Hey - is that nice or what?! Our client Club Med has invited me to become an expert on the brand-new Club Med insider website. The Club Med Insider is an online community for Club Med aficionados and invites them to leave their vacation impressions and pictures, share tips and tricks about everything Club Med travel and vacation related. As a first contribution I posted Beautiful Oceans‘ Top 10 Things You Can Do to Protect Coral Reefs:
My expert page is here.
Here are our Top 10 Things You Can Do to Protect Coral Reefs:
1. Follow the three R’s: Reduce, reuse and recycle at home, work and school. Most – if not all – of our current environmental problems that directly impact coral reefs, including global warming, stem from overconsumption. Overconsumption takes a heavy toll upon the resources of our planet - such as water, oil and other raw materials. We use huge volumes of these resources each year to produce plastics, cars, TVs etc. – more than we really need. On your next shopping trip, think about what you really need and avoid items that are environmentally unsound, such as those that are not recyclable or that have excess packaging. Ask yourself: How much more stuff is enough? Watch Annie Leonard’s video on the subject and share it with others: www.storyofstuff.com
2. Use water responsibly. Make sure that sewage from your home does not represent a burden for the environment by minimizing your use of chemicals. For example, try to use phosphate-free detergents for doing your laundry and dishwashing. Excess nutrients such as phosphates find their way from wastewater into the watershed – the area that drains into a common waterway, such as a stream, lake, estuary, or wetland – and eventually reaches the ocean where it can negatively impact reefs. Always try to conserve water, as the less water you use, the less runoff and wastewater eventually find their way back into the oceans.
3. Educate yourself about coral reefs and the creatures they support. As a Senegalese environmentalist once put it: “We only protect what we love, we only love what we understand and we only understand what we have been taught”. In furthering your own education, you can help others understand the fragility and value of the world’s coral reefs. Enrol into educational programs such as the Beautiful Oceans Coral Reef Adventures that combine fun and education to help SCUBA divers, snorkelers and the entire family in becoming coral reef guardians.
4. Select tourism operators that care for the environment. Choose tropical marine tourism organizations that are environmental conscious and strive to lower their ecological footprint. Do they manage water consumption responsibly? How do they take care of the waste? Is there a recycling program in place? Let them know you are an informed consumer that cares about the impacts tourism has on reefs.
5. If you dive, don’t touch! Keep your fins, gear, and hands away from the reef, as this contact can hurt you and will damage the delicate coral animals. Control your buoyancy in order to stay off the bottom, as disturbed sediments can settle on and smother the corals. Always follow the golden rule: take only pictures and leave only bubbles.
6. Keep the marine environment clean. Help keep our reefs and beaches clean, and in addition to picking up your own trash, carry away the trash that others have left behind. More than just an unsightly nuisance, beach and reef litter poses a significant threat to the health and survival of marine organisms, which can swallow or get tangled in beverage containers, plastic bags, six-pack rings, and other debris. Remove only recent waste from the natural environment, as waste that has been in place for a long time often becomes a home for marine organisms.
7. Be an informed aquarist. As an aquarium hobbyist, buy only fish and other organisms when you know they are not endangered or threatened species and have been captive bred or collected in an ecologically sound manner. Voice your concern by asking store managers where their stock comes from and how it was caught – unsustainable collecting practices such as cyanide fishing have decimated reefs across the Pacific for the sake of the aquarium pet trade. Some species of fish, corals, and other invertebrates are so at risk that their trade is strictly controlled by the international conservation organization known as CITES – visit www.cites.org to ensure that you are not purchasing threatened species.
8. Watch what you eat. If you like to eat fish and other seafood, make sure that the species you choose to eat come from sustainable fisheries. Many types of seafood are threatened or endangered due to overfishing or habitat destruction, while other types of seafood are farmed in ways that produce waste which pollutes the ocean. Download a free sustainable seafood guide from the Monterey Bay Aquarium to learn what types of seafood to avoid if you care about their future: www.mbayaq.org/cr/SeafoodWatch.asp
9. Support organizations that contribute to the preservation of coral reefs. Many national and international organizations have coral reef conservation programs, and your support will make a big difference.
10. Spread the word! Remember your own excitement at learning the value and importance of coral reef ecosystems. Use your newly acquired knowledge to educate others and raise awareness about the plight of coral reefs and what can be done to help.
Stephan is the President and Founder of Beautiful Oceans, an international coral reef education, mapping and conservation organization. His company donates 1% of its annual revenues or 10% of its annual profits, whichever is greater, to non-profit organizations working in the field of marine conservation. Beautiful Oceans Coral Reef Adventures and courses are available online and at selected destinations throughout the Caribbean for the enjoyment of the entire family.
To quote Stephan: "My commitment to the protection of the natural world finds its roots in the profound understanding that all life on Earth is interconnected. Being respectful of all forms of life equals being respectful of ourselves." When Stephan is not in the water diving or snorkeling, he likes to practice Yoga on the beach or tell ocean stories to marveled kids..
Pet Snakes
May 27th, 2009 at 12:12 pm
It’s great to see some unique content and a good quality blog for once, actually I would be very interested in doing a link exchange with you.
Rosie Emery
October 17th, 2009 at 5:07 pm
Love these - Nice and concise! Have shared them with Twitter world and subscribed to your blog.
Taylah Mong
April 29th, 2010 at 4:59 am
I love corral reefs they are so beautiful and its so sad to see it be threated by US!! its so upsetting knowing that us humans are coursing alot of these problems, but then again it good knowing that there are people out there doing things like this to try and help the coral reefs. keep it up :) xxx
Jon
June 17th, 2010 at 1:57 pm
This article involves doing what you can to protect reefs worldwide, and I would like to ask a question about an ongoing program that I feel is detrimental to the coral reef off Ambergris Caye, Belize
Sea Trek underwater helmet program lets users walk directly on the seafloor, crushing potential organisms and stirring up sediment which can find its way onto the coral (sediment loading). The proposed site is at Mexico Rocks and people would be walking on the ground just feet from coral heads.
What are your opinions on this? Personally, I think it is a terrible idea to put even more sediment into the water column which could eventually harm the local species of coral.
Thank you for your time, any insight would be helpful.
Stephan
June 18th, 2010 at 7:46 am
Hi Jon - as with everything we do when visiting the oceans, it all depends on how we do it. In the case of Sea Trek underwater helmets, ill all depends on the guide: is the group of visitors led through an area of life coral - or are they walking on sand or any other form of ‘barren’ substrate? See, Scuba could be considered a potentially low impact activity as scuba divers are ‘floating’ through water - yet in reality, scuba divers touch, trample and otherwise negatively impact the environment - be it by the mere fact that you need a boat and fuel to get to the dive spot in the first place. So again, I think that it all depends on what we as humans do with new technology, new tools of exploring the underwater world - technology itself is not ‘good’ or ‘bad’. Just my five cents. Cheers, Stephan
Jan Ahlman
October 27th, 2010 at 2:01 pm
Hello, we are meeting a lot of resistance to bringing SeaTrek to Ambergris Caye. Will you please provide me with any info possible to understand how we can provide this to tourists without damaging the ocean bottom?
thank you ,
Jan