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	<title>The Narwhal | News on Climate Change, Environmental Issues in Canada</title>
	<link>https://thenarwhal.ca</link>
  <description>The Narwhal’s team of investigative journalists dives deep to tell stories about the natural world in Canada you can’t find anywhere else.</description>
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  <copyright>Copyright 2026 The Narwhal News Society</copyright>
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		<title>The Narwhal | News on Climate Change, Environmental Issues in Canada</title>
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      <title>Oceans Of Reasons To Protect What We Love</title>
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			<pubDate>Wed, 08 Jun 2016 23:02:54 +0000</pubDate>			
			<description><![CDATA[June 8 marks World Oceans Day, but what if we celebrated oceans every day? Covering more than&#160;70 per cent of Earth&#8217;s surface, oceans, more than anything, define our small blue planet. We should celebrate their complex and vibrant ecosystems, life-sustaining services, calming effects and unimaginable diversity, much of which we have not yet even discovered....]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure><img width="826" height="620" src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h.jpg" class="attachment-banner size-banner wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" fetchpriority="high" srcset="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h.jpg 826w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h-760x570.jpg 760w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h-450x338.jpg 450w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h-20x15.jpg 20w" sizes="(max-width: 826px) 100vw, 826px" /><figcaption><small><em></em></small></figcaption></figure> <p>June 8 marks World Oceans Day, but what if we celebrated oceans every day? Covering more than&nbsp;70 per cent of Earth&rsquo;s surface, oceans, more than anything, define our small blue planet. We should celebrate their complex and vibrant ecosystems, life-sustaining services, calming effects and unimaginable diversity, much of which we have not yet even discovered.</p>
<p>Summer is an especially rich time for ocean life. As days grow longer here in the northern hemisphere, abundance builds from the microscopic level as photosynthesis triggers phytoplankton to bloom, providing food for zooplankton such as krill. Krill then feed small fish like herring and sand lance, which in turn feed larger fish, dolphins and whales. This marine food web relies on a scale of unfathomable interconnectedness &mdash; yet it&rsquo;s easily disrupted.</p>
<p>Climate change, overfishing, pollution, industrial activity, shipping and events like El&nbsp;Ni&ntilde;o are putting oceans under stress like never before. Sea levels are rising,&nbsp;fish migrating,&nbsp;oceans acidifying, coral reefs bleaching and&nbsp;phytoplankton&nbsp;disappearing, and populations of iconic marine mammals&nbsp;like&nbsp;killer whales&nbsp;are plummeting.&nbsp;</p>
<p><!--break--></p>
<p>The news for oceans hasn&rsquo;t been good lately, and that worries Canadians. It&rsquo;s not just coastal communities that are defined and affected by oceans. Canada has the longest coastline in the world, and people throughout Canada want the seas, and all the marine life they support, to be healthy.</p>
<p>Fortunately, solutions to&nbsp;many ocean woes are within our grasp, although governments have been frustratingly slow to act over the past decade. Canada could protect marine areas, restore protective&nbsp;laws,&nbsp;conserve&nbsp;wild salmon and&nbsp;control&nbsp;open net-pen fish&nbsp;farms.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Our country&rsquo;s commitment&nbsp;to <a href="http://www.davidsuzuki.org/issues/oceans/science/marine-planning-and-conservation/marine-protected-areas/" rel="noopener">protect 10 per cent of its marine environment</a> by 2020 is a good start, but if we followed countries like Australia and the U.S, we&rsquo;d aim higher. Canada could act to transform its reputation from laggard to leader on marine protection, plan&nbsp;for ocean management with an understanding of how ecosystems work and&nbsp;incorporate traditional Indigenous knowledge&nbsp;to give&nbsp;wildlife a chance to thrive.</p>
<p>Pacific&nbsp;salmon, crucial to West Coast ecosystems,&nbsp;are especially in need of protection, but their numbers continue to decline.&nbsp;Few natural events are as dramatic and moving as millions of salmon returning from the oceans to spawn in streams, rivers and lakes.&nbsp;Driven by the imperative to reach spawning beds before their genetically programmed deaths, salmon fight past predators, hooks, nets and pollution, retaining the power to leap river barriers shortly before their lives end.&nbsp;Bears, eagles and other wildlife feed on the salmon, leaving their nitrogen-rich wastes to fertilize the magnificent coastal rainforests.</p>
<p>For&nbsp;almost 40 years,&nbsp;Canadian laws protected fish such as salmon and the&nbsp;water bodies where they live and spawn.&nbsp;The Fisheries Act was one legal tool to protect lakes and rivers, which offer benefits such as clean drinking water to nearby communities. But the federal government removed habitat protections from the act in 2012. Fish that aren&rsquo;t part of a defined, often commercial, fishery&nbsp;will remain vulnerable until&nbsp;protection is&nbsp;reinstated.</p>
<p>We still have much to learn about wild salmon, but we can take some practical steps to support them.&nbsp;A lot of time and money, about $37 million, was spent&nbsp;on <a href="http://publications.gc.ca/site/eng/432516/publication.html" rel="noopener">one of the most comprehensive reviews</a> of Pacific salmon management ever undertaken.&nbsp;It&rsquo;s been four years since&nbsp;B.C. Supreme Court Justice Bruce Cohen&nbsp;completed his Inquiry into the Decline of Sockeye Salmon in the Fraser River, yet few of his recommendations have been implemented.&nbsp;Fish biologists&nbsp;say that&nbsp;Canada&rsquo;s Wild Salmon Policy, adopted in 2005,&nbsp;also offers <a href="http://www.actionforsalmon.ca" rel="noopener">good management measures</a>,&nbsp;but it isn&rsquo;t being followed either.</p>
<p>Salmon face other threats.&nbsp;Concerns over disease spread from salmon farms to wild salmon were heightened recently with the discovery of a <a href="http://news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=1069579" rel="noopener">new pathogen&nbsp;in farmed salmon</a>. The virus connected to this disease&nbsp;plagues Norway&rsquo;s farmed salmon and is now common in penned Atlantic salmon and wild fish near B.C. fish farms.</p>
<p>Salmon are often indicators of the overall health of the ecosystems in which they live. When marine ecosystems are healthy, they provide food, jobs, recreation and culture. They are foundational life forces for&nbsp;whales, bears, eagles,&nbsp;forests and humans.&nbsp;We should&nbsp;celebrate their&nbsp;life-giving capacity&nbsp;by&nbsp;<a href="http://action2.davidsuzuki.org/canadas-oceans-need-your-support" rel="noopener">treating them with respect</a> &mdash; not just on World Oceans Day, but every day!</p>
<p><em>Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation senior communications specialist Theresa Beer.</em></p>
<p><em>Learn more at&nbsp;<a href="http://www.davidsuzuki.org/" rel="noopener">www.davidsuzuki.org</a>.</em></p>
<p>Image credit: Brendan DeMelle</p>

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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[David Suzuki]]></dc:creator>
						<category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[climate change oceans]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[oceans day]]></category>			<media:content url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h-760x570.jpg" fileSize="4096" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="760" height="570"><media:credit></media:credit></media:content><media:thumbnail url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/8356647864_cc88e6dddb_h-760x570.jpg" width="760" height="570" />    </item>
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