Eight urgent, fundamental and simultaneous steps needed to restore ocean health, and the consequences for humanity and the planet of inaction or delay
The ocean crisis is urgent and central to human wellbeing and life on Earth; past and current activities are damaging the planet's main life support system for future generations. We are witnessing an increase in ocean heat, disturbance, acidification, bio‐invasions and nutrients, and reducing...
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Published in | Aquatic conservation Vol. 30; no. 1; pp. 194 - 208 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Oxford
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.01.2020
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Abstract | The ocean crisis is urgent and central to human wellbeing and life on Earth; past and current activities are damaging the planet's main life support system for future generations. We are witnessing an increase in ocean heat, disturbance, acidification, bio‐invasions and nutrients, and reducing oxygen levels. Several of these act like ratchets: once detrimental or negative changes have occurred, they may lock in place and may not be reversible, especially at gross ecological and ocean process scales.
Each change may represent a loss to humanity of resources, ecosystem function, oxygen production and species. The longer we pursue unsuitable actions, the more we close the path to recovery and better ocean health and greater benefits for humanity in the future.
We stand at a critical juncture and have identified eight priority issues that need to be addressed in unison to help avert a potential ecological disaster in the global ocean. They form a purposely ambitious agenda for global governance and are aimed at informing decision‐makers at a high level. They should also be of interest to the general public.
Of all the themes, the highest priority is to rigorously address global warming and limit surface temperature rise to 1.5°C by 2100, as warming is the pre‐eminent factor driving change in the ocean. The other themes are establishing a robust and comprehensive High Seas Treaty, enforcing existing standards for Marine Protected Areas and expanding their coverage, especially in terms of high levels of protection, adopting a precautionary pause on deep‐sea mining, ending overfishing and destructive fishing practices, radically reducing marine pollution, putting in place a financing mechanism for ocean management and protection, and lastly, scaling up science/data gathering and facilitating data sharing.
By implementing all eight measures in unison, as a coordinated strategy, we can build resilience to climate change, help sustain fisheries productivity, particularly for low‐income countries dependent on fisheries, protect coasts (e.g. via soft‐engineering/habitat‐based approaches), promote mitigation (e.g. carbon storage) and enable improved adaptation to rapid global change. |
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AbstractList | The ocean crisis is urgent and central to human wellbeing and life on Earth; past and current activities are damaging the planet's main life support system for future generations. We are witnessing an increase in ocean heat, disturbance, acidification, bio‐invasions and nutrients, and reducing oxygen levels. Several of these act like ratchets: once detrimental or negative changes have occurred, they may lock in place and may not be reversible, especially at gross ecological and ocean process scales. Each change may represent a loss to humanity of resources, ecosystem function, oxygen production and species. The longer we pursue unsuitable actions, the more we close the path to recovery and better ocean health and greater benefits for humanity in the future. We stand at a critical juncture and have identified eight priority issues that need to be addressed in unison to help avert a potential ecological disaster in the global ocean. They form a purposely ambitious agenda for global governance and are aimed at informing decision‐makers at a high level. They should also be of interest to the general public. Of all the themes, the highest priority is to rigorously address global warming and limit surface temperature rise to 1.5°C by 2100, as warming is the pre‐eminent factor driving change in the ocean. The other themes are establishing a robust and comprehensive High Seas Treaty, enforcing existing standards for Marine Protected Areas and expanding their coverage, especially in terms of high levels of protection, adopting a precautionary pause on deep‐sea mining, ending overfishing and destructive fishing practices, radically reducing marine pollution, putting in place a financing mechanism for ocean management and protection, and lastly, scaling up science/data gathering and facilitating data sharing. By implementing all eight measures in unison, as a coordinated strategy, we can build resilience to climate change, help sustain fisheries productivity, particularly for low‐income countries dependent on fisheries, protect coasts (e.g. via soft‐engineering/habitat‐based approaches), promote mitigation (e.g. carbon storage) and enable improved adaptation to rapid global change. The ocean crisis is urgent and central to human wellbeing and life on Earth; past and current activities are damaging the planet's main life support system for future generations. We