Title: Human Impact on The Oceans
1Human Impact on The Oceans
2The Ocean
- One of the most valuable and untapped resources.
- Yet, seriously threatened by what humans have
done to it. - The problem of controlling human impacts on the
ocean boils down to short term costs. - These short term costs () often prevent
effective controls.
3Problem 1 Habitat Alteration
- Dredging
- Removing sediment from the bottom of the ocean
with mechanical force to dislodge and excavate
material. - Dredging is used to clear obstructions so larger
ships can enter ports. - Used to keep harbors, rivers and other waterways
from silting up.
4- Dredging is also a method used to collect
scallops. - Dredging dramatically
- affects marine ecosystems,
- causing severe seabed
- habitat destruction.
- Sea creatures living on the bottom are crushed,
buried or exposed to predators, and clouds of
sediments rise, altering seabed biochemistry.
5(No Transcript)
6Natural healthy undisturbed cobble-shell bottom,
habitat for scallops.
After just one pass of a scallop dredge this is
the result!
7- By leveling the ocean floor, the food chain is
disturbed, the hiding places have been removed
and conditions favorable to faster growing
species take over. - Seafloor recovery could take centuries.
- Some species of sponges can reach 50 years old.
- Some clams can live for more than 200 years.
- Some individual corals have been estimated to
live 500 years or more.
8(No Transcript)
9Problem 2 Offshore Drilling (Oil)
- Problems with it
- Noise from Seismic Testing
- Water and air pollution
- Visual impacts
- Coastal Development
10Sonic blasts damage the brain and ears of marine
mammals and other species, disorienting them and
causing them to beach themselves.
11Problem 3 By Catch
- This refers to fish and other marine life caught
"incidentally" while harvesting another species. - These are fish that are the wrong type, size,
sex, or quality as well as marine mammals, sea
turtles, and seabirds.Â
12(No Transcript)
13Facts about Bycatch
- Commercial fishing worldwide wastes approximately
44 billion pounds of ocean life annually. - Roughly 25 percent of the entire global catch.
- In the United States, all sea turtles are listed
as endangered or threatened under the Endangered
Species Act, as a result of fishing bycatch.
14Whale Entanglement
More whales, dolphins and porpoises die every
year by getting entangled in fishing gear than
from any other cause.
15Problem 4 Toxic Ocean Pollutants
- Our waste, even in small quantities, have huge
effects on ocean communities and species. - Toxic pollutants in the ocean ecosystem have
massive impacts on the plants and animals.
16Some major types of pollutants
- garbage
- sewage
- chemicals
- radioactive waste
- eutrophication
- heavy metals
- oil
17Oil Spills (1)
- The effects of an oil spill of marine life depend
on a number of physical and biological factors. - The distribution of the oil spill will be
affected by currents and wind - In addition, the amount of oil spilled will
determine the eventual geographic boundaries of
the impact area. - The physical and chemical properties of the oil
will determine the behaviour of the slick, in
terms of its thickness and rate of spreading.
18Oil Spills (2)
- Environmental conditions such as salinity, water
temperature, and type and slope of shoreline will
determine habitat effects and clean-up procedures
- Some example habitats include sandy beach, mud,
cliffs, estuaries and open water. In terms of
difficulty of clean-up and relative
vulnerability, a salt marsh ranks the highest,
followed by eelgrass, mud, mixed-fine sediment,
mixed-coarse sediment, rock, sand, algae (kelp)
and open water.
19Oil Spills (3)
- Biological characteristics of the organisms
affected will determine the severity of impact. - These characteristics include the type of
species, life stage (larval, juvenile or adult)
and size.
20Cleaning-up oil spills
- 1. Dispersants Oil can be broken down more
quickly by spraying dispersants (chemicals) on
the oil slick from boats or planes. This method
only works on fresh, small oil spills. - 2. Booms A boom has a floating skirt suspended
down in the water and a sail holding it above the
water line. The floating skirt stops the oil from
passing. These are used to prevent oil from
entering delicate and protected areas. - 3. Slick-lickers This method uses a belt of oil
absorbing material that sucks up the oil from the
ocean water. The oil is then squeezed out of the
absorbing material into a collecting bin.
21(No Transcript)