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Issue 29 - September 2017

Loggerhead Marinelife Center research biologists document record-breaking sea turtle nesting season

Sometimes, it is easy being green. Since this May, research biologists from the Research Laboratory at Loggerhead Marinelife Center have documented 6,039 green sea turtle nests along the 9.5-mile stretch of beach they monitor, beating the all-time green nesting record set in 2015. The record also beat Florida’s entire green sea turtle nest count last year at 5,393 nests.

Additionally, LMC’s research biologists have documented a total of 17,086 leatherback, loggerhead and green sea turtle nests,breaking the overall record along the 9.5-mile stretch that the LMC team monitors. That’s more nests in one season than some researchers will find in over 10 years.

Still, comparing numbers year over year is difficult, especially since green sea turtles nest in alternate high to low years. Sea turtles are also long-lived animals, so LMC’s research biologists cannot be sure why exactly the numbers change. This is one of the reasons long-term monitoring is essential in sea turtle research.

“Scientists can’t know what is happening with populations unless we know numbers, which means we have to document nests and crawls,” said Sarah Hirsch, LMC’s data manager. “However, it’s not just about counting. We have to analyze those numbers to find trends, including beach ecological health and sea turtle hatching success. We also collect data for ongoing collaborative research projects. It’s encouraging to see nest numbers steadily increase – definitely an affirmation of our efforts to learn more about and protect sea turtles.”

Sea turtle nesting season ends in Palm Beach County on Oct. 31. Guests can learn about the Center’s research work through Biologist Beach Walks and Hatchling Release programs being offered this August.

For more information about LMC’s research efforts, visit marinelife.org/research.


About Loggerhead Marinelife Center

Loggerhead Marinelife Center is a non-profit sea turtle hospital that promotes conservation of ocean ecosystems with a focus on threatened and endangered sea turtles. The Center features an on-site campus hospital, research laboratory, educational exhibits and aquariums, and also operates the Juno Beach Pier, a pier that hosts world-class fishing and sightseeing. Situated on one of the world’s most important sea turtle nesting beaches, Loggerhead Marinelife Center is open daily and hosts over 300,000 guests free-of-charge each year. For more information, visit www.marinelife.org or call (561) 627-8280.

Health & Sustainable Living

September Letter from the Editor: When did we become a disposable society?

Taking a step backwards to borrow a lesson from a simpler society can be the first move in reducing our waste and living a greener, healthier life. I went to Vietnam but you can look just about anywhere. Maybe even to your own childhood to learn how to turn away from being a participating member of our disposable society.

vietnam man fixing fan with souldering iron

Reflections from Vietnam

Earlier last month I was heading out to Sapa, Vietnam, for a multi-day hike through the tribal highlands (check out some photos I included at the bottom). Sapa was a magical experience stepping back slightly to a place where communities live in closer harmony with the land. Simpler rural lives respecting nature but still easily connected through smart phones, internet, and GPS positioning. On my way out there, I stopped in Hanoi, one of my favorite (and most delicious) cities.

As my curiosity often leads me, I wandered the streets stretching the lens of my camera. I captured moments in time of hurried men and women on their way to work. Teenagers zipping around town, and laborers going about their daily lives. I paused in front of a garage to watch an older man who caught my attention. He was soldering broken rungs back on the grate of a table fan. Cigarette in mouth and flame in hand he spent upwards of an hour maneuvering each small piece until the ventilator was in proper condition.

What would have ended in the trash at our homes was painstakingly repaired and given a new life. It got me thinking, when did we (in western culture) become such a disposable society? And to what end? These “trashing” habits are what drives the waste of products, food, and resources, while fueling our insatiable hunger for more.

Our wasteful lifestyle

Some people might wonder what the big deal is to have a wasteful lifestyle. For starters, new products and increased food production raises carbon emissions leading to human-induced climate change. Habitat loss and deforestation results from mining and grazing land. All the while, pollution remains inescapable. But there is something we can do about it. I don’t expect anyone to take out a blow torch to fix their broken iphone (with the latest software update I just might), but we have to take a step back to be more conscious of what we waste, what goes straight in the trash, and the physical energy and resources that end up in the bottom of our bins. 

