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Census of Marine Life 2000-2010 Maintained by CoML  
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Outcomes - an archive of the Census of Marine Life Achievements.
 


First Census Shows Life in Planet Ocean is Richer, More Connected, More Impacted than Expected
After a 10-year exploration, 2,700 scientists from 80 nations reported on the first Census of Marine Life, revealing what, where, and how much lives and hides in the oceans. Key outcomes were
  • establishing a baseline to measure future changes
  • discovery of new species, mapping of marine highways and rest stops
  • marine biodiversity database OBIS which allows anyone to map the addresses of species online
  • documenting of diminished abundance, as a result of historic impacts

The report on First Census of Marine Life 2010 Highlights of a Decade of Discovery is in English with report summary also in Italian, Korean, Chinese, German, French, Japanese, Arabic, Spanish, Russian and Portuguese. Partnerships among the Census of Marine Life, the Encyclopaedia of Life and the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) have now gone far towards documenting all 250,000 known marine species; a task that will continue into 2011 and beyond. Expert judgement of Census scientists examining knowledge by region and taxa affirms that at least 1 million species of marine life likely exist, and thus at least three species remain to be discovered for each already known. No firm basis exists for an estimate for the upper bound.
Mac Ridge
Photo title: Mac Ridge
Photo credit: Census of Marine Life
 
Making Ocean Life Count
 
Census of Marine Life logoWhat are they? How many are there? How many were there? How many will there be?
The Census of Marine Life was a global network of researchers in more than 80 nations engaged in a 10-year scientific initiative to assess and explain the diversity, distribution, and abundance of life in the oceans. The world's first comprehensive Census of Marine Life - past, present, and future was released in London, UK in October 2010. The emphasis of the program was on field studies, which were carried out in poorly known habitats like the deep-sea (CeDAMar) as well as those assumed to be well-known eg coral reefs (CReefs). Through field studies and other projects, ranging from analyzing historical documents (HMAP) to modeling future ecosystems (FMAP), the Census enabled scientists to compare what once lived in the oceans to current populations, as well as to project what will inhabit the oceans of the future. To learn more about CoML field projects, click this link
Photo title: Census of Marine Life logo
Photo credit: Census of Marine Life
 
 
 
 
All   (16) News   (3) Events   (1) Websites   (1) Documents   (4) Books   (7)
  7 Books 
 
Proceedings of the Caribbean Workshop of the Census of Marine Life. Comprehensive assessment of the status of Caribbean marine biodiversity including country reports, Census of Marine Life projects, research initiatives and conservation efforts. Caribbean Marine Biodiversity. the Known and the Unknown Proceedings of the Caribbean Workshop of the Census of Marine Life. Comprehensi...  
This book reveals the most intriguing organisms in the ocean, captured in action by skilled underwater photographers from National Geographic and the Census of Marine Life. Citizens of the Sea. Wondrous Creatures from the Census of Marine Life This book reveals the most intriguing organisms in the ocean, captured in actio...  
This book explains the rationale behind the Census of Marine Life (CoML) and highlights some of its most important and dramatic findings, illustrated with full-color photographs throughout. Discoveries of the Census of Marine Life. Making Ocean Life Count This book explains the rationale behind the Census of Marine Life (CoML) and hi...  
Describes one of the first projects of the Census of Marine Life (CoML), which was dedicated to the study of the mid-Atlantic Ridge and called Mar-Eco. Life in the Mid Atlantic Describes one of the first projects of the Census of Marine Life (CoML), which ...  
Oceans past, present and future with a chapter on the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) Life in the World’s Oceans. Diversity, Distribution and Abundance Oceans past, present and future with a chapter on the Ocean Biogeographic Infor...  
Authoritative book from Indonesia on changes in diversity, distribution and abundance of marine organisms in the Arafura and Timor Seas. Marine Biodiversity Review of the Arafura and Timor Seas Authoritative book from Indonesia on changes in diversity, distribution and abu...  
Focuses on the Census of Marine Life, a 10-year global project to investigate our oceans and the creatures that live there. Examines how the Census was carried out and what the researchers discovered. World Ocean Census. A Global Survey of Marine Life Focuses on the Census of Marine Life, a 10-year global project to investigate o...  
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