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Working Together for a Healthy Ocean Grantmakers of Oregon and SW Washington January 18, 2006. Who is Oregon Ocean What’s the Problem: An Ocean in Crisis A 21 st Century Opportunity: Create an Ocean Ethic Protect Special Places: Ecosystem Approach One Remedy: Marine Protected Areas
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Working Together for a Healthy OceanGrantmakers of Oregon and SW WashingtonJanuary 18, 2006
Who is Oregon Ocean • What’s the Problem: An Ocean in Crisis • A 21st Century Opportunity: Create an Ocean Ethic • Protect Special Places: Ecosystem Approach • One Remedy: Marine Protected Areas • Our Legacy: Extending Beach Bill to Marine Waters
The oceans are our largest public resource—an area 23% larger than our nation’s land area • Yet, less than 1% of our nation’s oceans, and none of Oregon’s ocean are protected
WHO IS OREGON OCEAN? • A statewide alliance of conservation organizations and science and communications partners
Formed in 2004, Launched in 2005 • 7 State and National Conservation Members • 7 Advisory Council Partners • Carolyn Waldron, Director • Paul Engelmeyer, OPAC Liaison
Audubon Society of Portland • Conservation LeadersNetwork • Natural Resources Defense Council • Oceana • Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition • Oregon State Public InterestResearch Group • Surfrider Foundation
COMPASS–Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea • PISCO–Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies on Coastal Oceans • Green Fire Productions • Resource Media • The Nature Conservancy • Coast Range Association • Pacific Marine Conservation Council
The Lazar Foundation (Oregon) • Meyer Memorial Trust (Oregon) • David and Lucile Packard Foundation (Calif) • The Bullitt Foundation (Washington) • The Harder Foundation (Washington)
Mission Statement Oregon Ocean is a statewide alliance promoting the protection and restoration of marine life and habitat for a healthy ocean, thriving communities and our children’s future.
WHAT’S THE PROBLEM? • Collapse of West Coast Groundfish Fishery -- largest fishery closure in US history • Beach Closures • Seabird Die-offs • Sedementation/Water Pollution • Dead Zones • Loss of Biodiversity
HUMAN SERVICES Weather Water Quality Transportation Energy Food Aesthetic Value Medicines Play / Rejuvenation
MORAL IMPERATIVE • Intrinsic Value of Marine Life and Ocean Resources - Wildlife: Invertebrates/Anemones/Coral (starfish, barnacles, sponges, crabs), Fish, Pelagic Birds, Mammals (whales)
Once considered inexhaustible and resilient, we now know the ocean is finite and fragile • Sweeping changes are needed in coastal, ocean protection
Pew Oceans Commission (May 2003) America’s Living Oceans: Charting a Course for Sea Change • U.S. Commission on Oceans (July 2004) An Ocean Blueprint for the 21st Century • Joint Ocean Commission (Oct. 2005) www.joint oceanscommission.org
Develop an Ocean Ethic in Oregon Marine parks and wildlife refuges • Harness current regional, national, and international momentum driving urgent need for a new ocean policy ethos • Extend “Beach Bill” legacy into ocean waters All 362 miles of ocean beaches are public access recreation areas
Stemming the biodiversity crisis is credibly one of the most important social movements of our time.
