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April 25, 2014
A Blueprint for Protecting the World’s Oceans
“ There is really only one ocean. But over time, it’s been cordoned off into various regions, with the most fluid of boundaries. Today, geographers recognize more than 50 seaswithin five major oceans....

A Blueprint for Protecting the World’s Oceans

There is really only one ocean. But over time, it’s been cordoned off into various regions, with the most fluid of boundaries. Today, geographers recognize more than 50 seaswithin five major oceans. There are also more than 150 Exclusive Economic Zones where individual coastal nations exercise sovereignty up to 200 nautical miles from their shores. 

Now, thanks to the rise of marine protected areas (MPAs), the global ocean is becoming increasingly partitioned. The term is a catchall for sites like ocean sanctuaries, marine parks, and no-fishing zones—scattered havens where marine life is supposed to thrive, free of human interference (or, at least, subject to limited human interference). The world’s 5,000-plus MPAs include national treasures like the Galápagos and the Great Barrier Reef, but they also include small “fishery-management zones” that are undistinguished except for fine-print prohibitions on certain types of fishing gear. Even the Great Barrier Reef is open to extractive activities like trawl fishing and deep-sea dredging.

Only 2 percent of the ocean is currently covered by some sort of MPA. (In contrast, 12 percent of the world’s land is protected in national-park systems and wildlife preserves.) And only half of that 2 percent—a mere 1 percent of the ocean—is classified as “no-take,” or completely closed to fishing and other extractive activity.

The international conservation community has long heralded the role of MPAs in protecting ocean resources.

Read more. [Image: MPAtlas.org ]

March 5, 2014
Man vs. Sea: The Quest for the Perfect Armor is Nearly Complete
“ A search for a photo of a miniature submarine took me to a government website, and as I browsed the tiny thumbnails, I saw something better than a tiny sub in the water. I found a...

Man vs. Sea: The Quest for the Perfect Armor is Nearly Complete

A search for a photo of a miniature submarine took me to a government website, and as I browsed the tiny thumbnails, I saw something better than a tiny sub in the water. I found a picture of a man standing on the bottom of the ocean. And I’ve been staring at it for a week.

Read more.

February 27, 2014
What It’s Like at the Bottom of the Ocean

What It’s Like at the Bottom of the Ocean

January 21, 2014
There’s All This Fish DNA in the Water
“ Fish are, in a lot of ways, like humans. They’re amazingly diverse. They have well-defined senses of taste and smell. They often travel in groups. They go really well with olive oil.
One other way fish are...

There’s All This Fish DNA in the Water

Fish are, in a lot of ways, like humans. They’re amazingly diverse. They have well-defined senses of taste and smell. They often travel in groups. They go really well with olive oil. 

One other way fish are like us? They’re also shedding cells, constantly. But while humans’ cells generally slough off into air, the fishy ones end up in water. This leads to what one scientist refers to, accurately if somewhat horrifyingly, as "a soup of cells" in the sea. The ingredients of said soup? “Skin, damaged tissues, and … body wastes." 

The mixture is technically called eDNA, and you’d be forgiven for thinking that the "e” stands for “ewwwww.” (It actually stands for “environmental.”) And while you may prefer not to think about the stuff when planning your next beach vacation, eDNA could prove to be wonderfully useful. For science!

Read more.

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