Tips categories
Articles with tips for going green to help protect the environment we all affect!
 
Renewable energy - solar power, wind energy and hot water
 
Special offer
NEW - Green Deal Of The Day! Save 50 - 90% on earth friendly products!
::
Buy castile soap and save! Learn more about uses for eco friendly castile soap
Popular Articles
  1. Brown rice vs white rice
  2. Hydrogen peroxide tips
  3. Uses for eucalyptus oil
  4. Handy borax tips
  5. Recycling styrofoam
  6. White sugar vs raw sugar
  7. Castile soap
  8. 30 baking soda tips
  9. White bread vs brown bread
  10. 24 handy lemon tips
No popular articles found.
Get involved!
Feel free to add comments to tips and blog posts & build on the information or click here to submit new earth friendly tips and environmental news items!
 
Green Living Tips on Twitter
 
Green Living Tips on Facebook

 
bookmark or share this page
 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  Census of the sea
Census of the sea
By Green Living Tips | Published  08/3/2010
Census of Marine Life scientists yesterday unveiled a roll call of marine species distribution and diversity in key global ocean areas.

Australian and Japanese waters both contain almost 33,000 documented forms of life, by far the most biodiverse. The oceans off China, the Mediterranean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico round out the biodiversity top five.

The most prevalent marine organisms:

* 19% Crustaceans (which includes crabs, lobsters and barnacles)
* 17% Mollusca (includes squid, octopus, clams, snails and slugs)
* 12% Pisces (fish, including sharks)
* 10% Protozoa (unicellular micro-organisms)
* 10% Algae and other plant-like organisms
* 7% Annelida (segmented worms)
* 5% Cnidaria (includes sea anemones, corals and jellyfish)
* 3% Platyhelminthes (includes flatworms)
* 3% Echinodermata (includes starfish, sea urchins and sea cucumbers)
* 3% Porifera (includes sponges)
* 2% Bryozoa (mat or 'moss animals')
* 1% Tunicata (includes sea squirts)

The rest are other invertebrates (5%) and other vertebrates (2%) which includes whales, sea lions, seals, sea birds, turtles and walruses.

The Mediterranean had the most alien species among the 25 regions, with over 600 (4% of the all species inventoried), most of
which arrived from the Red Sea via the Suez Canal; a man-made waterway opened in 1869.

The main threats to marine life up until recent times have been overfishing, lost habitat, invasive species and pollution. Emerging threats include rising sea temperature and acidification through carbon dioxide saturation, and the enlargement of areas characterized by low oxygen content (called hypoxia) of seawater - also known as dead zones.

In October, the Census will release its latest estimate of all marine species known to science, which is likely to exceed 230,000. It's an incredible number, but those involved in the Census acknowledge it will still be nowhere near the true count.

You can Track the geographic locations of the Census at http://comlmaps.org/globe  
 
Related:
 
Caring for our waterways



Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
Article reproduction guidelines
 

 
blog comments powered by Disqus