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Human Impact on The Oceans The Ocean One of the most valuable and untapped resources. Yet, seriously threatened by what humans have done to it. The problem of controlling human impacts on the ocean boils down to short term costs. These short term costs ($$$) often prevent effective controls. Problem #1: Habitat Alteration Dredging – Removing sediment from the bottom of the ocean with mechanical force to dislodge and excavate material. Dredging is used to clear obstructions so larger ships can enter ports. Used to keep harbors, rivers and other waterways from silting up. Dredging is also a method used to collect scallops. Dredging dramatically affects marine ecosystems, causing severe seabed habitat destruction. Sea creatures living on the bottom are crushed, buried or exposed to predators, and clouds of sediments rise, altering seabed biochemistry. Natural healthy undisturbed cobble-shell bottom, habitat for scallops. After just one pass of a scallop dredge this is the result! By leveling the ocean floor, the food chain is disturbed, the hiding places have been removed and conditions favorable to faster growing species take over. Seafloor recovery could take centuries. Some species of sponges can reach 50 years old. Some clams can live for more than 200 years. Some individual corals have been estimated to live 500 years or more. Problem #2: Offshore Drilling (Oil) Problems with it: Noise from Seismic Testing Water and air pollution Visual impacts Coastal Development Sonic blasts damage the brain and ears of marine mammals and other species, disorienting them and causing them to beach themselves. Problem # 3: By Catch This refers to fish and other marine life caught "incidentally" while harvesting another species. These are fish that are the wrong type, size, sex, or quality as well as marine mammals, sea turtles, and seabirds. Facts about Bycatch Commercial fishing worldwide wastes approximately 44 billion pounds of ocean life annually. Roughly 25 percent of the entire global catch. In the United States, all sea turtles are listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act, as a result of fishing bycatch. Whale Entanglement More whales, dolphins and porpoises die every year by getting entangled in fishing gear than from any other cause. Problem #4 Toxic Ocean Pollutants Our waste, even in small quantities, have huge effects on ocean communities and species. Toxic pollutants in the ocean ecosystem have massive impacts on the plants and animals. Some major types of pollutants: garbage sewage chemicals radioactive waste eutrophication heavy metals oil Oil Spills (1) The effects of an oil spill of marine life depend on a number of physical and biological factors. The distribution of the oil spill will be affected by currents and wind In addition, the amount of oil spilled will determine the eventual geographic boundaries of the impact area. The physical and chemical properties of the oil will determine the behaviour of the slick, in terms of its thickness and rate of spreading. Oil Spills (2) Environmental conditions such as salinity, water temperature, and type and slope of shoreline will determine habitat effects and clean-up procedures Some example habitats include sandy beach, mud, cliffs, estuaries and open water. In terms of difficulty of clean-up and relative vulnerability, a salt marsh ranks the highest, followed by eelgrass, mud, mixed-fine sediment, mixedcoarse sediment, rock, sand, algae (kelp) and open water. Oil Spills (3) Biological characteristics of the organisms affected will determine the severity of impact. These characteristics include the type of species, life stage (larval, juvenile or adult) and size. Cleaning-up oil spills: 1. Dispersants: Oil can be broken down more quickly by spraying dispersants (chemicals) on the oil slick from boats or planes. This method only works on fresh, small oil spills. 2. Booms: A boom has a floating skirt suspended down in the water and a sail holding it above the water line. The floating skirt stops the oil from passing. These are used to prevent oil from entering delicate and protected areas. 3. Slick-lickers: This method uses a belt of oil absorbing material that sucks up the oil from the ocean water. The oil is then squeezed out of the absorbing material into a collecting bin.