Ocean Armageddon

Dr. Steve Best’s spot-on, thought-provoking blog post, “Climate Armageddon: How the World’s Weather Could Quickly Run Amok,” prompted this, my reply:

The bad part is that it doesn’t take a perfect storm and domino effects to make the planet uninhabitable for today’s earthlings.  It takes just a small fraction of that.  While some may suggest that THIS scientist is spewing doom and gloom, it’s an apt and fair assessment.

Consider the recent weather, the extremes that caused people to stop using “Global Warming” and call it Climate Change.  These seemingly capricious swings are already making this planet uninhabitable for those in flood and drought areas, in places of extreme heat or cold, and creating radical changes in places like Greenland as the ice melts.  In science-fiction worlds, we see human ingenuity compensating.  In that speculative fiction universe, mankind develops new ways to live within the harsher climate.  But that’s only for the rich.  The everyman, the villager, the lower class (even in urban areas) doesn’t possess the resources to have such housing, transportation, etc.  It’s great to say “Well, we’ll just live in air conditioning, as they do in Dubai.”  But Dubai has the money (from oil, how ironic) to pay for those comforts.  The upper mucky-muck in the UAE doesn’t even pay for electricity.  What will the everyman do?  He will suffer, and he will die, and his wife and children with him.

Perhaps this is Gaia’s way of ridding herself of an annoyingly destructive parasite, a plague of vermin that she recognizes as a threat to her well-being.  In the bigger picture, it is of no consequence to her what life form inhabits this rock as it spins and zooms through space.  Quite the contrary, our clever monkey brains have made us that very parasite in just a couple centuries — not even the blink of a god’s eye.  Gaia may not care if she is inhabited by the current creatures or the new beings which spring up able to thrive in the new climate(s).  But wouldn’t WE (and our fellow Earthlings) be better off to stave off that climate change NOW?

I think and believe it to be true that we are flying headfirst towards a precipice, a point beyond which we cannot recover.  If we and the current Earthling species are to survive, we MUST put the brakes on.  We MUST cease use of all combustion processes (as they are ALL inherently destructive and toxic) and stop spewing noxious chemicals into the air and water — and we’ve got to do so sooner, or there will be no Later for us.  This does not mean returning to living in cabins and dying of easy  cured diseases, as some reactionaries would attempt to claim.   We took a wrong turn at the combustion engine.  We just need to go back that far and replace the energy generation with PASSIVE electronic harvests of energy.  The forces of solar, wind and tide, combined with more energy-efficient devices AND a more responsible stewardship over ourselves, can easily provide us all with everything we need.

The time is now.  If we are to survive, instead of causing the end of nearly all life as we know it on this beautiful, wonderful world, we MUST recognize our place AMONGST the species of the earth, toss away the Judeo-Christian “thou shalt have Dominion over them” presumptions, and live in ways that are harmonious with the rest of the planet.  In short, it’s time we grew up… and if we do not, we will not survive this adolescence, and we’ll take every other living being, the dogs, cats, wolves, eagles, hawks, falcons, gorillas, orangutans, dolphins, whales — all the innocent creatures great and small will suffer our fate along with us.  Do we REALLY need to feel powerful that bad, to reassure ourselves that we are in control, at so horrible a price?

Maui Dolphin Near Extinction! – ACTION Alert!

ACTION ALERT!

Bombarded as we are by the tragedies of life and living, animal lovers hear the term “endangered” a lot.  But we don’t hear of extinction.  The Passenger Pigeon is the last species to go extinct while we watched, right before our very eyes.  From blackening the sky to nearly none happened in just 30 years, around the turn of the century.  Because there were billions just 5o years earlier, no one thought it truly possible for a species to disappear until it was much too late to bring them back.  Such is very close to the case now with the Maui’s Dolphins.

Dead Maui & Hector's dolphins found drowned at the shoreline, killed by illegal nets

The NZ Fishing Industry refuses to recognize that they're even endangered!

In 2007, the WWF survey estimated that there were 110 of these friendly shore-dwelling dolphins left, all at the coast of New Zealand.  Now in 2012, there are less than 80… and three have been killed in as many weeks, drowned after becoming caught in illegal recreational fishing nets.  Called Set or Gill nets, they have been claiming the lives of Maui’s and Hector’s dolphins for years.  The government of New Zealand has laws against the use of such nets, but the laws are nearly never enforced.

If this trend continues, there will not be enough Maui’s dolphins left for a sustainable genetic gene pool by this time next year.  The Maui’s dolphin is going extinct, literally right before our very eyes!  Long before the President of the United States finishes his next term, there will be no Maui dolphins left in the world, unless we take strong measures immediately.   But the prime minister of New Zealand, uncharacteristically preferring the cash influences of the Fisheries, acts as though these horrifying truths don’t even exist!

Though Maui’s dolphins continue to be found dead on the shores of the harbor, the Fisheries industry still demands that the politicians parrot their claim that Maui’s and Hector’s dolphins do not go into the harbor!

