans
Location: the body of water between the Southern Ocean, Asia,
Australia and the western hemisphere
Area: 155.6 million square km, or about 15 times the size
of the US. The Pacific Ocean covers about 28 per cent of the global
surface - larger than the total land area of the world
Terrain: the ocean floor in the eastern Pacific is dominated
by the East Pacific Rise, while the western Pacific is dissected by
deep trenches, including the Mariana Trench, which is the world's
deepest place
Deepest point: Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench - 11,022m
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Atlantic
Ocean:
The Atlantic Ocean is the second largest of the world's
five oceans (after the Pacific Ocean, but larger than the Indian Ocean,
Southern Ocean, and Arctic Ocean)
Location: the body of water between Africa, Europe, the Southern
Ocean, and the western hemisphere
Area: 76.8 million square km, or just under 6.5 times the
size of the US
Terrain: the ocean floor is dominated by the Mid-Atlantic
Ridge, a rugged north-south underwater mountain range stretching down
the entire Atlantic basin
Deepest point: Milwaukee Deep in the Puerto Rico Trench -
8,605m
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Indian
Ocean:
The Indian Ocean remains the third largest of the world's
five oceans (after the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean, but larger
than the Southern Ocean and Arctic Ocean)
Location: the body of water between Africa, the Southern
Ocean, Asia, and Australia Area: 68.6 million square km or
about 5.5 times the size of the US
Terrain: the ocean floor is dominated by the Mid-Indian Ocean
Ridge and subdivided by the Southeast Indian Ocean Ridge, the Southwest
Indian Ocean Ridge and Ninetyeast Ridge
Deepest point: Java Trench - 7,258m
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Southern
Ocean:
The Southern Ocean is the fourth-largest of the world's
five oceans
Location: body of water between 60 degrees south latitude
and Antarctica
Area: 20.3 million sq km, or slightly more than twice the
size of the US
Terrain: the Southern Ocean is deep, 4,000-5,000m over most
of its extent with only limited areas of shallow water. The Antarctic
Circumpolar Current (21,000km in length) moves perpetually eastward.
It is the world's largest ocean current, transporting 130 million
cubic meters of water per second - 100 times the flow of all the world's
rivers
Deepest point: 7,235m at the southern end of the
South Sandwich Trench
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Arctic
Ocean:
The Arctic Ocean remains the smallest of the world's
five oceans
Location: body of water mostly north of the Arctic Circle
Area: 14.1 million square km, or slightly less than 1.5 times
the size of the US
Terrain: the ocean floor is about 50 per cent continental
shelf (the highest percentage of any ocean) with the remainder a central
basin interrupted by three submarine ridges (Alpha Cordillera, Nansen
Cordillera and Lomonosov Ridge)
Deepest point: Fram Basin - 4,665m |
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Marine preservation.
•
The living marine environment is like a chain with many links
– if one is broken, an entire species may disappear. Every species
plays an important role in maintaining healthy ecosystems and the loss
of biodiversity weakens the entire natural system.
•
65,000-80,000
whales, dolphins, seals and other marine mammals perish through dirty
fishing methods each year.
• Nearly
58% of the world’s reefs are at risk from human impacts such as
destructive fishing impacts, pollution, and coastal development, and many
have already been degraded beyond recovery. Coral Reef Task Force, 2000.
• Since
the 1960s, more than one million kilograms of cyanide have been injected
onto coral reefs to stun and capture ornamental fish in the Philippines
destined for live aquarium hobbyists in North America and Europe.
Demand for the live food fish trade from Asian countries is further intensifying
the use of cyanide on reefs. Poison and profits
• On
some shallow Indo-Pacific reefs, 70-90% of the corals died as a result
of the largest ever-recorded bleaching event, believed to be caused by
abnormally high ocean temperatures, in 1998. Coral Reef Task Force, 2000.
•
Hundreds
of millions of tonnes of toxic chemicals, sewage, industrial waste, agricultural
run-off and oil are dumped in the oceans every year – and up to
80 per cent originate on land.
•
Marine
fisheries throughout the world catch over 80 million tonnes of fish every
year.
•
Every day ships throughout the world throw 5.5 million items of
waste overboard.
•
Three times more rubbish is dumped into the world’s oceans
as the weight of fish caught annually. spinneypress.com.au
•
Each
year 20 million tonnes of fish, seabirds, marine mammals and other ocean
life are killed unnecessarily by indiscriminate fishing practices.
• Seahorse
populations in Indo-Pacific countries have declined by 25 to 75% over
the past five years largely due to habitat loss and overfishing. Coral
Reef Task Force, 2000.
• The
American Fisheries Society recently identified 82 fish species as vulnerable,
threatened, or endangered in North American waters, and 22 species as
vulnerable, threatened, or endangered globally. Among this list
of severely depleted species are some of the world’s most prized
food and game fish, including several species of shark, skates, sturgeons,
groupers, Atlantic halibut, Atlantic salmon, and Pacific rockfish.
