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Guilty Planet

Seeking reason amidst the irrational madness of destroying one's only home.

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Jacquet_Berlin.jpgJennifer Jacquet is a postdoctoral research fellow working with Dr. Daniel Pauly and the Sea Around Us Project at the UBC Fisheries Centre. As a kid, she read 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the Earth and would come to discover that while those 50 things were indeed simple, saving the Earth was not.

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July 30-August 1, 2010: Attending Sci Foo Camp hosted by Nature, O'Reilly and Google at the Googleplex, Mountain View, CA.

June 19, 2010: Presenting at the Human Behavior and Evolution Society Annual Meeting at the University of Oregon in Eugene.

May 2010: Counting fish: A typology for fisheries catch data published in The Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences.

May 3-7, 2010: Workshop: Incorporating Appropriate Ecological Baselines into Management of Ocean Resources at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.

April 24, 2010: Q&A following a screening of The End of the Line at the Food Film Festival in Portland, Oregon.

March 12, 2010: Presenting at the World Affairs Conference of Northern California in San Francisco.

February 21, 2010: Co-organizing and presenting on the panel Preserving the Global Commons Through Conservation and Cooperation at the AAAS meeting in San Diego.

January-March 2010: Visiting lecturer at the Scripps Insitution of Oceanography, UCSD. Co-teaching Topics in Marine Conservation with Jeremy Jackson.

November 2009: Conserving Wild Fish in a Sea of Market-Based Efforts published online at Oryx

August 14, 2009: Dan Ax at Avukado Productions makes the following short video for Guilty Planet:

July 30, 2009: Successfully defended Ph.D. dissertation Fish as Food in an Age of Globalization at the University of British Columbia.

June 2009: Published at Conservation Biology: What Can Conservationists Learn from Investor Behavior?

May 27, 2009: Talk titled "Historical Renaming and Mislabeling of Fish" given the Oceans Past II conference in Vancouver, B.C.

May 24, 2009: Talk at the International Marine Conservation Congress in Washington, D.C.

March 24, 2009: Dave Beck and I showcase our jellyfish burger in Scientific American's photo gallery:

beck_jacquet_jellyburger.jpg


March 24, 2009: Talk at the Student Conference for Conservation Science at Cambridge University, UK.

March 14, 2009: Talk at the Kettle's Yard Problemathon for Cambridge's Science Festival.

March 3, 2009: Talk titled "Guilt v. Shame in Market Based Efforts to Save Our Fish" at the Max Planck Institute in Ploen, Germany.

February 27, 2009: Talk at Fauna & Flora International.

January-March 2009: Visiting researcher with Bill Sutherland's lab in the Conservation Science Group at the University of Cambridge.

November 2008: A new study In hot soup: sharks captured in Ecuador's waters published in Environmental Sciences.

November 2008:

« A Better Yogurt Container | Main | Will This Trash Can Reduce Waste? »

MPAs Work

Category: Shifting BaselinesSolutionsStylized Substance
Posted on: October 9, 2009 9:34 AM, by Jennifer L. Jacquet

Myopic spot-prawn lovers might not like the idea of closing some of the oceans to fishing, but California is creating a network of marine protected areas (MPAs) along its coast for one simple reason -- MPAs work. Research by Callum Roberts et al. (2001) published in Science found:

a network of five small reserves in St. Lucia increased adjacent catches of artisanal fishers by between 46 and 90%, depending on the type of gear the fishers used. In Florida, reserve zones in the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge have supplied increasing numbers of world record-sized fish to adjacent recreational fisheries since the 1970s.

Halpern and Warner (2002) reviewed 112 independent measurements of 80 reserves and published their results that marine reserves have rapid and lasting effects in Ecological Letters. Looking at these 80 spots, they found marine reserves show that:

the higher average values of density, biomass, average organism size, and diversity inside reserves (relative to controls) reach mean levels within a short (1-3 y) period of time and that the values are subsequently consistent across reserves of all ages (up to 40 y).

There is not enough emphasis (or money) on marine protected areas (which is why I suggested some softcoral porn a while back). Nor are most people aware that less than 1% of the oceans are protected compared to 12% of land. As part of an awareness campaigns, several California groups (including Shifting Baselines) have teamed up to rally support for the new series of marine reserves to be implemented in California. See their latest PSA here:

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Comments

1

Pamela Lee Coral. Softcoral Porn. This is brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. I really, really love this!

