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Pamela Biery

~ public relations & writing

Pamela Biery

Category Archives: ocean & fisheries

Blue Marble Planet lover Lea Haratani dives deep

02 Friday Jul 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries, poetry & poets

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environment, Jacques Cousteau, Lea Haratani, Poetry

“A lot of people attack the sea. I make love to it.” —Jacques Cousteau

Lea Haratani has had a lifelong passion for the ocean, and every day she tries to show it. Some days, it means not eating fish. Other times, it’s all about taking a walk on the beach—or diving off the coast of Belize with Jim Simon, the vice president of one of the nation’s largest ocean conservation organizations, Oceana. She might also be found circulating petitions against offshore drilling with her children at Bookshop Santa Cruz, or organizing a fundraising event for Oceana at the Saint Francis Yacht Club in San Francisco.

Read more about Lea and ocean activism, featured in Good Times this week.

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No metaphor is perfect

26 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries, Uncategorized

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Blue Frontier, Blue Notes, David Helvarg, Gulf oil spill, Saved by the Sea

Author David Helvarg  brought a wave of ocean enthusiasm to his reading at Bookshop Santa Cruz. The long-time activist and founder of the ocean dedicated organization, Blue Frontier, was in town to promote his new book,  “Saved by the Sea” but took questions concerning the Gulf Coast oil spill. This was just before Helvarg abandoned his book tour to visit the Gulf and put his focus on the crisis at hand. See his report from the  Gulf here.

Helvarg’s aerial of spill this week

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I guess people thought oil spills were over…

26 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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…this was Costner’s comment, when discussing the lack of initial interest in his oil-cleaning centrifuge. 32 have now been ordered by BP. Still room for daily applications in all water operations.

See interview here:

http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2010/06/15/video-kevin-costners-solution-to-oil-spill/

Live Like you Love the Ocean

06 Sunday Jun 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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Celine Cousteau, Fabien Cousteau, Ocean Voices, Oceana, Wallace J Nichols

Fabien Cousteau, Celine Cousteau and Wallace “J” Nichols

This week I attended the world premiere of Ocean Voices as a guest of Oceana’s Ocean Council Vice Chair, Lea Haratani. The newly remodeled Academy of Science in SF was buzzing with activity and shining in spectacular fashion with science, science everywhere.

Ocean Voices is a combination of recorded sound, live music and images of the ocean. Many voices came together to express the vast, magical ocean….children from all over the nation, indigenous peoples and perhaps, a Cousteau or two….accompanied by live performances of violin, cello, guitar and keyboard. Ocean Voices was composed by sound artist Halsey Burgund and marine biologist Wallace J. Nichols, who joined forces for this amazing expression of love, science and art.

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Sea of Consequence

10 Monday May 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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conservation, fisheries, Ocean science, Save Our Shores

Attended the “Sea of Consequence” talk by Save Our Shores (SOS) at the Museum of art and History in downtown Santa Cruz last week.

Emily Granville, Save Our Shores educator, gave this attentive group a startling look at where American’s relationship with plastic is headed. (Not long term-maybe terminal-was my take-away from this talk)

  • At any given time, about 3 million tons of trash can be found floating off the California Coast
  • 80% of floating ocean trash is plastic
  • 80% of plastic pollution that enters the ocean originated from a land-based source
  • SOS tracking data shows that from June 2007 – March 2010 SOS volunteers have removed over 19,887 plastic bags during beach and river cleanups
  • There is no known life cycle for plastic (Translate: Plastic is forever)

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“Death is one thing, an end to birth is something else.”

17 Saturday Apr 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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Bluefin tuna, Carl Safina, CITES, conservation

Greenpeace photo of Bluefin

Carl Safina included the above quote from poet Gary Snyder in his talk on fisheries and ocean conservation at Hopkins Marine Station in Monterey yesterday.

Safina is an author, professor and ocean activist–not necessarily in that order. As the co-founder and president of Blue Ocean Institute, Safina has long been a voice in ocean and fishery conservation.

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Think Pink this Earth Day

09 Friday Apr 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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climate change, earth day, environment, Monterey Bay Aquarium, ocean

Coral reef

Coral reef display at Hot Pink Flamingo exhibit

Monterey Bay Aquarium’s new exhibit Hot Pink Flamingos did what was expected—providing insights into species, habitats and migration. But this was only the beginning. Hot Pink Flamingos ties together the climate change catastrophe now underway with examples of global cause and effect. Pulling no punches about projections, the displays show the waterline in a few short years, demonstrating that most of the exhibit itself will soon be underwater.

Coral reefs are dying at an astounding rate. Many species are facing extinction each day.

At least 19 percent of the world’s coral reefs are already gone, including some 50 percent of those in the Caribbean. An additional 15 percent could be dead within 20 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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The Cove: Stranger than Fiction Investigative Journalism and Eco-Adventure

27 Saturday Mar 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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Academy Awards, dolphins, environment, Ric O'Barry

For a fast-paced 92-minute documentary, The Cove, is many things at once—action, adventure, activism, marine biology and biography. Winner of this year’s Academy Award for a feature length documentary, veteran National Geographic director Louie Psihoyos brings together marine mammal specialist Ric O’Barry and a cast of extreme athletes, adrenaline junkies, event and special effects experts. Together they expose Japan’s horrific dolphin sales and slaughter while educating the viewer on both whaling law and why we might regard dolphins as sentient beings.

“…a provocative mix of investigative journalism, eco-adventure and arresting imagery, adding up to an unforgettable story that has inspired audiences worldwide to action.”—from www.thecovemovie.com

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And one more thing….

28 Sunday Feb 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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fisheries, Monterey Bay Aquarium, seafood watch

Lost Seafood Watch card becomes litter

Lost Seafood Watch card becomes litter

….Here’s yet another reason to get Monterey Bay Aquarium‘s Seafood Watch free iPhone app—no paper = no litter.

Strategic Brilliance: Plan for the Future of Oceans

19 Friday Feb 2010

Posted by Pamela Biery in environment, ocean & fisheries

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Monterey Bay Aquarium, seafood watch, Stanford

Attended “New Approaches for the Ocean Conservation” lecture presented by Michael Sutton, Vice President and Director of Monterey Bay Aquariums Center for the Future of the Oceans.

Part of a series of free events held in Stanford’s multidisciplinary sustainability showcase, Y2E2 Building, this talk covered  strategic approaches being utilized to conserve and protect ocean resources. Including:

  • Marine Protected Areas
  • Ocean Policy Reform
  • Sustainable Seafood
  • Protecting Wildlife and Marine Ecosystems

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