Observing wildlife too closely can impact feeding, mating, and other behaviours. Whale sharks are an example of an endangered species, so touching or disturbing them can result in legal consequences. It’s best to appreciate wildlife from a distance and let them do their part for the reef—like the whale sharks who keep populations of krill and plankton under control so reefs can thrive. Bring binoculars and be a good role model for other boaters.
Spread along the seafloor like secret gardens of the sea, seagrass meadows nurse young, vulnerable marine creatures before they are strong enough to make the big move to reefs and other marine ecosystems. They are critical for food security, and 20% of the world’s major fisheries industries depend on healthy seagrass meadows.
Though they cover only 0.1 per cent of the ocean floor, these meadows are highly efficient carbon sinks, storing up to 18 per cent of the world’s oceanic carbon.
But they are increasingly under threat from urban, industrial, and agricultural run-off, coastal development, dredging, unregulated fishing boating activities, and climate change. We have already lost 29% of known seagrass cover.
Luckily, seagrass restoration projects around the world are demonstrating that there may be hope for these critical ecosystems. We’ll learn more about seagrass restoration later on—right now, let’s check out the scenery!
Plastic and other waste can kill seagrass and suffocate, wound, or poison marine life. You can safely collect it from the ocean or the beach using gloves or a grabber tool, and keep waste on your boat until you can properly recycle or discard it. As a rule, avoid single use plastics by planning ahead, and be a role model for other tourists by demonstrating and being vocal about the options. Plastics that leave your hands rarely end up being recycled. Learn about the effects of plastic at the Clean Seas website.
Lining tropical coasts like guardians, mangrove trees protect life on land from the harmful impacts of storms and waves which are getting stronger due to warming seas from climate change.
They are also critical habitats for many marine species and can even create their own islands. They are important for food security, as they provide the nursery habitat for many commercial fish species, and they are important for climate change mitigation as they are extremely efficient carbon sinks.
But they are under serious threat from coastline development, aquaculture, pollution and other human impacts. Mangroves are lost at a rate 3 to 5 times higher than other forests, and we have already a lost over a quarter of original mangrove cover.
The good news is that communities are increasingly understanding how to restore degraded mangrove ecosystems to protect all of these unparalleled benefits. We’ll learn more about this later.
For now, let’s see what we can find in the mangroves!
Immature fish that have yet to reproduce are important for maintaining a species’ population. You can gently remove the hook and put the fish back quickly to ensure a safe release and extended life span!
Two-thirds of our oceans have been negatively impacted by human activity, much of which happens on land from pollution, carbon emissions, and infrastructure development. In the ocean, overfishing is the greatest threat; however, even the subtlest actions like discarding plastics, using harmful chemicals, or changing animal behaviour can have a great impact on the health and functioning of ocean ecosystems.
Protecting coral, seagrass, and mangroves also means protecting the thousands of species that rely on them. And in turn, this supports our food supply, culture, recreation, and livelihoods on land!
Learn more about the Decade of Restoration and its link to oceans.
But protection on its own isn’t enough.
Because so much seagrass, mangrove cover, and coral cover has already been lost, the key to maintaining the benefits we receive from these ecosystems is restoration.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
And your efforts to protect marine ecosystems as a tourist a big part of that resilience!
Spread along the seafloor like secret gardens of the sea, seagrass meadows nurse young, vulnerable marine creatures before they are strong enough to make the big move to reefs and other marine ecosystems. They are critical for food security, and 20% of the world’s major fisheries industries depend on healthy seagrass meadows.
Though they cover only 0.1 per cent of the ocean floor, these meadows are highly efficient carbon sinks, storing up to 18 per cent of the world’s oceanic carbon.
But they are increasingly under threat from urban, industrial, and agricultural run-off, coastal development, dredging, unregulated fishing and boating activities, and climate change. We have already lost 29% of known seagrass cover.
Luckily, seagrass restoration projects around the world are demonstrating that there may be hope for these critical ecosystems. We’ll learn more about seagrass restoration later on—right now, let’s check out the scenery!
The way you fish can permanently damage marine ecosystems, making them less productive for future catches. Trawling (dragging a net on the bottom), poisoning fish, and using dynamite are examples of destructive fishing practices. Using a hook and line, a cast net, or a spear respects marine life.
With as much life and colour as any big city, coral reefs are biological “hotspots” of the ocean. While covering only 0.1% of the ocean floor, they provide a home for twenty-five per cent of all marine life, and provide us on land with food, life-saving medicines, recreation, livelihoods, and protection from storms. They are one of the most productive and biodiverse ecosystems on our planet!
