Marine wildlife. Whale, shark and turtle watching and diving.
About 75% of the world is covered by water, of which only 3 percent is fresh water. On dry land wildlife exists within a very small band around the earth surface, but the great oceans and seas of the world AVERAGE over 2 miles deep, with their deepest point, the Marianas trench, being comfortably deep enough to swallow Mount Everest whole with a couple of thousand metres to spare (Humans have only reached the bottom of the Marianas trench once, compared with thousands of climbers who have reached the top of Everest.).
Yet the number of known marine species stands at only around 30,000 at the moment, though this is increasing at the rate of roughly one every three days as new discoveries are made.
Aussie scientist Brad Norman has spent a career studying whale sharks, though still little is known about their habits, but you can help unravel the mystery.

Whale watching
Whale watching is now a well established and burgeoning industry, providing opportunities in almost every sea and ocean. Surprisingly there are only slightly more than 100 species of whales and dolphins, though they are spread far and wide. At least one third of these species are classified as endangered, with the Western Gray and Northern Right whales probably being the rarest. A recent UNEP (United National Environment Programme) report on wildlife tourism recognised the importance of tourism as a force for good in conservation.
Whale watching is now a well established and burgeoning industry, providing opportunities in almost every sea and ocean. Surprisingly there are only slightly more than 100 species of whales and dolphins, though they are spread far and wide. At least one third of these species are classified as endangered, with the Western Gray and Northern Right whales probably being the rarest. A recent UNEP (United National Environment Programme) report on wildlife tourism recognised the importance of tourism as a force for good in conservation.
Whale watch guidelines, Argentina.
- No more than one boat per group of whales;
- No drifting toward the animals with engines off;
- Always approach whales from their side or back, never from in front;
- Do not chase whales when they swim away from the boats;
- Do not approach a breaching whale closer than 100 m;
- Restrict time with each individual or group of whales to 15 minutes;
- Leave the whales only when their location is certain;
- Do not exceed 10 knots when returning from a trip.
However it is a fine line between responsible and sustainable tourism, to degrading the environment and contributing to species decline. Any decent whale watching industry should have strict and enforceable code of conduct. The following has been adopted by whale watching operators in Peninsula Valdes, Argentina, one of the finest whale watch areas in the world.
Shark diving
Shark diving and watching is becoming increasingly popular, with cage diving for great whites and boat trips off South Africa, boat trips to see the huge basking shark off the Isle of Man and diving with Whale sharks in the Seychelles all providing different experiences.
Shark diving and watching is becoming increasingly popular, with cage diving for great whites and boat trips off South Africa, boat trips to see the huge basking shark off the Isle of Man and diving with Whale sharks in the Seychelles all providing different experiences.
Turtle watching is a fast growing sector of the tourism industry. If properly undertaken it can have huge benefits for turtle conservation. There are 8 species of sea turtle in the world, and all are threatened or endangered. The following is taken from a recent UNEP report on the benefits of wildlife tourism.
Projeto TAMAR, established by the Brazilian government in 1980, protects five species of turtles that are found around Brazil’s coasts. TAMAR’s conservation programme is based on a network of 22 stations along 1,100 km of coastline, as well as on three oceanic islands. The stations are located in the major nesting and feeding areas for sea turtles, and provide direct employment to 1,300 people, at least 80 percent of whom are fishermen and their relatives’ resident in villages around the stations. Visitor centres have been opened at the 10 most visited sites, and between them they receive one and a half million visitors each year. The most popular, at Praia do Forte, receives over 500,000 visitors a year, approximately ninety-four per cent of whom are Brazilians; in 2003 this centre alone generated net revenues of $490,000 from sales and admissions.
Projeto TAMAR, established by the Brazilian government in 1980, protects five species of turtles that are found around Brazil’s coasts. TAMAR’s conservation programme is based on a network of 22 stations along 1,100 km of coastline, as well as on three oceanic islands. The stations are located in the major nesting and feeding areas for sea turtles, and provide direct employment to 1,300 people, at least 80 percent of whom are fishermen and their relatives’ resident in villages around the stations. Visitor centres have been opened at the 10 most visited sites, and between them they receive one and a half million visitors each year. The most popular, at Praia do Forte, receives over 500,000 visitors a year, approximately ninety-four per cent of whom are Brazilians; in 2003 this centre alone generated net revenues of $490,000 from sales and admissions.
A recent study of Leatherback turtles in Gabon, West Africa, led by Dr Brendan Godley of the University of Exeter, has revealed that 'It's thought that globally more than 50,000 leatherback turtles are incidentally caught by fisherman trawling for other species each year. Of these, thousands are thought to die as a result. Approximately 1.4 billion hooks are cast into the world's oceans as part of industrial long-line fishing, with 37% of this fishing effort in the Atlantic. A major hotspot is found off West Africa, the focus of this study.' Click here for further information.
