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:// Can sharks predict an English storm?

[One good reason for onshore slop. No Sharks.]
Researchers are beginning to conclude that there may be a link between bad weather and sharks behaviour. Sharks have a very acute sensory system, and now its been put forward that they can detect pressure changes in the atmosphere.
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News We have 13 days to make history. Save California's coast and ocean!

Support the North Central coast marine protected areas by Serge Dedina

09/04/2008:// Underwater Yosemites' chart course for California's ocean legacy

North Central Coast
After months of hard work, the North Central Coast regional stakeholder group has finalized three proposals for protecting the coastline between San Mateo and Mendocino Counties. The plans vary in the level of protection they provide. The strongest plan, nicknamed "Proposal 4", would do the best job of helping California's ocean life recover and thrive.

On April 22-23, the state's Blue Ribbon Task Force (a high level group of policy advisors) will recommend one proposal to the Fish & Game Commission. Please join us in making your voice heard by sending an email.

We need your help! Fishing clubs have generated an avalanche of emails supporting the weakest plan. We want to make sure strong conservation voices balance that out to avoid the Task Force feeling like it has to lower the bar.
Please visit caloceans.org where you can easily send a public comment supporting the strongest of the three plans. Comments can also be emailed to MLPAComments@resources.ca.gov .

Let's follow on the footsteps of those who created our National Park System and save California's coast and ocean for generations to come.

Marine Reserves at a Glance

The Problem
California fish populations, habitats, and marine ecosystems need help. In 2000, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce declared the West Coast groundfish fishery a "disaster." By 2002, seven species of rockfish were designated as "overfished" by the federal government. "Overfished" means that the estimated numbers of fish were less than 25 percent of their original populations. While roughly 75% (66 out of 89) of West Coast fisheries have not been fully assessed, scientists have seen declines in fish populations around the globe. Further, scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Fisheries Service have documented a 45% decline in fish population size along the West Coast in the last twenty-one years alone.

The solution
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), are areas of the ocean set aside where some or all types of human activity are restricted. They help conserve biological diversity, protect habitats, aid recovery of depleted fisheries, and promote recreation, study, and education, a function similar to that of national parks.
Benefits of Marine Reserves

Marine protected areas can help curb this decline. A marine reserve is a type of MPA that limits all extractive uses, which makes them the most protective and potentially the most beneficial. Scientific studies of over 80 marine reserves worldwide have shown that protecting areas from fishing and other extractive uses really do make a difference. These studies show that reserves placed in California-like habitats allow the fish and other animals to more than double their population size and grow 30% larger than animals outside reserves.
Marine reserves provide an area for fish to grow older and larger. These older and larger fish produce more young.

• Bigger, older female fish produce a greater quantity and greater quality of larvae.

• These protected areas also have 20% higher diversity of plants and animals than outside reserves.

• Over 160 scientists signed a consensus statement stating that marine reserves are a highly effective but under-appreciated and under-utilized tool that can help alleviate the declining state of the ocean.

• 71% of Californians stated they wanted more marine reserves created off the coast in a recent poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.

• The California Department of Fish and Game found no direct evidence that MPAs were responsible for any gains or losses in commercial fisheries in the Channel Islands region three years after the establishment of the Channel Islands marine reserves, despite predictions of economic hardship and loss prior to their establishment.
 
  Surfing headlines

Ingleby Wins Oxbow WLT pres. by Orange at Anglet, France

 

Ben Haworth wins the English Longboard Title

 

Surf snow crossover in Devon

[Harley Ingleby (Coffs Harbour, AUS) won the Oxbow WLT] [Ben Haworth by Sarah Clarke] [The Brush Ramp]

Harley Ingleby was crowned Oxbow WLT pres. by Orange Champion today in good two to three foot waves at Les Dunes

Eighteen year old Ben Haworth from North Devon won the English National Longboard title at Watergate Bay over the bank holiday weekend

Pro-surfers endorse Brush Boarding, a combination of Surfing and Snowboarding, in Devon, the home of its Aussie inventor

British hopes rest with Skinner

 

Surfing legends celebrate Tintagel sewage victory

 

Surfers Celebrate After Saltburn and Tynemouth Beaches Saved From Sewage Treatment Winter Turn-Off's

[Jersey's Ben Skinner in action in France] [Arthurian legends back in Tintagel to campaign for proper sewage treatment] [North East Surfing]

Cornishman Sam Bleakley has failed to join his British team-mate Ben Skinner in the third round of the Oxbow World Longboard Tour event in France

Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) campaigners have today welcomed Hilary Benn, Secretary Of State for the Environment decision to refuse South West Water permission to carry on dumping raw sewage at Tintagel and Bossiney

SAS campaigners are today delighted that Northumbrian Water’s application to turn off Ultra-Violet disinfection sewage treatment from October to April at Marske-by-the-Sea has been rejected by the Environment Agency (EA)

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