Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

294 CHAPTER 11 The Ocean and Fisheries


pollute the adjacent water and also causes a net loss of wild
fish because many of the fishes farmed are carnivorous.


  1. Marine pollution is generated by many human activities,
    including the release of trash and contaminants through
    commercial shipping, ocean dumping of sludge and industrial
    wastes, and discarding of plastics that are potentially harmful to
    marine organisms. Marine environments are also deteriorated
    by coastal development and the extraction of offshore minerals.

  2. The ocean conveyor belt moves cold, salty, deep-sea water
    from higher to lower latitudes, affecting regional and possibly
    global climate. Global climate change associated with human
    activities may alter the link between the ocean conveyor belt
    and global climate.


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Addressing Ocean Problems 291


  1. International initiatives aimed at protecting the global
    ocean include the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea
    (UNCLOS), a “constitution for the ocean” that protects ocean
    resources, and the U.N. Fish Stocks Agreement, the first
    international treaty to regulate marine fishing. In the United
    States, marine fisheries are regulated by the Magnuson-
    Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.

  2. Long-term goals for halting and reversing destruction of the
    ocean focus on adopting an ecosystem-based approach to
    management of ocean environments. Consolidating ocean
    programs, funding research on marine ecosystems, and
    enhancing ocean education to instill in citizens a stewardship
    ethic could improve U.S. ocean policy.

  3. The ocean and the atmosphere are strongly linked. The
    El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event, which is
    responsible for much of Earth’s interannual climate variability,
    is a periodic, large-scale warming of surface waters of the
    tropical eastern Pacific Ocean that temporarily alters both
    ocean and atmospheric circulation patterns. A La Niña event
    occurs when surface water in the eastern Pacific Ocean
    becomes unusually cool. Its effects on weather patterns are
    less predictable than an ENSO event’s effects.


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Major Ocean Life Zones 278


  1. The vast ocean is subdivided into major life zones. The
    biologically productive intertidal zone is the area of shoreline
    between low and high tides. The benthic environment is the
    ocean floor, which extends from the intertidal zone to the
    deep-ocean trenches. Most of the benthic environment consists
    of sediments where many animals burrow. Shallow benthic
    habitats include sea grass beds, kelp forests, and coral reefs.
    The pelagic environment is divided into two provinces. The
    neritic province is the part of the pelagic environment from
    the shore to where the water reaches a depth of 200 m (650 ft).
    Organisms that live in the neritic province are all floaters or
    swimmers. The oceanic province, “the deep sea,” is the part of
    the pelagic environment where the water depth is greater than
    200 m. The oceanic province is the largest marine environment,
    comprising about 75 percent of the ocean’s water.


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Human Impacts on the Ocean 284


  1. The most serious problem for marine fisheries is the
    overharvesting of many species to the point that their
    numbers are severely depleted. Fishermen usually
    concentrate on a few fish species with high commercial
    value. In doing so, they also catch bycatch: fishes, marine
    mammals, sea turtles, seabirds, and other animals caught
    unintentionally in a commercial fishing catch and then
    discarded. Aquaculture is the growing of aquatic organisms
    (fishes, shellfish, and seaweeds) for human consumption.
    Aquaculture is common in developing nations with abundant
    cheap labor, and it is limited by the size of the space
    dedicated to cultivation. Aquaculture produces wastes that


Key Terms


aquaculture 287
benthic environment 278
bycatch 286


El Niño–Southern Oscillation
(ENSO) 276
gyres 274

intertidal zone 278
neritic province 281
oceanic province 283

After Halperin, B.S., et al.
“A global map of human
impact on marine ecosystems.”
Science, Vol. 319, No. 5865,
pp. 948–952 (February 15, 2008).
Mapping Human Impacts.
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