Diving
Diving is a long established, but fast growing sport that is increasingly throwing its net wider and wider. With hotspots in the Caribbean, the Red Sea and on the Great Barrier Reef, this high value sport can now be undertaken almost anywhere in places as diverse as Indonesia, the North Pole, Madagascar and the Amazon.
Diving is a long established, but fast growing sport that is increasingly throwing its net wider and wider. With hotspots in the Caribbean, the Red Sea and on the Great Barrier Reef, this high value sport can now be undertaken almost anywhere in places as diverse as Indonesia, the North Pole, Madagascar and the Amazon.
Recent Marine & Diving news
- Marine survey of Britain’s remotest nature reserve to reveal undersea wildlife
- 30% of the world’s reef building corals endangered
- Scientists discover huge new coral reefs off the coast of Brazil
- Hundreds of Yorkshire seabirds drowning in fishing nets – fishery closed temporarily
- Swordfish found on South Wales Beach
- Spanish admit taking 25% more tuna that quota allowance
More Marine & Diving news
- Six Shark Species added to Northeast Atlantic Threatened Species List
- Disappearing penguins set alarm bells ringing in the world’s oceans
- US authorities criticise EU Bluefin tuna management - Despite fishery closure
- Identifying Marine Ecotourism Opportunities in Timor-Leste
- US acts to cut Atlantic shark quotas and prohibit removal of shark fins at sea
- “Flag of convenience” ships pillaging the oceans
- DEFRA announces protection for Lyme Bay Reefs - one of the UK’s top marine wildlife sites
Wildlife watchers in west Cornwall have been privileged by the large numbers of Basking sharks sighted over the last month (June-July 2006) or so. Without a doubt one of the most exciting spectacles and gatherings of nature it’s still possible to see on this ever more denuded planet of ours. Curiously it is the complete opposite to last year, when comparatively few were seen in this area, but a big increase was noted off the West coast of Scotland instead. One theory was that rising sea tempe
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2006, a year of unusual marine strandings
After the huge coverage of the Bottlenose whale that swam up the Thames in January there have been a string of unusual marine strandings and deaths in 2006 around our shores. The Northern Bottlenose whale is a rare visitor to our UK waters, but not as unusual as the Yellow fin tuna that washed ashore recently in Burry Port Estuary in Wales. Another unusual visitor, a Sei whale, became stranded and died in Lough Larne in Northern Ireland, The first time for 90 years this species has stranded in I
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The dolphin population in the Moray Firth area is very special as they are the most northerly resident bottlenose dolphins in the world with over 130 animals currently recorded. These particular dolphins vary physically to their relations in warmer climates such as the Caribbean, Indian or Pacific oceans. They are a lot bigger and fatter (4m as opposed to 2.5m) - this is due to the large percentage of blubber they have in their bodies to insulate them from the colder water temperatures of the No
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Sand eels, a key supply chain food, are disappearing from the North Sea.
In advance of the crucial pre-Christmas Fisheries Council meeting in Brussels to thrash out how many tonnes of fish the industry can catch next year, the European Commission’s annual proposals for industrial fisheries, such as sand eel and sprat, highlight that seabirds, whales and other marine animals may be finding it difficult to find the food they need to survive. Industrial fisheries pursue these important fish species - which make up the bottom of the food chain - not for human consumption
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Related News Articles
A rare and endangered swordfish has been discovered dead on a South Wales beach.
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SEPTEMBER 2006. Dozens of new species of marine life, including epaulette sharks, ‘flasher’ wrasse and reef-building coral, have been discovered.
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Lyme Bay Reefs devastated.
Devon Wildlife Trust has collected evidence that the Reefs in Lyme Bay have been trashed by some fishing techniques.
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The Census of Marine Life has discovered many new species, including crabs, corals, sea cucumbers, sea quirts, worms, sea stars, snails, and clams.
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A Colossal squid, thought to be the largest largest invertebrate ever seen, has been caught by an NZ fishing boat.
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One of the finest marine wildlife sites in the UK's is to be protected from damaging scallop-dredging, thanks to the introduction of a new 60sq mile exclusion zone in Lyme Bay.
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Many weird and new species revelaed by Australian scientists conducting a deep sea survey.
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Three new species of salamander discovered in Costa Rica forest
The salamanders, including a tiny dwarf salamander, were discovered on an expedition run by the Natural History Museum of London.
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One of the world's rarest coral-like structures has been discovered in Loch Teacuis in Morvern, Scotland.
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Swansea University researchers believe that one of Britain’s oldest species is likely to become a more frequent visitor to UK and Ireland because the water is getting warmer.
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10% off 'Whales, Dolphins and Seals', now £11.69.
Photos, illustrations, maps, hotspots and plenty of information, by far the best book in its field. Includes information on all whales, dolphins, seals, sea-lions, Polar bears, sea otters, dugong and manatees.
Click here to buy this book.
Photos, illustrations, maps, hotspots and plenty of information, by far the best book in its field. Includes information on all whales, dolphins, seals, sea-lions, Polar bears, sea otters, dugong and manatees.
Click here to buy this book.
