NEWSLETTER MARCH 2008
 
Dear UN Atlas Member,

This month's newsletter takes a look at new happenings around the globe with information from the polar regions to the equator. Many worldwide activities have been launched to celebrate the wonders of our planet: the International Polar Year, the International Year of the Reef and the International Year of Planet Earth -- learn more by visiting these sites.

If this newsletter may interest someone you know, please forward it.

Contribute to and participate in the growing Atlas community by becoming an active Member of the UN Atlas today.

Thank you,

The UN Atlas of the Oceans Editors

Visit the UN Atlas of the Oceans Web site

Comments? Please write to UN-Atlas-Oceans-Project@fao.org
 
Recently added content:
  • FAO Fisheries Technical Paper: Global fishery resources of tuna and tuna-like species : Global fishery resources of tuna and tuna-like species (Document)
  • FAO and industry reps discuss emerging issues affecting seafood business : Energy efficiency subject of second FAO-industry forum in Bremen (News)
  • IMO: IMO endorses Fair Treatment of Seafarers poster campaign : A joint campaign by the International Shipping Federation (ISF), the International Chamber of shipping (ICS) and the International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) to promote the IMO/ILO Guidelines on Fair Treatment of Seafarers in the event of a Maritime Accident, has been endorsed by the IMO Secretary-General, Mr. Efthimios E. Mitropoulos. The campaign encourages members of ISF/ICS and ITF to approach Governments to promote the Guidelines and monitor how effectively they are being implemented. (News)
  • Development of co-operative management arrangements in the Great Barrier Reef: an adaptive management approach : The practicalities of planning and evaluating effective Indigenous co-management partnerships within this unique marine protected area. (Document)
  • Feed Me! The story of Penny the Penguin Chick : A children's story based on the Gentoo Penguin's breeding grounds around Bransfield Strait, Antarctica. Notes for parents and teachers. Ideal for 5 to 9 year old children. (Book)
  • Frank Hurley. The Man Who Made History : Frank Hurley captured some of the world's earliest images of the Antarctic, particularly Shackleton's expedition on the Endurance in 1914. DVD includes 4 photo galleries, biography of life and work and an extended version of the 59min film in English. (Multimedia)
  • Ocean Mapping Expedition Yields New Insights into Arctic Depths : New Arctic sea floor data released today by the University of New Hampshire and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration suggests that the foot of the continental slope off Alaska is more than 100 nautical miles farther from the U.S. coast than previously assumed.
    Coastal nations have sovereign rights over the natural resources of their continental shelf, generally recognized to extend 200 nautical miles out from the coast. The Law of the Sea Convention, now under consideration in the U.S. Senate, provides nations an internationally recognized basis to extend their sea floor resource rights beyond the foot of the continental slope if they meet certain geological criteria backed up by scientific data. (News)
  • Coral Reef Research : Conserving what we have as well as we can has become the greatest of all challenges to face humanity. This website is Veron's contribution towards this formidable task. (Website)
  • Status of Caribbean Coral Reefs after Bleaching and Hurricanes in 2005 : This book documents the devastating effects on coral reefs from the hottest year on record with its very high sea surface temperatures and record hurricane activity throughout the Caribbean and Atlantic basins. (Book)
  • Environmental Groups Call For Increased Protection Of Coral Reefs As World Marks 2008 International Year Of The Reef : As 17 countries and 30 organizations launch the International Year of the Reef today, three major environmental groups – World Wildlife Fund, The Nature Conservancy and Conservation International – call on governments, businesses, scientists, non-governmental organizations and individuals around the world to vastly increase actions to protect coral reefs. The International Year of the Reef 2008, designated by the International Coral Reef Initiative, is a worldwide campaign to raise awareness about the value and importance of coral reefs and to motivate action to protect them. (News)
  • New guide to reducing bycatch goes online : As a service to the long-term sustainability of both fish stocks and fishing communities, WWF has established an online resource providing up-to-date information on bycatch (the capture of non-target creatures in fishing gear) and how to reduce it. (News)
  • La Niña weather pattern likely to last for some months : The current La Niña weather pattern is expected to strengthen and continue through the middle of the year, bringing wetter conditions to Australia and the western Pacific and a drier climate to the Americas, the United Nations World Meteorological Agency (WMO) reported. (News)
  • Biosphere reserves play major role in combating climate change : Biosphere reserves can spur efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change as well as encourage increased use of renewable energy, according to a recent declaration adopted by a meeting backed by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (News)