However, around much of the globe, we have lost 50% of coral cover. This loss is projected to reach 90% with even 1.5 degree Celsius of global heating. This could mean the end of an entire ecosystem that silently functions to ensure our human well-being.
Given that we’ve already lost so much coral and are projected to lose a lot more, it may seem like life below water and on land is doomed. But scientists and communities working on reefs are showing us that isn’t the case! There is hope for coral restoration, which would bring back the critical benefits coral reefs provide for life on our planet.
We’ll hear more about restoration in a bit. For the time being we’re ready to jump in!
Wastewater can contain high amounts of bacteria, fungi, parasites, and viruses that can kill native species and cause humans to fall ill. Stay safe by looking up the best ways to pump your wastewater locally.
But with your responsible fishing practices, you helped to keep the ocean healthy!
In protecting mangroves, seagrasses, and reefs, we are actively protecting ourselves as well; around three billion people rely on seafood for protein.
Fishing plays an increasing role in food security, livelihoods, and the global economy, yet fish stocks are being rapidly depleted. Fish provide nearly 20% of all animal protein globally and almost 60 million people were engaged in fisheries and aquaculture in 2012. Industrial fishing’s footprint is 4 times that of agriculture, covering at least 55% of oceans’ areas. Three-quarters of major marine fish stocks are fully or over-exploited or depleted.
Learn more about the Deacade of Restoration and its links to oceans.
The protective measures you just learned are essential for safeguarding the marine ecosystems we still have.
But what about the ones that have already been lost or damaged?
Thankfully, there is much we can do to restore these ecosystems.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
Such efforts depend on your contribution as a fisher to make them worthwhile!
Because reefs are so complex and interconnected, they are fruitful and diverse—but this means they can also be easily disrupted.
Two-thirds of our oceans have been negatively impacted by human activity, much of which happens on land from pollution, carbon emissions, and infrastructure development. In the ocean, overfishing is the greatest threat; however, even the subtlest actions like discarding plastics, using harmful chemicals, or changing animal behaviour can have a great impact on the health and functioning of ocean ecosystems.
Protecting coral, seagrass, and mangroves also means protecting the thousands of species that rely on them. And in turn, this supports our food supply, culture, recreation, and livelihoods on land!
Learn more about the Decade of Restoration and its link to oceans.
But protection on its own isn’t enough.
Because so much seagrass, mangrove cover, and coral cover has already been lost, the key to maintaining the benefits we receive from these ecosystems is restoration.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
And your efforts to protect marine ecosystems as a tourist a big part of that resilience!
Lining tropical coasts like guardians, mangrove trees protect life on land from the harmful impacts of storms and waves which are getting stronger due to warming seas from climate change.
They are also critical habitats for many marine species and can even create their own islands. They are important for food security, as they provide the nursery habitat for many commercial fish species, and they are important for climate change mitigation as they are extremely efficient carbon sinks.
But they are under serious threat from coastline development, aquaculture, pollution and other human impacts. Mangroves are lost at a rate 3 to 5 times higher than other forests, and we have already a lost over a quarter of original mangrove cover.
The good news is that communities are increasingly understanding how to restore degraded mangrove ecosystems to protect all of these unparalleled benefits. We’ll learn more about this later.
For now, let’s see what we can find in the mangroves!
Boating in shallow water can cause your boat propellers to hit the floor, damaging seagrass beds and causing harm to the many species who live there. It’s best to avoided uncharted waters and look for channel markers that designate deep water. The biggest threat to the endangered manatees and dugongs that call seagrass meadows home is boat strike. In 2019 alone, an estimated 531 manatees were killed by boats in the US state of Florida alone.
Catch limits are in place to prevent overfishing and help ensure there are plenty of fish for those who rely on it for their livelihoods and food. Abiding by these rules means you are contributing to the long-term sustainability of fish stocks.
Chemical sunscreens which use ingredients like avobenzone and oxybenzone are toxic to coral reefs. Look for a mineral-based sunscreen with zinc oxide to keep your skin safe and the reef safe, too. Make the effort to find companies and products that explicitly take environmental impacts into account, from ingredients to packaging and disposal.
Although we can’t see all that goes on underneath the ocean’s surface, we surely do impact it.
