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Author Topic: Scientists to gauge health of Canada's oceans  (Read 2214 times)

troutbreath

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Scientists to gauge health of Canada's oceans
« on: November 26, 2009, 02:05:10 PM »

Scientists to gauge health of Canada's oceans
 
Country has a moral responsibility for ocean ecology, panel chairman says
 
By Larry Pynn, Vancouver SunNovember 26, 2009
 
An independent panel of scientists will produce a comprehensive report of the health of Canada's oceans, with special emphasis on climate change and marine biodiversity.

Panel chairman Jeff Hutchings, a Dalhousie University biology professor, said in an interview that Canada has a moral and geographic responsibility to care for its oceans, given that it has the longest coastline in the world.

"People tend not to focus on the oceans, but on the land-based issues," he said of the climate-change debate. "Things in the oceans belong to all Canadians, not specific groups or companies, and that lends a sense of stewardship to what happens in the oceans."

Announcement of the report today, sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada, precedes next month's United Nations climate change conference in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Hutchings said the report would provide a source of education and information about oceans, with recommendations to Ottawa on how to improve the oceans' health into the future.

Hutchings is also chairman of the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, a scientific body that recommends to Ottawa species that should be listed as at risk.

COSEWIC has identified 29 marine fishes and 33 marine mammals at risk in Canada -- including southern resident killer whales, basking sharks, and abalone -- although not all have been accepted by Ottawa to date.

Of 10 scientists on the panel, one is from each of the U.S. and Britain, and the other eight from Canada, including three from B.C.: Brian Riddell, a former federal fisheries scientist, now chief executive officer of the Pacific Salmon Foundation; and two from Simon Fraser University, marine biologist Isabelle Côté, and Randall Peterman, Canada research chair in fisheries risk assessment and management.

The panel, expected to report back in 2012, plans to address broader issues than the recently announced federal judicial inquiry into the collapse of Fraser River sockeye runs.

lpynn@vancouversun.com

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun
 
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another SLICE of dirty fish perhaps?