How about a twist here to engage the more myopic, resource carefree sleepwalking impaired, to think of an MPA a little differently? M.P.A. = Marine Porn Area? [not people of course... heaven forbid we would not want the fire and brimstone crowd getting all excited about needing to censor some indecent ‘FISH’ mating rituals.]

Softcoral porn... You have an idea that should be developed somehow. I would be more than willing to help with some illustrations. Why should the porn purveyors have all the fun and be the only ones to rake in all that juicy disposable international income. Indeed, lets make eco-system protection, and resource awareness sexy, titillating and juicy. Or, maybe to be a little more blunt: Desirable. Somewhere in the subtle lessons of marketing and commerce, I believe that there were some lessons on the art and science of attaching the code of making an object (or subject) wanted, because it helps portray desirability in knowing it, or owning it. You know: Plumage, but our human variant of the stuff. Like, as in knowing and learning about MPAs, it would increase one’s plumage. I know, crazy talk. But then again, I am still crazily trying to figure out how the car industry can get people to drop $90,000 on an automobile that does pretty much the exact same thing that a $20,000 vehicle does....? I don’t know, am I sensing some sort of connection to the plumage idea here somewhere...?

This is an extremely interesting consideration point on the lack of interest, and sad truth on the lack of MPA focus of international expenditures, and mental awareness energy compared to the “watching other humans having sex biz.” Or, even lack of interest compared to the amount of money and energy expended watching film actors and actresses pretending to have lots sex in the more socially acceptably rated entertainment forms. There are some absolutely crazy theories out there... that the more repressive and prudish [GUILT and SHAME filled] societies become, the more they are unconsciously induced (programmed) to focus on obtaining very costly sources of mediated porn. Also, and I cannot remember where I read this, but it went something along the lines of: The more sexually repressed societies are, the more prone members of their societies are to act out violently and be attracted to violent behavior. [Strange, I simply cannot seem to remember where I Googled that information on Sexual Repression...?] Which I guess then, it is no surprise that peaceful prawns, and other non-dramatic ocean creatures minding their own boring business can never seem to generate any mass consumer audience appeal. Or news.

What a truly interesting planet we live upon and time we are in, when watching other people having sex, and or being violent towards each other, is higher on the priority list than resource protection survival...

Posted by: Chris Martell | October 14, 2009 1:13 AM

2

An additional note on our ocean protection, and our connection to it and MPAs: I don’t know what you feel about Stephen Colbert of Comedy Central, and as wacky as his routines and presentations are, he does introduce some outstanding, and vital consciousness to audiences, such as his short interview last night with Sylvia Earle, in which her book “The World is Blue: How Our Fate and the Ocean’s Are One.”

If global issues need to be introduced via quasi comedy, and or off the wall news forums, well, more power to people like Colbert for using the medium like he does. The viewing audience realities that have people like Colbert and Jon Stewart using comedy formats to present serious issues, is believed that most contemporary audiences unfortunately, do not want news reporting subject matters that are presented in dry, serious and ominous modes. As much as I hate to agree, and wish it were different, professorial ecology campaign pitches are often floating as well these days, like hard to grasp ideas in movies such as Idiocracy (a film I have studied six times and counting...).

The Sylvia Earle segment begins at 14:00 minutes into the clip.

http://www.comedycentral.com/colbertreport/full-episodes/index.jhtml?episodeId=252149

Posted by: Chris Martell | October 14, 2009 3:58 PM

3

Jon Stewart recently took Sean Hannity to task for, essentially, failing to understand how food chains work. It was a great moment. But back to the post, the PSA is great - I wish there were a non-California specific version! I need an MPAs Work t-shirt, stat.

Posted by: claire | October 15, 2009 5:12 PM

4

Teşekkürler.Başarılar.

Posted by: Robben | November 18, 2009 9:00 AM

5

Özellikle son zamanların en popüler cilt yenileme ürünüdür. Pembe Maske bir çok ünlü isim tarafından da yoğun olarak kullanılmaktadır. Yüzdeki kırışıklıklar, sivilce ve sivilcelerin sebep olduğu deformasyonları gidermede kullanılan Pembe yüz maskesi ve inceltici, selülit giderici olarak kullanılan pembe vücut maskesi olmak üzere iki farklı ürün mevcuttur.

Posted by: PEMBE MASKE | June 15, 2011 5:23 AM

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