  • International Year of Planet Earth launched at UNESCO : Making the Earth a better place for humankind by engaging Earth Sciences for Society is the motto of the declaration adopted on 12 February 2008 at the Global Launch Event of the International Year of Planet Earth (IYPE) held at UNESCO on 12 and 13 February 2008 (News)
  • Sharks disappearing as fin chopping rises : Populations of tiger, bull, dusky and other sea sharks have plummeted by more than 95 percent since the 1970s as fisherman kill the animals for their fins or when they scoop other fish from the ocean, according to an expert from the World Conservation Union, or IUCN. (News)
  • Improved management of fishing's "last frontier" needed : Countries discuss how to better protect deep sea species and habitats (News)
  • Science and the challenge of managing small pelagic fisheries on shared stocks in northwest Africa : The marine waters off northwest Africa, from Morocco in the north to the southern region of Senegal, are among the richest in the world. FAO, in partnership with the Moroccan Institut National de Recherche Halieutique and the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research, are organizing a four-day symposium to address the issues on the challenges for managing the area's important small pelagic fisheries. (Event)
  • FAO Fisheries Technical Paper: Culture-based fisheries in Bangladesh - A socio-economic perspective : Review of culture-based fisheries and community-based fisheries management in Bangladesh with regard to socio-economic impacts as well as environmental effects and biodiversity loss. (Document)
  • Understanding the Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 : Guidebook providing a quick overview of the Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 (Document)
  • Ocean Map Charts Path of Human Destruction : Four years in the making, a groundbreaking new map of the state of the world's oceans was released today, and its message is stark: Human activity has left a mark on nearly every square kilometer of sea, severely compromising ecosystems in more than 40% of waters. (News)
  • Map shows toll on world's oceans : Only about 4% of the world's oceans remain undamaged by human activity, according to the first detailed global map of human impacts on the seas. (News)
  • IMO: BLG Sub-Committee agrees technical proposals for reduction of air pollution from ships : Draft amendments to revise the MARPOL regulations on the prevention of air pollution from ships were agreed by the IMO Sub-Committee on Bulk Liquids and Gases (BLG) when it met last week (4-8 February) for its 12th session. (News)
  • Social Dimensions of Marine Protected Area (MPAs) : Marine Protected Areas: Small-scale fishing community perspectives (Event)
  • A co-operative solution to overfishing : When Tam Giang Lagoon’s once-bountiful catch started dwindling in the face of poor management and destructive fishing methods, the area’s fishermen decided it was time to get organised. (News)
  • Climate change and children : Report examining how climate change has evolved from an ‘environmental’ issue into one that requires collective expertise in sustainable development, energy security, and the health and well-being of children (Document)
  • The world's rubbish dump: a garbage tip that stretches from Hawaii to Japan : A "plastic soup" of waste floating in the Pacific Ocean is growing at an alarming rate and now covers an area twice the size of the continental United States, scientists have said. (News)
  • Dutch mull ideas to defend coast from rising seas : Dutch water experts met to look at ways of protecting the nation's fragile coast from rising sea levels, including one proposal to build man-made islands -- one in the shape of a massive tulip. (News)
  • Loss of mangroves alarming : 20 percent of mangrove area destroyed since 1980 -rate of loss slowing (News)
  • Fishermen 'greening' their catch : About 400 vessels from six European nations catch brown shrimp in the North Sea's Crangon fishery, off the coast of Holland. (News)
  • IMO: Major shipping nation accedes to key Conventions : One of the world's largest shipowning nations, the Commonwealth of the Bahamas, has acceded to two major IMO Conventions and deposited its annual assessment for 2008 with the Organization.

    His Excellency Mr. Basil G. O'Brien, High Commissioner and Permanent Representative of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas to IMO has deposited with IMO Secretary-General, Efthimios E. Mitropoulos, instruments of accession to the International Convention on the Control of Harmful Anti-fouling Systems on Ships, 2001 (AFS Convention) and the International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage, 2001 (Bunkers Convention). (News)

  • Illegal, unregulated fishing continues to plague Africa : Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing is an acute problem globally, and, for Africa, it creates numerous struggles regarding the extraction of its natural resources. (News)
 
"This is an automatically generated message. Please do not reply to this e-mail. If you would like to contact the UN Atlas of the Oceans, please send messages to UN-Atlas-Oceans-Project@fao.org"
Unsubscribe (Requires login)