Let’s get it together with ecosystem management


By David Suzuki with Faisal Moola

The North Coast of B.C. is one of my favourite places. If you visit this spectacular and ecologically diverse region, you’ll see people fishing, logging, travelling on boats and ships, and raising families. You’ll see mountains, forests, oceans, sea lions, puffins, and whales. If you are fortunate to dive into the ocean, you’ll see salmon, herring, rockfish, sea anemones, giant scallops, kelp forests, and – deep below – 9,000-year-old glass-sponge reefs. There is so much to see here, but we still have a lot to learn about how this ecosystem works.

It’s absurd to think that we could manage our activities in such a vast and complex area by having different government departments oversee individual activities in isolation. But that’s pretty much the way we’ve been doing things.

Fortunately, people are beginning to talk about a new way of managing our oceans, a way that’s being tested in five large ocean areas in Canada. One of these areas is the North Coast of B.C., in a region stretching from northern Vancouver Island to the B.C.-Alaska border, which the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) has labelled the Pacific North Coast Integrated Management Area, or Pncima.

DFO is attempting to engage an integrated management planning process here, in part based on the recognition that everything in nature is interconnected, including human activity. For years, many scientists, resource managers, and environmentalists have encouraged government to adopt an ecosystem-based management, or EBM, approach that takes into account all values and interests. The Encyclopedia of Earth defines EBM as “an integrated, science-based approach to the management of natural resources that aims to sustain the health, resilience and diversity of ecosystems while allowing for sustainable use by humans of the goods and services they provide.”

The Federal government’s planning processes in the Beaufort Sea, Gulf of St. Lawrence, Eastern Scotian Shelf, Placentia Bay/Grand Banks, and Pacific North Coast could set an example for the EBM approach in all of Canada’s oceans. Until now, there’s been more talk than action.

The Pncima integrated management planning process has recently seen some significant breakthroughs, though. In December, DFO signed a formal governance agreement with First Nations in the area to move forward with a marine planning process. And in late March, more than 380 people – including representatives from government, First Nations, coastal communities, marine industries, and non-governmental organizations – took part in a two-day forum to discuss management and conservation options for the region.

That so many people from so many walks of life and so many communities were able to come together to discuss the needs of this area shows not just that cooperation is possible but also that everyone understands the need for urgent action to protect the health of our oceans.

As with most processes involving a multitude of resources, interests, and ecological values, government must continue to play a leading role. Even more importantly, our government must provide enough money for scientific research to ensure that decisions are made according to the best local and scientific knowledge.

We don’t have a lot of time to waste. Many ocean ecosystems are at tipping points, with pollution, resource extraction, and industrial impacts contributing to declines in fish, mammal, and other marine-life populations. Add to that uncertainty about the effects climate change is having on these ecosystems, and the need for planning becomes even more urgent.

A credible, long-term plan for any ocean region must include an increase in protected areas where specific types of industrial activity are limited. Canada has the longest coastline of any nation on Earth, and 40 per cent of our jurisdictional area is ocean, yet the federal government has set aside less than one per cent of that as marine protected areas.

I hope governments, First Nations, and other interested people will continue the formal dialogue, scientific research, and relationship-building required to ensure we have intelligent management and conservation in our oceans. I believe most people understand that our own health depends on the health of ocean ecosystems, and are willing to come together to ensure ecological and economic well-being provided by our oceans are maintained at as high a level as possible. I encourage everyone in Canada who cares about the future health of our oceans to let the government know that we want a greater investment in science, management, and conservation so that our oceans stand a fighting chance in an all too uncertain future.

For more information, visit www.healthyoceans.ca.

Take David Suzuki’s Nature Challenge and learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.
Posted by on 04/15 at 02:00 PM
more...

Or a certain day, and his wife go shopping and found a very good brand-name clothes, watched

the price was more than 300 can also be discounted, and cheap. Mobilize immediately
runescape items took her knife test

clothing, brand name is a famous brand, good
<a href="http://www.rs-sky.com/powerleveling.html “>runescape powerleveling</a> results. Miss

turnover on the spot should be up to the billing, I saw Miss read in a single 2830 yuan. Exam,

are more than 3000 original clothes, watch one less zero, tremor, rapid heartbeat,
runescape items then make a wise decision, pulled a knife

she and her three children fled the scene.

Posted by runescape money on 04/16  at  05:06 AM

http://www.wikishoes.com
http://www.wikishoes.com
Jordan shoes
Air Jordan Shoes
Nike SB Dunks
Addia shoes
Handbag
Chanel Handbag
Fendi Handbag
LV shoes
Louis Vuitton sandals
ED hardy hoodies
ED hardy jeans
ED hardy belts
play boy underwear
bikini
tiffaby finger ring

Posted by angya on 05/18  at  08:01 AM

buy wow gold is an easy thing now as well as buy wow power leveling.

Posted by WoW Power Leveling on 05/22  at  04:09 AM

It’s such a shame that we’re not taking care of our water, especially of our oceans. So many fish species will go extinct unless we stop polluting.

Posted by Cialis on 08/14  at  01:29 PM
Page 1 of 1 pages

Next entry: Fashionably Responsible

Previous entry: Green Memo to All Staff

<< Back to main