Monday, July 6, 2009

JULY 6, 2009 50 WAYS TO SAVE THE OCEAN #2 Get married on a wild beach

'The places we associate with love are the places we seek to conserve'


Although I am not married and don’t know if I ever will be I always imagined I would get married on a beach. I always imagined I would be married somewhere wild and beautiful like East Sooke Park near my home of Victoria, Vancouver Island. When I was younger my parents took my brothers and I on many hikes and barbeques in this park…and many of the gorgeous spots overlooking the ocean would be perfect for a wedding!

East Sooke Park (Photo source)

In 2006 I spent nearly a year working on a project studying the dolphin populations off the south coast of Kenya. Just prior to leaving for Kenya my parents and I went for dinner with their friends who had lived in Kenya many decades earlier. This amazing couple filled me in on life in Kenya during the pre-Lonely Planet days and told me about a beach, Tiwi Beach, where they had spent their honeymoon years earlier. It was great to hear their story and I grew excited anticipating the life I would live on the other side of the world in a very different country.


The white sandy beaches of Kenya

During my time in Kenya I put Tiwi Beach and their honeymoon to the back of my mind…that is until I decided to spend a weekend away there and also ended up having a very memorable romantic evening on this same beach. Tiwi beach is a gorgeous white, sand beach on the southeast coast of Kenya. Shortly after we arrived and set up camp my friend Sara and I went snorkelling in the coral rag tide pools typical of this part of the African coastline.

Tiwi Beach has two beautiful large tidepools; one shaped like Australia and the other like Africa. When you swim in 'Africa' you can swim into a cave and watch the bats flying overhead and then swim through a short underwater cave into another pool! It was absolutely fabulous! After a nice day on the beach my friend Sara and I decided to sit in the shallow, sun heated, tidal pools near our camp and eat cheese and crackers and drink wine.


The tidepool shaped like the African continent at Tiwi Beach, Kenya
(Photo source)

Upon returning to our camp we met up with our Austrian neighbours, two brothers who’d driven their big overland truck from Austria to Kenya. We spent the evening around a campfire with the two of them. They were living on this beautiful beach for a month while they recorded music for their band. I hit it off with one of them and our conversation next to the campfire went deep into the night with the sounds of the waves and crickets and the stars overhead as a backdrop to add the magic to the moment. It was one of those experiences that always stay with me and so will the memory of that beach. That place and the emotions attached to it will forever remain in my memory.

I have had romantic moments at the beach, ones that I will never forget, and I know that I, as would my parent’s friends who spent their honeymoon at the beach years before, would be deeply saddened if I went back to a place like Tiwi Beach and found the beach destroyed or polluted. I would feel my memory of a precious moment had also been changed or destroyed. It is these moments that give us that personal connection to the beach and drives us to protect it.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre Presented on June 23, 2009:

A talk by Dr. Peter Ross of the Institute of Ocean Sciences on “British Columbia’s Endangered Killer Whales: Can We Improve the Habitat Quality for the World’s Most Contaminated Marine Mammals?”

The Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre in Sidney, British Columbia opened their doors to the public on June 20, 2009. They then started their by-donation-to-speaker series on the 23rd starting with a wonderful presentation by Dr. Peter Ross of the Institute of Ocean Sciences. I was fortunate enough to not be out on a work rotation observing fish, and was able to attend. I, being the “whale nerd” that I am, scribbled some of the key points of Dr. Peter Ross’s talk in a notebook. These are the key elements that I believe we should all think about/take action against to help improve the habitat quality of endangered southern resident killer whales.

K21 - Member of K Pod which is part of the Southern Resident Community

The southern resident killer whales home range encompasses the Salish Sea (the water’s of Strait of Juan de Fuca and Haro Strait), which fall into two national jurisdictions. Therefore, their fate relies on the policies of the Canadian Species at Risk Act (SARA) and the United States National Marine Fisheries Services (NMFS). Three major threats have been determined to influence the fate of the southern resident killer whales: (1) prey availability, (2) noise/disturbance, and (3) toxic chemicals.

