Sea Shepherd in the Galapagos

Since 2000, Sea Shepherd has maintained a strong, positive presence in the Galapagos Islands. From patroling the Marine Reserve stopping illegal fishing activities, to busting shark finners, to educating the local youth, Sea Shepherd carries out its mission of promoting ocean conservation using a wide range of methods and actions.The Galapagos is our line in the sand. If humanity cannot protect such a unique and diverse ecosystem, we will not be able to protect any ecosystem. The Galapagos is a challenge and battlefield for the effort to halt human greed and destruction. These Enchanted Isles are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and this means all of us have a responsibility to help protect them from illegal exploitation.

http://www.oceansentry.org/lang-en/menu-articles/2227-campaign-for-sharks.html http://www.oceansentry.org/lang-en/menu-articles/2205-sobrepesca-muerte-de-los-oceanos.html http://www.oceansentry.org/lang-en/menu-articles/2350-the-end-of-the-line-world-without-fish.html http://oceansentry.org/lang-en/menu-articles/1509-secret-dolphin-slaughter.html /lang-en/menu-articles/menu-featured-content/1858.html
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Off the menu: billboards in China to save sharks PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 08 December 2009 09:48

By divemagazineEach year, the fins of 73 million sharks are sold in markets in Hong Kong with most being shipped to China for soup - but shark populations can't sustain the rate at which they are being killed and are being fished to extinction.

American charity Shark Savers and WildAid are putting up billboards in Shanghai and Beijing that tell consumers of shark fin soup about the damage finning is having on shark populations.

Michael Skoletsky of Shark Savers said: 'A lot can be done on the marine protection side of shark conservation, but nothing can be solved if we don't work on the demand and consumption side - which is shark fin soup.

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'We might assume that people who eat shark fin soup don't care, but in reality they don't know the issues - for example contamination issues. Shark is high in heavy metals, including mercury, which is toxic. And most people don't know that finning is wiping out sharks and that this affects the balance of ocean ecosystems. Some don't even know that shark is in the soup because in Chinese it translates as fish fin soup.'... Read Full Article by Jo Mattock

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