And don’t forget that what you do in your recreational boat also applies for bigger boats and cruise ships. If you take a cruise, do your due diligence to find an operator that puts its environmental impact at the heart of its business practice: reducing single-use plastics, being energy efficient, and responsibly disposing of waste. You might be surprised, but many ships simply dump their waste at sea to avoid paying to dispose of it properly.
Learn more about the Decade of Restoration and its links to oceans.
Why worry about keeping the ocean healthy?
Coastal ecosystems such as salt marshes, coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves have a ton of benefits: they reduce the impact of severe weather events by slowing floodwater release and reducing wave heights. They also help regulate our weather and climate, and provide us with food and medicine. That’s on top of their spiritual, cultural, and recreational benefits.
Unsustainable practices can threaten these benefits, which is why protecting marine ecosystems is so important. But because we’ve already lost so much precious habitat to the actions you’ve just learned about and others, protecting what remains is not enough to secure the economic, environmental, health, and social benefits we rely on.
To do this, we must turn to restoring marine ecosystems to their former glory.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
The protection you’re providing as a responsible boater is key to making these restoration efforts last.
Their complex and intricate food webs can suffer from a damaging rippling effect when even just one part is disrupted. Fishing practices can actually have a sizeable impact on the health of marine ecosystems, and given they are home to many so many different species that we rely on for catch, it’s certainly in our interest to stay on track!
As of now, almost 30% of commercial fish stocks are over-fished, but our reliance on fish stocks as a food source for millions has not changed. With this in mind, through using responsible fishing practices, we can protect delicate ocean ecosystems and still reap the benefits of fishing.
Learn more about the Decade of Restoration and links to oceans.
The protective measures you just learned are essential for safeguarding the marine ecosystems we still have.
But what about the ones that have already been lost or damaged?
Thankfully, there is much we can do to restore these ecosystems.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
Such efforts depend on your contribution as a fisher to make them worthwhile!
Lining tropical coasts like guardians, mangrove trees protect life on land from the harmful impacts of storms and waves which are getting stronger due to warming seas from climate change.
They are also critical habitats for many marine species and can even create their own islands. They are important for food security, as they provide the nursery habitat for many commercial fish species, and they are important for climate change mitigation as they are extremely efficient carbon sinks.
But they are under serious threat from coastline development, aquaculture, pollution and other human impacts. Mangroves are lost at a rate 3 to 5 times higher than other forests, and we have already a lost over a quarter of original mangrove cover.
The good news is that communities are increasingly understanding how to restore degraded mangrove ecosystems to protect all of these unparalleled benefits. We’ll learn more about this later.
For now, let’s see what we can find in the mangroves!
Even a little food, or food we think of as “natural”, can disrupt marine creatures’ feeding processes. They also learn to associate people with food, which can harm their instincts to avoid danger making them more vulnerable to nets, fishing lines, and predators.
Anchors can threaten seagrass beds when they aren’t thrown properly. It’s best to always look for a clear, sandy spot where there is no grass or coral to avoid harming marine life.
With as much life and colour as any big city, coral reefs are biological “hotspots” of the ocean. While covering only 0.1% of the ocean floor, they provide a home for twenty-five per cent of all marine life, and provide us on land with food, life-saving medicines, recreation, livelihoods, and protection from storms. They are one of the most productive and biodiverse ecosystems on our planet!
However, around much of the globe, we have lost 50% of coral cover. This loss is projected to reach 90% with even 1.5 degree Celsius of global heating. This could mean the end of an entire ecosystem that silently functions to ensure our human well-being.
Given that we’ve already lost so much coral and are projected to lose a lot more, it may seem like life below water and on land is doomed. But scientists and communities working on reefs are showing us that isn’t the case! There is hope for coral restoration, which would bring back the critical benefits coral reefs provide for life on our planet.
We’ll hear more about restoration in a bit. For the time being we’re ready to jump in!
Corals may look like strange rocks, but they are actually made of living creatures called polyps! Stepping on or touching them can damage or kill these polyps and destroy an entire reef. Use a flotation device if you need to, or step on the sandy bottom outside of a reef. Identify water sport operators like Green Fins that put an emphasis on looking after the ecosystems they are benefitting from. Be proactive by asking your guide to do a briefing for the group about buoyancy and the impacts of unskilled use of fins.
It’s never too late to start practicing trash clean-ups, proper anchoring, and other responsible boating practices that protect the ocean and the many benefits it provides us.