Earlier this year, NMFS proposed its first-ever listing of a marine fish
species—the smalltooth sawfish—in response to a petition to
list the fish as endangered under the Endangered Species Act. This
“living fossil,” having first appeared in the oceans nearly
60 million years ago, has been nearly extirpated throughout its range
in the North and South Atlantic, and is now confined to a small region
in the shallow coastal waters of Florida. Bycatch is believed to
be the main culprit in the sawfish’s demise.fisheries.org
• From
1993-1998, cruise ships were involved in 87 confirmed cases of illegal
discharges of oil, garbage and hazardous wastes and paid more than $30
million in fines. Cruise ship pollution includes sewage (a typical
one-week trip generates 210,000 gallons of sewage), gray water (1,000,000
gallons), hazardous wastes (dry cleaning and photo processing waste),
solid waste (8 tons), and oily bilge water. The Blue Water Network.
• The
Pacific Northwest killer whale faces an 81% chance of extinction in the
next 300 years. Salmon population declines, a major prey item of
the killer whale, are believed to be primary threat to the killer whale.
Seaweb.
• In
the U.S. shrimp fishery of the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic, the
amount of bycatch is equal to the storage capacity of 50,000 10-ton garbage
trucks. Congressional Record.
• In
1994, the Alaska fishing fleet dumped a staggering 750 million pounds
of bycatch, more than was caught by the entire New England fishing fleet
in each year from 1994 to 1999. NMFS’ Fisheries.
Freediving.
•
The
record for the deepest free dive is held by Jacques Mayol. He dove to
an astounding depth of 86 m without any breathing equipment.
Attacking
Sharks.
•
Over 375 shark species have been identified, but only about a
dozen are considered particularly dangerous. Three species are responsible
for most human attacks: great white (Carcharodon carcharias), tiger (Galeocerdo
cuvier), and bull (Carcharhinus leucas) sharks.
•
Of the 375 or so shark species, about 80% grow to less than 1.6
m and are unable to hurt people or rarely encounter people.
•
The media can have a voracious appetite for "shark bites
man" stories. The summer of 2001, for example, saw an explosion of
shark-attack hype and was even heralded on the cover of Time magazine
as the "Summer of the Shark." Yet 2001 was statistically average:
The year saw 76 shark attacks and 5 fatalities worldwide, compared to
85 attacks and 12 fatalities in 2000.
•
More people die from bee stings than from shark attacks.
•
More people die from coconuts falling on their heads than from
shark attacks.
•
The
largest shark is the whale shark (Rhincodon typus), which can grow to
60 feet (20 meters) long. The gentle giant eats tiny plankton.
•
Sharks
are known as eating machines. But because many species are cold-blooded,
some sharks eat only about 2 percent of their body weight each day. That's
a bit less than humans typically eat.
•
The
United States averages just 16 shark attacks each year and slightly less
than one shark-attack fatality every two years. Meanwhile, in the coastal
U.S. states alone, lightning strikes and kills more than 41 people each
year.
•
By 2017, 20 species of shark could be commercially extinct 100
million sharks are slaughtered each year.
•
While
sharks kill fewer than 20 people a year, their own numbers suffer greatly
at human hands. Between 20 and 100 million sharks die each year due to
fishing.
•
A major cause of shark mortality is "finning," a process
in which fishers kill sharks solely to remove their fins. Fins can sell
for U.S. $400 per kilogram (U.S. $880 per pound) or more.
Sharks.
•
For more than 400 million years sharks have dominated the oceans,
evolving long before dinosaurs walked the earth.
•
Shark fins are amongst the most valuable items taken from the
sea. Consumer demand has prompted a massive surge in its demise.
•
There are approximately 390 different species of shark
• Cartilage - like our noses and ears
- makes up the skeleton of the shark.
•
The bull shark is the only shark that can live in both fresh and
salt water.
•
More people are struck by lightening each year than are attacked
by sharks
•
Only seven species of shark are known to have ever attacked humans.
• Sharks can only swim forwards.
• Smell is so important to a shark
that two thirds of its brain is devoted to processing scent information
• Whale sharks can grow up to 50 feet
in length and weigh 20 tonnes.
• A huge oily liver gives sharks almost
neutral buoyancy.
• Sharks may have up to 3,000 teeth
at any one time.
• Mako sharks have been recorded at
speeds of 43mph - making them the fastest
• Hong Kong imports shark fins from
125 countries and exports them to 75 countries. (Shark and Marine Conservation)
•
Sharks do not sleep. Rather, they experience alternating periods
of activity and rest.
Polar
bears.
•
Polar bears are the largest meat-eating animals on land!
•
Polar bears have more problems with overheating than they do with
cold. Even in very cold weather, they quickly overheat when they try to
run.
•
Polar bears have two layers of fur for further protection from
the cold.
•
The polar bear's compact ears and small tail also help prevent
heat loss.
•
Polar bears know how to pack on the fat: A single bear can consume
100 pounds of blubber at one sitting.
•
A polar bear's body temperature is 98.6°, which is average
for mammals.
•
A thick layer of blubber (up to 4.5 inches thick) provides polar
bears with such excellent insulation that their body temperature and metabolic
rate remain the same even at -34°F.
•
When curled up in a ball, polar bears sometimes cover their muzzles
— which radiate heat — with one of their thickly furred paws.