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World Ocean Network celebrates World Ocean Day June 8th

http://www.thew2o.net/blog-entry/world-ocean-day-june-8-2010

We are celebrating World Ocean Day, a date designated by the United Nations to recognize our relationship with the ocean through so many different ways of connection. The official day is June 8, and around the world, through the World Ocean Network, The Ocean Project, and many other associations with ocean interests, events will take place to highlight the value of ocean resources. There will be maritime festivals and beach clean-ups, school projects and environmental presentations the world over – in Africa and Asia, Europe and the Americas. What was once a bright idea is now an international event that for one brief moment focuses some part of ephemeral world interest on the ocean and its benefit for all mankind.

Of course, every day is ocean day. And we can claim that with the authority of the headlines that every day point to an ocean issue of import:  the catastrophic disaster of a failed oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico, incidents of piracy and attack in Asian waters, the decline of fisheries across the world economy, and growing evidence of the negative impact of climate change on the ocean and its capacity for supporting all aspects of human survival.

What is Ocean Day meant to do? If all those concerned with ocean issues were to shout at once, there would be a compelling noise, enough to let us know that others around the world also care, enough to give us confidence that our whole is greater by the sum of our individual voices, and perhaps enough to penetrate the consciousness of a political structure that for the most part ignores ocean issues until it is too late.

Recently, around the climate issue, 350.org, a small organization with a big climate agenda, used the Internet to mobilize what has been characterized as the largest public expression of environmental concern in history. Literally thousands of organizations, encompassing millions of people, gathered round one issue and one response on one day. On that day as well, an estimated 500,000 marched through the streets of Copenhagen in a comparable expression on the same issue, a manifestation intended to influence the many national leaders and policy makers who were gathered there to conclude a climate treaty.

That effort failed. The thousands and millions were not enough.  What, then, does it take for the political will of the people coalesced around a single issue to be heard and accommodated? The analogy that occurs of course is the ocean itself, believed to be infinite in its capacity to dissolve the toxins, absorb the oil, sequester the CO2, cleanse the waste, circulate the protein and fresh water, heal itself along with the poisons of others.  Cleaning the beaches is a reminder of what the ocean cannot assimilate – the poly nets and fishing lines, plastic bags and containers, and, as in today’s news, the congealed residue of too much oil spilled, the dead fish and birds, and the destroyed lives of many who make their living from the sea, “environmental refugees” in the most developed nation on earth. That detritus is ample evidence that the ocean has reached its limits and that, if we continue to despoil it, we risk a vast, terrible, foreseeable, irretrievable loss.

When we stand by the sea, when we imagine it in our minds, we perceive Nature in the reality of its movement, shifting light, and sense of life. When we study the ocean, we understand its contribution to our health and well being through water, food, energy, and economic and cultural connection. Why would we put such a thing at risk? Why, deliberately, through acts of commission and omission, would we allow such a thing to be compromised, poisoned, and killed? Surely, if on Ocean Day we can come to the realization that such an act is truly self-destructive, we can then use every other day to spread the word, to act in some overt way, and to otherwise express the will of one, becoming thousands, becoming millions, who demand that the ocean be returned from scarcity to abundance, from conflict to accommodation, from despoliation to sustainability.

The ocean will serve us well, if only, worldwide, we demand to serve it better.

Florida Ocean & Coastal Coalition: ‘An Ocean State of Mind’ Conference Friday June 18th, 2010 in Tallahassee

REGISTER NOW!!!!!!!
THE FLORIDA COASTAL AND OCEAN CONFERENCE 2010
“An Ocean State of Mine”
 
FRIDAY JUNE 18, 2010
Hotel Duval,  415 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, FL 32301
 
The Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition, a group of organizations working together to conserve, protect and restore Florida’s coastal and marine environment, is hosting The Florida Coastal and Ocean Conference – a one day conference on Friday June 18, 2010 in Tallahassee at the Hotel Duval.

 
The goal of the conference is to explore solutions to key issues facing Florida’s coasts and oceans, including: marine spatial planning, water quality, future of Florida’s coast, marine ecosystems and fisheries and ocean policy and governance.
 
This conference will bring together key policymakers, managers, scientists and interested members of the public (see Speaker List) to provide a well rounded discussion of the issues and solutions at a time of increasing national, state and local attention, especially given the current Gulf oil spill.
 