Acknowledging waste and backpedaling to a more conscious lifestyle is the very thing that we all have to do if we want a healthier and safer tomorrow. Our grandparents certainly led simpler, less wasteful lives, so why can’t we? As always, never hesitate to reach out if you have any questions or would like to learn more. This September issue has two articles on reducing waste if you need some ideas to get started. 

Join us

SEVENSEAS Media is the leading free resource that promotes marine conservation through community engagement, online media, and eco-tourism, with readers in 174 countries. With the particularly brutal effects of climate change we are witnessing through floods and storms, we are asking you to please keep SCIENCE at the forefront of your conversations with family, friends, and colleagues. Encouraging them to subscribe to free products and programs like SEVENSEAS Media actually makes a difference by promoting scientific discussion and shining a spotlight on the good work of our partners in conservation.

Safe travels & happy swimming,

Giacomo Abrusci, Executive Director, Editor-in-Chief

See the slideshow below for some great snaps from our hike through Sapa, Vietnam.

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Conservation Photography

Conservation Photographer Karim Iliya: September 2017

Freediver Marina Daian swims with a Hawaiian green sea turtle. Turtles are known to lose a fin in a variety of ways including shark attacks or entanglement in fishing gear. Image by conservation photographer Karim Iliya. 

green turtle karim iliya sevenseasmedia sevenseas conservation photography Conservation Photographer


Karim Iliya

Karim is a professional underwater photographer and Aerial Cinematographer living on the island of Maui, Hawaii. Growing up in the Middle East and Asia, Karim lives a nomadic lifestyle with a focus on photographing wildlife and marine environments to help increase awareness and an appreciation of our delicate ecosystems on Earth.  

www.karimphotography.com
karimiliya@gmail.com
instagram: karimiliya

 

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SEVENSEAS Media Conservation Photography

SEVENSEAS Media publishes some of the world’s best and most famous photographers, videographers, and artists. Some professional, some amateur, some first timers, and even a growing Instagram community. We all have one thing in common, a shared goal of visually telling a story and preserving what we have left of our natural world. 

If you want to publish with us, online or in monthly issue, just shoot an email to info@sevenseasmedia.org. Also follow and tag @SEVENSEAS_Media on Instagram for a chance to be featured as Photo of the Week.  Contributors never loose rights to artwork. 

Check out the latest articles and photography on SEVENSEAS Media here. You can take a break and check out some art on the SEVENSEAS Media Gallery here

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Issue 29 - September 2017

Above and Below the Surface with 4Ocean. Tackling Marine Litter.

See how two entrepreneurs took on marine litter

by Kevin Majoros

The natural tendency to have far-sightedness is a gift that successful business owners use to fulfill their vision. Many entrepreneurs will tell you that their inclinations began at an early age.

4ocean bracelets sevenseasmedia sevenseas media

Such is the case for the two millennial founders of 4Ocean.

The entrepreneurial spirit lived inside of them early on whether it was hawking candy bars in high school, selling coconuts on the beach in college, captaining boats or running fishing charters.

The self-described ‘boat ramp rats’ had an epiphany while on a surfing trip to Bali. Alex Schulze and Andrew Cooper were just graduating from Florida Atlantic University with marketing and entrepreneurship degrees and knew they wanted their life paths to involve working on the water.

“On that trip to Bali, we watched local fishermen wade through piles of trash to push their boats out, only to return with no fish to sell,” says Cooper. “Someone pointed out that fishing is their living – it’s what they sell. That sentence resonated and we wondered, ‘what if we could get people to buy the trash.’”

guy surfing on waves on the ocean working to remove marine litter

Removing the trash that ends up in our oceans

4Ocean is based in Boca Raton, Florida and is dedicated to removing the trash that ends up in our oceans. After 16 months of prepping and quantifying, the company was launched in January of 2017.

