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Protected: The Tide Has No Bias: Why the Next Generation of Indian Women Must Take Action in the Field

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Art & Culture

Protected: The Koovagam Festival: A Celebration of Trans Identities and a Marriage to God

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Issue 132 - May 2026

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine — No. 132 May 2026

Issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine, May 2026. Twelve stories on coral recovery, polystyrene-free marinas, UNESCO biosphere reserves, ocean acoustics, Peace Boat at sea, the Edges of Earth expedition, and a Brazilian campaign asking what a flag looks like without blue or green.

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine cover for issue No. 132, May 2026, featuring Vanuatu and the lead stories of the issue

Welcome to issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine. This month we follow recovery on a Caribbean reef, a marina trial that could end polystyrene in our harbours, and a UNESCO report reframing 2,260 protected places as one planetary network. We sit with the Director of Peace Boat US, return to the Edges of Earth expedition after three years at sea, listen to the ocean through hydrophones, and meet a campaign in São Paulo asking what a Brazilian flag looks like without blue or green.


The SEVENSEAS Mentor Network: Build Your Community

SEVENSEAS Mentor Network, connecting marine professionals across generations

A new initiative connecting marine professionals across generations, pairing emerging conservationists with seasoned mentors to build the kind of community many wished they had at the start of their careers. [Read more]

Three Years on Earth’s Edges, an Expedition Reflects

Andi Cross meets Marie Rite on the shore of Little Bay, an Edges of Earth expedition portrait

After three years circumnavigating the planet’s most remote coastal communities, Andi Cross reflects on what an expedition teaches you about belonging, the people you meet, and the edges where the ocean still feels wild. [Read more]

No Blue, No Green: Droga5 Reframes the Ocean Crisis

No Blue No Green campaign by Droga5 Sao Paulo for SOS Oceano Marinho, the Brazilian flag stripped of blue and green

Droga5 São Paulo and SOS Oceano Marinho launch a campaign that strips the blue and green from the Brazilian flag, making the disappearance of healthy oceans impossible to look away from. [Read more]

Sounds of the Ocean: From Inspiration to a Movement

A swimmer suspended in a halo of bubbles beneath the ocean surface

A yoga teacher’s encounter with sound becomes a project mapping the acoustic life of the ocean, weaving hydrophone recordings, music, and listening practice into a tool for ocean awareness. [Read more]

King of the Seaducks, Enduring Sign of Chesapeake Winter

Biologist Donald Webster watches the crimson-headed canvasback return to the Chesapeake, the largest estuary in the United States, asking each winter whether the king of seaducks will keep its court on the Bay. A field portrait of an iconic wintering species and the seagrass that sustains it. [Read more]

What HungerMap LIVE Reveals About World Fisheries

Boys preparing fishing nets in Butre, Ghana

A close look at the World Food Programme’s real-time hunger dashboard, what fisheries data is missing, why coastal communities slip between the cracks of food security tracking, and what better signal would look like. [Read more]

SeaKeepers Names Dr. Mark Luther Scientist Chairman

Jay Wade and Dr. Mark Luther of The International SeaKeepers Society

The International SeaKeepers Society opens a new chapter in ocean research leadership, with Dr. Mark Luther of the University of South Florida joining as its first Scientist Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council. [Read more]

Salone del Mobile 2026 Stakes a Claim on Sustainability

A Matter of Matter installation at Salone del Mobile 2026, Milan

Milan’s design week leans into sustainability with A Matter of Matter, an installation that asks the design industry to take material accountability as seriously as form. [Read more]

After Bleaching, Little Cayman Shows Early Recovery

A butterflyfish swims above living staghorn coral on a Caribbean reef

Two years after the most extreme coral bleaching event on record, CCMI’s 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card delivers the first quantitative signs that Little Cayman’s reefs may be turning a corner. [Read more]

UNESCO’s New Report Frames Conservation as a Network

Spreewald, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Germany, where visitors travel by punted boat through forested waterways

The first cross-network report from UNESCO treats its 2,260 World Heritage Sites, Biosphere Reserves, and Geoparks as one planetary infrastructure for biodiversity, climate stability, and the communities that depend on them. [Read more]

Falmouth Trials the World’s First Concrete Pontoon

Pontoons and yachts moored at Falmouth Marina, Cornwall

Falmouth Harbour partners with Cornish marine engineers ScaffFloat to test what is believed to be the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon float, a move to phase out polystyrene microplastics from leisure marinas. [Read more]

A Satellite AI Maps Ocean Currents Like Never Before

GOFLOW satellite-derived temperature gradient map of ocean surface currents

A new satellite-based AI from a University of Rhode Island team led by Dr. Nick Pizzo reveals ocean surface currents in unprecedented detail, sharpening our picture of how heat, nutrients, and plastics travel. [Read more]

Peace Boat US Director Emilie McGlone, In Her Words

MV Pacific World, Peace Boat’s flagship for global voyages and ocean action

On the MV Pacific World, training young leaders at sea, and how a global voyage becomes a platform for ocean conservation and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. [Read more]

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