And don’t forget that what you do in your recreational boat also applies for bigger boats and cruise ships. If you take a cruise, do your due diligence to find an operator that puts its environmental impact at the heart of its business practice: reducing its single use plastics use, being energy efficient, and responsibly disposing of waste. You might be surprised, but many ships simply dump their waste at sea to avoid paying to dispose of it properly.
Learn more about the Decade of Restoration and its link to oceans.
Why worry about keeping the ocean healthy?
Coastal ecosystems such as salt marshes, coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves have a ton of benefits: they reduce the impact of severe weather events by slowing floodwater release and reducing wave heights. They also help regulate our weather and climate, and provide us with food and medicine. That’s on top of their spiritual, cultural, and recreational benefits.
Unsustainable practices can threaten these benefits, which is why protecting marine ecosystems is so important. But because we’ve already lost so much precious habitat to the actions you’ve just learned about and others, protecting what remains is not enough to secure the economic, environmental, health, and social benefits we rely on.
To do this, we must turn to restoring marine ecosystems to their former glory.
Restoring seagrass beds, mangrove forests, and coral reefs will look different in every location, but here are a few ways communities are already doing it:
Rearing seagrass seedlings in a laboratory and transporting them to seagrass beds
Growing corals in land-based or ocean-based nurseries and establishing them in a suitable habitat
Growing mangrove seedlings in a greenhouse and planting them along the ocean’s edge
Beyond simply planting new seagrass, corals, and mangroves, restoration looks to build ecosystem resilience to threats like climate change, so that the restored ecosystems can thrive for a long time.
The protection you’re providing as a responsible boater is key to making these restoration efforts last.
With as much life and colour as any big city, coral reefs are biological “hotspots” of the ocean. While covering only 0.1% of the ocean floor, they provide a home for twenty-five per cent of all marine life, and provide us on land with food, life-saving medicines, recreation, livelihoods, and protection from storms. They are one of the most productive and biodiverse ecosystems on our planet!
However, around much of the globe, we have lost 50% of coral cover. This loss is projected to reach 90% with even 1.5 degree Celsius of global heating. This could mean the end of an entire ecosystem that silently functions to ensure our human well-being.
Given that we’ve already lost so much coral and are projected to lose a lot more, it may seem like life below water and on land is doomed. But scientists and communities working on reefs are showing us that isn’t the case! There is hope for coral restoration, which would bring back the critical benefits coral reefs provide for life on our planet.
We’ll hear more about restoration in a bit. For the time being we’re ready to jump in!
Fishing line can trap, suffocate, or wound marine life and humans. Sea birds and endangered sea turtles are examples of species that are often hurt or killed by abandoned fishing line. Taking precaution when you cast, and detangling your line, will help protect marine life from injury.
Spread along the seafloor like secret gardens of the sea, seagrass meadows nurse young, vulnerable marine creatures before they are strong enough to make the big move to reefs and other marine ecosystems. They are critical for food security, and 20% of the world’s major fisheries industries depend on healthy seagrass meadows.
Though they cover only 0.1 per cent of the ocean floor, these meadows are highly efficient carbon sinks, storing up to 18 per cent of the world’s oceanic carbon.
But they are increasingly under threat from urban, industrial, and agricultural run-off, coastal development, dredging, unregulated fishing boating activities, and climate change. We have already lost 29% of known seagrass cover.
Luckily, seagrass restoration projects around the world are demonstrating that there may be hope for these critical ecosystems. We’ll learn more about seagrass restoration later on—right now, let’s check out the scenery!
Leaving any kind of trash in the ocean is dangerous for entire ecosystems, for individual species, and for humans. Take any trash back to land where you can properly recycle or discard it. As a rule, avoid single use plastics by planning ahead, and be a role model for other tourists by demonstrating and being vocal about the options. Plastics that leave your hands rarely end up being recycled.
Anchors damage or kill coral reefs. Many coral reefs have buoys where you can tie up your boat without having to anchor. If a buoy is not available, you can anchor a safe distance outside of the reef. Just be sure the reef is not protected from fishing before you cast away. And make sure you pass this knowledge on!
Staghorn, like all coral, provide food and refuge for many species. Fragmenting them can kill the whole tree, and because they are also legally protected, it could get you in trouble. Try taking home local crafts, music, art, or clothing instead. If you buy any products from the sea, ask the shop owner if they are legal and sustainable. Often they don’t know, so it is better to avoid these altogether. Learn more about the fascinating life of corals through the Glowing Gone campaign so that you can be a better advocate for their future!