4ocean team by the sea at a beach cleanup removing marine litter

In their first seven months, 4Ocean has collected over 90,000 pounds of trash. The company started with two employees and has grown to a staff of 40 which includes boat captains who operate five cleanup vessels, seven days a week.

Their cleanup focus is on beaches, offshore and intracoastal waterways and the primary location for the ocean cleanups is currently on the East Coast of Florida. Through partnerships with other organizations, 4Ocean has hosted cleanups in Canada, Bahamas, Montserrat, Haiti, Norway and the Philippines.

The concept of getting people to buy the trash has been accomplished through the sale of 4Ocean bracelets. The bracelets are made out of 100% post-consumer recycled material. The beads are made from recycled glass bottles and the cord is made from recycled plastic water bottles. Every bracelet purchased funds the removal of one pound of trash from the ocean. 

guy surfing sevenseas seavenseasmedia 4ocean working to remove marine litter

The trash collected by 4Ocean is sorted in their 8,000-square foot cleanup warehouse and then taken to waste processing centers. Their bracelets are made from recycled materials from an outside facility.

To keep the concept fresh, 4Ocean launches a new campaign every six to eight weeks and ties it to observation events such as Shark Conservation Week, Earth Day and World Oceans Day.

Looking back and into the future

Andrew Cooper was raised in Orlando, Florida and says the ocean has always been near and dear to him. “My mother once said I was born an hour too far away from what I really am,” Cooper says.

He is a 100-ton sea boat captain, sailboat captain and has worked on yachts. Along with Alex Schulze, he has traveled for freediving, surfing, scuba diving and spearfishing in locales such as Costa Rica, Panama, Nicaragua and Indonesia.

“My time spent on the water exposed me to trash in weed lines along with dirty intracoastal waterways,” says Cooper. “It was a precursor to this path of conservation.”

There has been a lot of discussion among ocean conservationists regarding cleanup efforts versus fixing the source of the problem. Cooper is quick to address that topic.

“When a sink breaks and water flows, you aren’t going to just mop it up, you are also going to stop it at the source,” Cooper says. “The reason for the bracelet is to encourage people to join the movement. We are hoping to showcase a lifestyle of being socially conscious by being proactive and reactive.”

Alex Schulze grew up on Marco Island in Florida and says he was fortunate to grow up on the water. When he was five, a 16-foot Carolina Skiff was given to his family and he was ‘hooked like a maniac’. He became a licensed captain and began running fishing charters while fishing, surfing and scuba diving became a daily part of his life.

When it came time for college, Schulze knew it would be near the water and he continued to run charters while attending Florida Atlantic. Just like Cooper, ocean conservation has always been a passion.

Support from the community

“What has resonated with both of us is the amount of support we have received from our customer base which has exploded with growth,” says Schulze. “People are becoming more aware and we want to educate on simple actions such as changing daily habits.”

4ocean team by the sea at a beach cleanup removing marine litterBecause of the bracelets, 4Ocean has struck a chord with the millennial generation and the organization has had great support at beach cleanups.

“Our methods for cleanup are to attack from all angles which includes the captains of the boats picking up floating debris along with workers diving down for trash,” Schulze says. “We are using every piece of our skill sets.”

Those skill sets have come from a life spent on the water that Cooper and Schulze acquired both above and below the surface.

The two ‘boat ramp rats’ have come full-circle.

“We are literally living the lifestyle we always wanted,” says Schulze. “It’s time to make cleaning the ocean cool.”

Adds Cooper, “There is a human responsibility in raising awareness for ocean conservation. Doing this work is a dream come true.”4ocean boat on sevenseas media cleaning up marine litter

 

visit www.4ocean.com to learn more.

 

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Check out more of the the latest articles on SEVENSEAS Media here. You can take a break from your day and check out some art on the SEVENSEAS Media Gallery here. Want to get in touch with questions or a submission? Contact us here.

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