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Wednesday, 28 January 2015
Friday, 16 January 2015
My world
I first fell
in love with the ocean as a young child. Being brought up on the beach, I learnt
to swim before I could walk. The ocean was my playground.
20 years later and the ocean is now my office.
I have no idea what it is like to hold down a regular job or have
a permanent address. But it is not relevant; it does not matter to
me because wherever there is an ocean I make my living and
I’m at home. I’ve always been this way. I have never aspired to
participate in societal routine because it is not my world.
This is my world.
But my world is being destroyed. THE OCEAN IS DYING.
I have seen the after effects of what we have done, how we are
ruining it. Water is what differentiates our planet from any other
and facilitates life. NO OCEAN, NO LIFE.
We call this world PLANET earth, but seven tenths of the world’s
surface is covered by water and over 80% of life on earth lives
in the ocean. Life on earth evolved from the sea.
We all come from the sea but we are not all of the sea.
There are those who have never seen these creatures in the wild.
They see them in their bank accounts.
They profit from the destruction of our oceans. They take exactly
what they want with no thought or respect for the impact it will have.
But we depend on the oceans. They hold 97% of the planet's water produce
more than half of the oxygen in the atmosphere and absorb the most carbon from it.
Over 2 billion people rely on the oceans for their primary source of food.
Destroying the ocean is threatening everything that lives in it.
Sharks are in real danger. But ironically, society
has taught us that it’s sharks that are dangerous and you
grow up believing it.
But when you see the very thing you were told to fear underwater: it’s absolutely
incredible. If sharks
were the evil, deadly man eaters that the media sensationalises them to be,
then I would have probably been eaten years ago.
However, I believe that sharks know we are
not prey. Millions of people swim every year in
waters where sharks hunt all the time. If they wanted to eat us they would, but
they don’t.
Swimming with sharks I feel vulnerable, clumsy
and small. They have an aura of invincibility, but nothing is as it seems. Sharks are in serious
trouble. Every single second of
every single day around 3 sharks are killed by us. With 90% of the
world's shark populations already wiped out, sharks are being depleted faster
than they can reproduce and if an apex predator is taken out of any ecosystem
then eventually it is going to collapse. Sharks are vitally important; they have
shaped life in the ocean for over 400 million years. Sharks kill 5 people each year. We
legally execute 2,400 people a year and kill 100 million sharks. Is it really
sharks that we should fear? Don’t fear them. Fear
for them.
I believe that future generations are going to look back on us as
barbarians, in the same way we now look back on slave traders.
We are driving species to extinction and the worst part is that we
know what we’re doing and yet we’re still allowing it to happen.
I just hope that by the time people finally see sense, it isn’t too late,
the damage isn’t irreversible and we aren’t faced with the extinction of species.
People protect what they love, this is what I love and I’m determined
to fight for it. I want future generations to grow up to be able to
experience the same ocean that I have. But if this carries on,
in the next 4 years 30% of known species of sharks and rays could
become extinct. Once they’re gone we’ve lost them forever.
We will have to carry that on our conscience, it will be the fault
of mankind. We have caused these problems it is our duty to fix
them.
People don’t see what goes on in the oceans so it’s easy for them
to ignore. They wanted to save bears, leopards and elephants;
mankind was afraid of sharks and creatures of the deep.
However I believe that if others had witnessed what I have seen
in my lifetime from hundreds of hours underwater, I would not seem
outspoken at all.
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