are witnessing an increase in ocean heat, disturbance, acidification, bio‐invasions and nutrients, and reducing oxygen levels. Several of these act like ratchets: once detrimental or negative changes have occurred, they may lock in place and may not be reversible, especially at gross ecological and ocean process scales. Each change may represent a loss to humanity of resources, ecosystem function, oxygen production and species. The longer we pursue unsuitable actions, the more we close the path to recovery and better ocean health and greater benefits for humanity in the future. We stand at a critical juncture and have identified eight priority issues that need to be addressed in unison to help avert a potential ecological disaster in the global ocean. They form a purposely ambitious agenda for global governance and are aimed at informing decision‐makers at a high level. They should also be of interest to the general public. Of all the themes, the highest priority is to rigorously address global warming and limit surface temperature rise to 1.5°C by 2100, as warming is the pre‐eminent factor driving change in the ocean. The other themes are establishing a robust and comprehensive High Seas Treaty, enforcing existing standards for Marine Protected Areas and expanding their coverage, especially in terms of high levels of protection, adopting a precautionary pause on deep‐sea mining, ending overfishing and destructive fishing practices, radically reducing marine pollution, putting in place a financing mechanism for ocean management and protection, and lastly, scaling up science/data gathering and facilitating data sharing. By implementing all eight measures in unison, as a coordinated strategy, we can build resilience to climate change, help sustain fisheries productivity, particularly for low‐income countries dependent on fisheries, protect coasts (e.g. via soft‐engineering/habitat‐based approaches), promote mitigation (e.g. carbon storage) and enable improved adaptation to rapid global change. |
Author | Page, Richard Baxter, John M. Roberts, Callum M. Rogers, Alex Downs, Craig A. Thiele, Thorsten Woodall, Lucy C. Sumaila, Rashid U. Currie, Duncan E.J. Hall‐Spencer, Jason M. Sheppard, Charles R.C. Laffoley, Dan Harden‐Davies, Harriet Amon, Diva J. Reid, Chris P. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Dan orcidid: 0000-0001-6338-6244 surname: Laffoley fullname: Laffoley, Dan email: danlaffoley@btinternet.com organization: IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) – sequence: 2 givenname: John M. surname: Baxter fullname: Baxter, John M. organization: University of St Andrews – sequence: 3 givenname: Diva J. surname: Amon fullname: Amon, Diva J. organization: Natural History Museum – sequence: 4 givenname: Duncan E.J. surname: Currie fullname: Currie, Duncan E.J. organization: Globelaw – sequence: 5 givenname: Craig A. surname: Downs fullname: Downs, Craig A. organization: Haereticus Environmental Laboratory, Clifford – sequence: 6 givenname: Jason M. surname: Hall‐Spencer fullname: Hall‐Spencer, Jason M. organization: University of Plymouth – sequence: 7 givenname: Harriet surname: Harden‐Davies fullname: Harden‐Davies, Harriet organization: University of Wollongong – sequence: 8 givenname: Richard surname: Page fullname: Page, Richard organization: International Programme on the State of the Ocean – sequence: 9 givenname: Chris P. surname: Reid fullname: Reid, Chris P. organization: The Continuous Plankton Recorder Survey, Marine Biological Association, The Laboratory – sequence: 10 givenname: Callum M. surname: Roberts fullname: Roberts, Callum M. organization: University of York – sequence: 11 givenname: Alex surname: Rogers fullname: Rogers, Alex organization: REV Ocean – sequence: 12 givenname: Thorsten surname: Thiele fullname: Thiele, Thorsten organization: Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies – sequence: 13 givenname: Charles R.C. surname: Sheppard fullname: Sheppard, Charles R.C. organization: University of Warwick – sequence: 14 givenname: Rashid U. surname: Sumaila fullname: Sumaila, Rashid U. organization: The University of British Columbia – sequence: 15 givenname: Lucy C. surname: Woodall fullname: Woodall, Lucy C. organization: University of Oxford, Zoology Research and Administration Building |
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Snippet | The ocean crisis is urgent and central to human wellbeing and life on Earth; past and current activities are damaging the planet's main life support system for... |
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SubjectTerms | Acidification Adaptation Carbon capture and storage Carbon sequestration Climate change coasts Data retrieval decision making deep‐sea mining Destructive fishing developing countries Earth Ecological function finance Financing Fisheries fishing funding Global warming Governance heat High seas Life support systems Marine pollution Marine protected areas mining Mitigation MPAs Nutrients ocean oceans Overfishing Oxygen Oxygen production pollution Pollution control Protected areas Protection scientific research Sea pollution social welfare Surface temperature sustainability |
Title | Eight urgent, fundamental and simultaneous steps needed to restore ocean health, and the consequences for humanity and the planet of inaction or delay |
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