Two-Time World Series Champion Hunter Pence Joins Team Ocean

Published by Ocean Conservancy The San Francisco Giants chose Hunter Pence as their Roberto Clemente Award nominee for 2020, Major League Baseball’s (MLB) annual recognition of the MLB player who best represents the game through extraordinary character, community involvement, philanthropy and positive contributions, both on and off the field. A World Champion with the Giants in […]

Shedding New Light on Microfiber Pollution

Published by Ocean Conservancy “Oh, the places you’ll go.” This is not a reference I never thought I’d conjure while staring at dirty clothes in my laundry hamper. I recently came across a scientific paper from University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) researchers who investigated the global contributions of laundry graywater to microplastic emissions, finding roughly […]

EPA Announces Water Infrastructure Loans for Oceanside, Calif and Salt Lake City—Totaling More Than $415 Million

Publilshed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) WASHINGTON (September 17, 2020) — Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced two new Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) loans at events in Oceanside, Calif. and Salt Lake City, Utah. Read the full article at: https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/epa-announces-water-infrastructure-loans-oceanside-calif-and-salt-lake-city-totaling

Tackling Ghost Gear through Community Engagement

Published by Ocean Conservancy For billions of people across the world, fish is an essential part of their diet and livelihood. Fish accounts for at least 13.8% of the animal protein intake of the human population and in many countries, the number is even higher. In Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa, fish makes up […]

Reducing Plastics and Other Waste in the Arctic Ocean

Published by Ocean Conservancy Penned by Becca Robbins Gisclair, Nicholas J. Mallos, Michael LeVine and Henry P. Huntington, this blog is sourced from a featured column in the journal Environment on the threat plastic pollution poses in the Arctic Ocean. From our ocean’s surface to its darkest depths, plastic pollution is ever-present. No part of our […]

Australia’s Witnesses to Fire’s Fury Are Desperate to Avoid a Sequel

Published by The New York Times Science & Environment Eight months after blazes devastated a wide swath of Australia, the most battered communities are trying to burn their way to safety as another fire season approaches. Read the full article at: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/14/world/australia/bush-fires-preventive-burns.html

Campaign Announcement – Operation Divina Guadalupe

Published by Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Sea Shepherd embarks on the seventh season of its longest-running research campaign, providing novel insights into the behavior and movement patterns of Cuvier’s beaked whales. ENSENADA, BC, Mexico – Sept. 14, 2020  – Sea Shepherd’s research vessel, Martin Sheen, has departed for Guadalupe Island, marking the launch of Operation Divina Guadalupe. This long-term research collaboration […]

19-Year-Old Cleans Up Trash on Saipan Shores

Published by Ocean Conservancy Jihan Younis, a Saipan resident, sifts through mounds of stranded ocean plastics on Pagan, Northern Mariana Islands. © Jihan Younis Adjacent to the deepest part of the ocean (the Mariana Trench) lies a string of small emerald-hued isles amidst a vibrant blue sea. This island chain, known as the Mariana Islands archipelago, is […]

Florida’s Water Quality Crisis

Published by Ocean Conservancy This blog was written by Dave Doebler, the co-founder, along with his partner Dara Schoenwald, of VolunteerCleanup.org, a citizen-led environmental action group that has removed tons of marine debris from South Florida waterways and beaches, and a critically important partner of Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup. When people started texting me pictures […]

The Real Power of the Pistol Shrimp

Published by Ocean Conservancy Faster than a speeding bullet, it’s … the pistol shrimp! At first glance, the pistol shrimp might seem more Mr. Krabs than Butch Cassidy, but this small invertebrate has a power-packed punch. Sometimes overshadowed by the very powerful, very colorful mantis shrimp, it’s time that the sassy snapping shrimp gets the recognition […]

Tapping the Brakes on Pebble Mine

Published by Ocean Conservancy If ever there was a place you’d think would be off-limits for a mine, it is Bristol Bay. Home to the world’s largest sockeye salmon run, this land of wild rivers and abundant salmon runs supports a thriving commercial fishery that supplies more than 140,000 jobs a year for people in Alaska […]

Food Wrappers Now #1 Item Found by the ICC

Published by Ocean Conservancy Today we released the 2020 International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) report. Each year this is an opportunity to celebrate the work of our partners and volunteers. With these latest results, nearly 16.5 million volunteers have collected more than 337 million pounds of trash from beaches and waterways worldwide since 1986, when Ocean Conservancy […]

Another Year Older

Published by Ocean Conservancy On September 7, Ocean Conservancy will turn 48 years old. A lot has changed since our founding in 1972. We’ve celebrated some incredible ocean victories, like the passage of the Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Management and Conservation act in 1976 and the first International Coastal Cleanup in 1986. We’ve also witnessed great tragedies, like […]

An Influx of Foreign Trash

Published by Ocean Conservancy This blog was written by Austin Ahmasuk, an Inupiaq from Nome, Alaska. He is a lifelong hunter, trapper and mariner, and serves his people as a tribal and marine advocate at Kawerak, a community-based organization in Nome. It’s 2020, and those of us living in the north are confronting the unsettling ecological reality […]

From Policy to Practice: Addressing Ghost Gear

Published by Ocean Conservancy Ghost gear is a problem with a common misconception: many people believe it’s a term for fishing gear that’s been recklessly discarded into the sea. The truth is that fishers don’t want to lose the expensive equipment that provides their income. Fishing gear is usually only abandoned intentionally in emergency situations or […]

Our Ocean Still Needs Us

Published by Ocean Conservancy Almost a year ago, Ocean Conservancy released the results of the 2018 International Coastal Cleanup (ICC). We had reached a new milestone for the annual event: more than one million volunteers around the world coming out to remove trash and plastics from beaches and waterways. We shared how plastic cutlery was among […]

Help Save the Endangered Species Act

Published by Ocean Conservancy In 1973, the Endangered Species Act (ESA) was passed to help provide protection for endangered and threatened species and their habitats. And it worked! Because of the ESA, our kids will be able to hear a humpback whale call, swim amongst vibrant coral reefs and know that monk seals still swim off […]

Science Matters: New York Times Ignores Chemical Research, Undermines Product Safety and Puts Essential Products at Risk

Have you ever counted all of the items you physically touch in a day? Everything from the soap you lather on your hands, the shoes you lace up on the way out the door, the TV remote you grab to watch your favorite show, the mobile phone you dial to call a family member, or […]

10 Thriving Sea Jellies

Published by Ocean Conservancy One of our main concerns at Ocean Conservancy is climate change and its impacts on our communities, resources and wildlife. Bleaching corals are among the first signs of climate change impacts we have seen have seen in our ocean. And though climate change has been a stressor on most ocean wildlife, there’s […]

1 26 27 28 29 30 122
top