Toxic Chemicals

Toxic chemicals may have a direct or indirect impact on the endangered southern resident killer whales:

  • Toxic spills – might result in direct inhalation or ingestion. The Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound demonstrated the direct impact of direct inhalation/ingestion when nine members of a unique “transient” killer whale the AT1s died after the March 24, 1989 spill. This pod only has seven remaining members of its initial twenty-two members.

  • “Food” contaminants – chemicals that might not directly impact the killer whales but have damaging impacts on their prey, in the case of the southern resident killer whales' Chinook Salmon. Utilization of fertilizers or chemicals that pollute or reduce oxygen quality in good fish habitat (cold, fast moving, and oxygen rich waters; spawning sites).

  • Chemical accumulation – persistent organic pollutants (POPs), with twelve considered the worst offenders being referred to as the dirty dozen. POPs are chemicals which persistent in the environment, bio-accumulate in the food web, and are consider toxic to the health of humans and environment. This has had a significant impact on the Northeast Pacific killer whale populations, which feed at or near the top of the food web. The southern residents are five times more polluted than the beluga whales in the St. Lawrence Seaway. The transient (mammal-hunting) are considered the most polluted marine mammal in the world, for they are the top of the oceanic food web.

The Three Most Significant Pieces of the Toxic Chemical Puzzle

Piece # 1: The Legacy

The persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are the most significant piece of the puzzle in the habitat of southern resident killer whales. Although, the United Nations Environment Programme Governing Council started to examine the “Dirty Dozen” in 1995, the chemicals’ roles as a persistent polluter were already in effect. Now despite being “widely” banned, the POPs i.e. Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) are still present in the Salish Sea and its inhabitants. The Southern resident killer whales have levels of PCBs well over the 17mg/kg lipid-1 threshold of immunotoxicity (toxins that suppress the immune system capabilities to defend against infections, etc.), witnessed in harbour seals.

The Northern resident community of killer whales will have to wait until 2030 for 95% of their population to fall to or below the 17mg/kg lipid-1 threshold, while the Southern resident community has until 2089. This will only occur if the “dirty dozen” remain banned and aren’t allowed to be traded to or utilized by developing nations. However due to the extreme bioaccumulation, in transient killer whales, the “legacy” of these banned chemicals might be around until the end of their existence.

Piece # 2: Dirty Backyards

The Southern resident killer whales utilize the waters off of Southern Vancouver Island, the Lower Mainland area of British Columbia, and the waters of Puget Sound off of Seattle and Tacoma. However, these surrounding waters act as the recreational and sewage sites for approximately 8 million people, which is significant considering the Southern resident population is 86 animals (as of July 2009). This population fluctuates between 80 to 100 animals. Therefore, human impacts on the marine sensitive environment of the Salish Sea are quite significant, i.e. over 8 million flushes of the toilet each day or the chemicals washed down to clean our house, etc. This means that if 8 million people made the minor adjustments to their lifestyles, such as biodegradable cleaning products, low-flush toilets, “killer whale” friendly lawns (local plants/vegetation vs. exotic plants) or pulling of weeds instead of chemical poisoning and practicing green boating, would result in a significant improvement to the habitat of the Southern killer whales. Refer to the Earth Day 365 Blog Post for tips on environmental friendly lifestyles.

The Low Flow Toliet in my Place - 6 Litres/1.6 Gallons

Piece # 3: Global Village

We are part of a global village. Therefore, the chemicals that we utilize are readily moved around the planet through atmospheric processes, oceanic currents, and biological migrations (food web). The Chinook salmon migrates out into the open Pacific Ocean to feed prior to returning their natal spawning streams off the coast of Western Canada and the United States. The salmon is feeding in the North Pacific sink for the chemicals from Asia and then transports them back to the Salish Sea. Each individual killer whale consumes 250 kg (500 lbs) of salmon daily, which results in an increase of contaminants being ingested from other pollutant sources. However, due to the boom of eco-tourism (i.e. salmon/halibut fishing and whale watching), we have a platform for environmental/conservational message for the killer whales and other marine wildlife. It allows for education of the public (local and global tourists) about global connectivity and that individual choices do have an impact. Therefore, individuals leave with the message that they can do something in their own “backyards” wherever it is in the world and have a positive impact on the marine environment. As a result, a global change occurs and improves the habitat of the Southern resident killer whales.

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