OUR AMBITION • Protect Special Places • Conserve Significant Marine Habitat Areas - spawning grounds, nursery areas, biodiversity hotspots Just as we have done on the landscape by setting aside national / state parks and wildlife refuges
Conserve and recover full range of native biological diversity in Oregon’s nearshore waters and coastal shore • Habitat designation and other methods: permanent protection of ecological values and representative habitat areas
Heceta Head to Heceta Banks, Astoria Canyon, Cape Blanco to Port Orford Reef + + + • Protect the Columbia River Gorge, Wallowa Mountains, Mt. Hood of Oregon’s Ocean
Help identify significant marine habitat areas for conservation and protection • Apply best available science and technologies to protect marine biodiversity (gov’t, NGO, academic collaboration) • Establish creative policy solutions
The “cornerstone of a new vision for healthy, productive, resilient marine ecosystems…” • Described by exerts as: “A comprehensive, integrated approach that considers the entire ecosystem, including humans.” • “…provide stable fisheries, abundant wildlife, clean beaches, vibrant coastal communities and healthy seafood.” COMPASS, Scientific Consensus Statement on Marine Ecosystem-Based Management, March 21, 2005
Ecosystem-based management: • Differs from current approaches that usually focus on a single-species , sector, activityor concern • Instead, considers the cumulative impacts of different sectors
Specifically, EBM • Acknowledges interconnectedness among systems, such as between air, land and sea; and • Integrates ecological, social, economic, and institutional perspectives, recognizing their strong interdependences
Adoption of a comprehensive strategy for sustaining Oregon’s coastal and ocean resources: - Strategic action plan for instituting ecosystem- based management / Meyer Memorial Trust - Marine biodiversity conservation planning / OSU
Human behavior is centered in a discontinuity between people’s ability to act and our ability to understand the consequences of our actions
Global Climate Change • Overfishing • Invasive Species • Coastal Development – Habitat Degradation • Land Use Impacts – Water Pollution
2006: warmest year on record • Past 9 years: warmest of last 25 • Warmer ocean water • Sea-level rise
Pew Oceans Commission (2003) America’s Living Oceans: Charting a Course for Sea Change • U.S. Commission on Oceans (2004) An Ocean Blueprint for the 21st Century • United Nations Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005) • Worm, et al, Science (2006)
‘Race to Fish’ is driven by fishery mgmnt policies (overcapitalization, overharvesting, bycatch) • Divide the spoils rather than conserve resource --ancient argument over freedom of the sea • Hypertrophic perspective has crippled efforts to implement protective policies
Protect the Habitat One Remedy: Marine Reserves and Marine Protected Areas
Marine reserves – “places in the ocean that are completely and permanently protected from uses that remove animals and plants or alter their habitats.” (PISCO)
Marine protected areas are tools that can be used to achieve specific management goals — -marine wildlife refuges and marine sanctuaries -marine parks and recreation areas -wildlife management areas -research-only areas
Scientific data show that marine reserves have bigger fish and more fish and significantly greater species diversity • Established marine reserves have yielded three essential results:
1. Increased abundance of life— 3Xs as many plants and animals 2. Size of organisms significantly increased: on average, fish and other animals and plants size increased by over 80%; and
3. Increased number of species— 70% increase, on avg., in species diversity • Spillover to adjacent waters: animals move to other areas outside of reserves and positively impact fisheries and ecosystems
Create an economically viable and ecologically sustainable plan for Oregon’s ocean • Local action to protect our ocean will bring local benefits
Dry Tortugas Ecological Reserve, FL 2001 - 150 square nautical miles • Marine Life Protection Act 2006 - 18% of Central CA protected • NW Hawaiian Islands National Monument 2006 - 140,000 square miles
“One thing that most people don’t appreciate is the phenomenal diversity of species that we have off our shores in Oregon. This is one of the richest temperate marine ecosystems in the entire world. We just have a wealth of plants and animals.”- Jane Lubchenco, distinguished professor of zoology, Oregon State University
Photos courtesy of Ben Nieves
Restore and Protect the Habitat • Protect Special Places • Conserve Significant Habitat Areas
Establish Marine Protected Areas: Marine Conservation Areas Marine Parks / Recreation Areas Wildlife Management Areas Sanctuary Preservation Areas Research-only Reserves
“All organisms need a place to live. That’s their habitat. So if the habitat goes, so does the organism. It’s as simple as that.” - Oregon State University’s Mark Hixon, M.A., in the documentary film, Common Ground: Oregon’s Ocean
As Federal Ocean Commissioner William Ruckelshaus puts it, "A healthy ecosystem has healthy fish stocks."