It has been well over a decade since a coastal and ocean conference such as this was held in Florida. The format of the conference (see Agenda) will be structured to provide expert presentations and facilitated group discussion and audience input conference to develop an action plan for Florida’s ocean and coast.
 
The Coalition invites you and your organization to join us June 18, 2010 in Tallahassee to be part of this process.
 
Please post and share this notice with others who may be interested.   To register and get more details on the conference go to http://flcoastalandocean.org/events
 Special thanks to Lindsey Pickel.

Brave New Ocean, a webcast talk by Dr. Jeremy Jackson Tuesday June 8th

Brave New Ocean, a talk by Dr. Jeremy Jackson*

*Tuesday, June 8, 2010     6:00 pm*

*Baird Auditorium (Ground Floor), Smithsonian’s Museum of Natural History, Washington D.C.

*Free and open to the public*

The ocean is essential to all life but experts agree that there are changes affecting the ocean and how it functions. On World Ocean Day, join us for an evening of deep thinking with *Dr. Jeremy Jackson* from Scripps Institution of Oceanography as he discusses ocean biodiversity loss in his talk  “Brave New Ocean.”

Dr. Jackson’s lecture will kick off  *Changing Tides: A Series of Ocean Discussions* in which top ocean scientists talk about current research and how it is helping to change the tide in ocean science and conservation.

This series is brought to you by Smithsonian’s Museum of Natural History and the Centers for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence (COSEE) and made possible through a grant from the National Science Foundation.

Live webcast of “Brave New Ocean” on the award-winning Ocean Portal
http://ocean.si.edu/ocean-videos/changingtides

 Special thanks to Elizabeth Ban elizabeth.ban@aya.yale.edu

Russell Kelley: The Indo Pacific Coral Finder: a new practical u/w coral i.d. tool that links to Corals of the World

Announcement:

The Coral Identification Capacity Building Program is pleased to announce the publication of the Indo Pacific Coral Finder by Russell Kelley. The Coral Finder is a proven, practical, underwater coral identification tool that allows anyone to identify hard corals to genus, regardless of growth form, anywhere in the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

The Coral Finder is available from BYOGUIDES – www.byoguides.com

Anyone who has tried knows how challenging coral identification can be because of the sheer number of species and variation in form with environment shown by corals. The Coral Finder solves this problem with a unique visual approach to coral identification that lets the user find the name of the coral they are looking at in less than a minute. The Coral Finder not only makes coral identification practical it also provides the user with a volume and page number cross reference back into Charlie Veron’s Corals of the World  for after dive follow up and learning.

The Coral Finder was designed to provide a friendly, practical way to teach yourself coral identification – it gives instant results and rewards for the motivated learner. By only presenting relevant options in a simple visual choice matrix the user is freed from the limitations of text based learning allowing the eye and brain to make powerful visual decisions. The Coral Finder is ideal for monitoring, surveys, students, scientists, dive masters, underwater naturalists, aquarists and CITES / coral industry professionals.

The Coral Finder is made from a robust waterproof plastic and was designed and tested (over two years) to cope with the rough and tumble of diving, requiring no more than a wash and dry along with your dive gear at the end of the trip.

The Coral Finder will be supported by a website of free learning resources including video training movies from beginner to advanced – due for completion later in 2010.

The development of the Coral Finder was supported by the Australian Coral Reef Society and Professor Charlie Veron (Author of Corals Of The World).
For more information about how the Coral Finder works please check out:

http://www.byoguides.com/coralfinder/how-it-works/

or just watch the 10 minute video of it in action at…

http://www.byoguides.com/coralfinder/in-action/

For the post-MTV generation who can’t afford 10 whole minutes there is a 60 second video here:

http://www.byoguides.com/coralfinder/

Does it work? Results from recent training workshops based on the Coral Finder demonstrate powerful, instantaneous increases in coral ID capacity because of the way the Coral Finder empowers the eye and brain to make taxonomic decisions free from text:

http://www.byoguides.com/coralfinder/results-of-testing/

A video describing more technique, tips and tricks can be found here:
http://www.byoguides.com/coralfinder/tips-tricks-and-accessories/
Happy Coralling,

Russell Kelley

Russell Kelley
russellkelley@mac.com

Program Director
Coral Identification Capacity Building Program.
P.O. Box 1859, Townsville, 4810, AUSTRALIA
ABN 66208215206
Int. + 61 (0) 7  47804380 ph.

Int. + (0) 419 716730 mob.

GMT + 10 hours

Skype: wireruss