Gareth Hughes, Activist Politician, at an Oil Spill Protection Plan rally

MP Gareth Hughes, Activist Politician

One voice stands up loudly in their defense, one activist voice in the wilderness of politicians.  Young MP Gareth Hughes, of New Zealand’s Green Party, is loudly outspoken regarding environmental issues.  While the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry officials claim that the two most recent deaths must be the result of illegal fishing, Mr. Hughes calls them out, noting that the protected areas are insufficient, considering the sheer number of sightings of Hector’s dolphins outside of the Set Net ban area; “Hector’s dolphins have been seen by Ministry of Fisheries observers outside the set net ban area off the coast of the South Island, and independent academic research backs up these observations,” said Mr Hughes. He calls upon the New Zealand government to

  • Act immediately to extend the set net ban further offshore to cover the areas in which Hector’s dolphins are known to swim.
  • Monitor the set net bans more thoroughly. (Historically, monitoring has been poor.)
  • Enforce the ban, including increasing the aerial monitoring of the set net ban area
  • Increase the amount of Ministry of Fisheries observers on commercial fishing boats outside the set net ban.

“How many endangered dolphins need to die before the Government strengthens protection for them?” asks Mr Hughes.

Hector's & Maui Dolphin Distribution vs Protection Map Sep 2011

The red is where they occur. The thin green lines are the only areas they are protected. The remaining Maui dolphins are found on the west side of the North Island.

What can be done to help?  Our idea is to make some noise — a LOT of it!  There’s no such thing as too much noise, when we’re talking about a species going extinct right before our very eyes.  Many of the deaths have been caused by RECREATIONAL fishing and boating!

Three people are responsible for the care of these precious and very endangered dolphins:

  • Right Honorable John Key, Prime Minister of New Zealand ( email [email protected] )
  • Honorable David Carter, Minister of Primary Industries, NZ ( email [email protected])
  • Honorable Kate Wilkinson, Minister of Conservation, NZ ( email [email protected])

All three of them have categorically ignored the pleas of activists, even when they are armed with valid scientific data and facts.  Please, write them emails.  Here’s an Example Letter:

Esteemed and Honorable (or Right Honorable, for Mr. Key) ______,

New Zealand has been known the world over for breathtaking beauty, ecological responsibility, and a sense of unity amongst all of her people.  That’s why it was so very shocking to me to discover that the plight of the Maui’s and Hector’s dolphins have been largely ignored.  At present, the beautiful Maui’s dolphin, which should be a national treasure for New Zealand, has less than 80 members left alive.  At the rate that they are being killed by recreational boaters and fishermen and illegal nets, the Maui dolphins may not survive your term, and the Hector’s fate is similarly grim.

Extinction is forever!  If we hesitate now, we cannot take that back or make it up, which is why it is so very important to err on the side of caution.  PLEASE, I urge you, implore you, step up the protections for these most rare, friendly and sensitive beings.  The harbor areas of the west side of the North Island must be protected immediately, and all areas expanded to reflect their actual range!

As a Kiwi, you know better than most that the fate of the world and that of the oceans are intrinsically linked.  This philosophy has done much to promote your multi-billion dollar tourist trade. The whole world is watching now.  Do whatever it takes to protect them.  Please, do not let indifference cause the Maui’s or Hector’s dolphins go extinct.  Don’t let your legacy, and the reputation of New Zealand, be stained by that they died on your watch.

Sincerely,

<Name>
<City, State, Country>

Then please add your name and voice to this petition:
http://www.change.org/petitions/stop-the-extinction-of-hectors-mauis-dolphins

The above video shows a diver freeing a Hector’s Dolphin which was caught in a gil net.
Below is a photo of a couple that weren’t so lucky.

Two Maui dolphins, drowned after being caught up in nylon nets last week.

A Human Issue

It is often said that the killing of dolphins in Taiji and whales in Antarctic waters is a matter for the Japanese to handle.  Similarly, the Danes say that the people of the Faroe Islands must decide to stop killing pilot “whales” (which are actually large dolphins).  These may seem apt excuses, and may even seem to make sense, given a perfunctory glance.  But such boundaries and distinctions are artificial, man-made, and ultimately invalid.

This is the amazing transformation performed by whaling

Whaling turns this majestic being into this corpse, and they don't even need the meat.

The killing of dolphins and whales is not a matter of national sovereignty, any more than human rights are a state-by-state issue.  This is a HUMAN behavior; humans are doing these killings, so it is up to we humans to police ourselves, regardless of what nationality those humans may give themselves.  Wherever such slaughters may be happening, it is up to fellow humans to stop it.

Just as we oppose slavery, torture and murders put upon fellow humans, we must fight against slavery, torture and killings done by fellow humans.  Similarly, it is incumbent upon us, it is our obligation, to stop humans from polluting and destroying the oceans, no matter where they may be while doing so.

When China’s manufacturing pours toxic chemicals into the rivers that eventually dump those chemicals into the sea, we have permitted it by not stopping it.  In fact, we have endorsed it (a little at a time) by buying those products made in that filthy fashion.  We may not like having such a responsibility thrust upon us, but the plain truth is that when we do not  do everything within our power to stop it, we become culpable as well.

If someone were to set up a floating base in the middle of the Pacific, far from any nation’s boundaries, and begin pouring acid into the waters there, would we allow it?  Do we allow humans to develop or discharge nuclear weapons as we please?  There is ample precedent; we have both the right and obligation to control ourselves, our fellow humans.  Our destruction of the oceans’ waters and her inhabitants is not a national issue.  It is a human issue, and it is up to us to fight it — tooth and nail — wherever it may occur.