Benefits of Marine Protected Areas

An MPA is a clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long‐term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values.

1.Protect ecosystems, habitats and species

2.Provide and secure ecosystem servicescies

3.Support fisheries sustainably

4.Provide for sustainable use

5.Can help address bycatch problems

6.Conservation of genetic diversity

7.Undisturbed reference/ benchmark areas

8.Promote and facilitate tourism

9.Provide sites for education and training

10.Conflict Resolution

Threats

Oil & Gas / Mineral Extraction

WILDOCEANS submitted its appeal on 21 October linked to the environmental authorisation granted in relation to the EIA for Exploration Drilling within Offshore Block ER236, South Africa. 

See appeal document here

 

Electricity and energy are generated from fossil fuels. Under the ocean, fossil fuels can occur as oil or gas. Gas and oil form in the sea over millions of years.

Living organisms which once lived in or near the sea fall to the sea floor and become changed by heat and pressure. Over time lots of sand and eventually rock, builds up over the dead material, trapping it deep underwater. Some of the dead material turns into “Petroleum” what we know commonly as crude oil. Dead material that is buried deeper than oil, is exposed to high temperatures and greater pressures under the bedrock. This becomes natural gas.

Oil and gas can be tapped through drilling at the bottom of the ocean. This is done from a drilling rig.

The production waste caused by the hydrocarbon drilling is highly toxic and the disposal of this waste is a major environmental concern.

Disturbance caused by drilling has a ripple effect on the ocean ecosystem which may never fully recover.

Drilling into the sea floor also produces intense vibrations and this has a negative impact on marine life living on or near the sea floor.

Small oil leaks usually occur during the production and transport of crude oil and pollutes the waters surrounding the rig.

A catastrophic oil spill pollutes tens of thousands of kilometres in a very short space of time as the oil is carried by currents. Oil and water do not mix so it sits on the surface – known as an oil slick. Crude oil is toxic and when marine life become covered in it – it is lethal, and seabirds coated in crude oil cannot swim or fly.

Oil spills also damage air quality as it contains benzenes, toluene and other dangerous hydrocarbons.

Seismic Surveys

Electricity and energy are generated from fossil fuels. Under the ocean, fossil fuels can occur as oil or gas. Gas and oil form in the sea over millions of years.

Living organisms which once lived in or near the sea fall to the sea floor and become changed by heat and pressure. Over time lots of sand and eventually rock, builds up over the dead material, trapping it deep underwater. Some of the dead material turns into “Petroleum” what we know commonly as crude oil. Dead material that is buried deeper than oil, is exposed to high temperatures and greater pressures under the bedrock. This becomes natural gas.

Oil and gas can be tapped through drilling at the bottom of the ocean. This is done from a drilling rig.

The production waste caused by the hydrocarbon drilling is highly toxic and the disposal of this waste is a major environmental concern.

Disturbance caused by drilling has a ripple effect on the ocean ecosystem which may never fully recover.

Drilling into the sea floor also produces intense vibrations and this has a negative impact on marine life living on or near the sea floor.

Small oil leaks usually occur during the production and transport of crude oil and pollutes the waters surrounding the rig.

A catastrophic oil spill pollutes tens of thousands of kilometres in a very short space of time as the oil is carried by currents. Oil and water do not mix so it sits on the surface – known as an oil slick. Crude oil is toxic and when marine life become covered in it – it is lethal, and seabirds coated in crude oil cannot swim or fly.

Oil spills also damage air quality as it contains benzenes, toluene and other dangerous hydrocarbons.

Over-fishing

Many of South Africa’s important fish species are over-fished, and their stocks have collapsed. While we do have regulations that try to limit how many of these threatened fish are caught and their size, in many cases these fish are still caught and brought up onto boats before being thrown back. Many do not survive this, especially those that live on the sea bottom and are subjected to pressure changes. The only way to help these fish species recover is to create protected areas with no fishing or regulated fishing, this will also create spill-over effects around the edge and enhance fisheries near the MPA.

BYCATCH – Bycatch is the unwanted fish and other marine creatures trapped by commercial fishing nets during fishing for a different species.

“They had been netted as a by-catch but had to be thrown back into the sea dead”

Habitat Destruction

Sea bed sediment mining

As on land the sediments on the ocean floor contain minerals that are valuable for a number of applications, these include titanium, phosphates and diamonds. Extraction of these minerals involves scraping the sea floor as well as digging up and filtering the sediments. This causes significant damage to the structure of the seafloor, disturbing the habitats and organisms living on the seafloor, as well as mobile species (fish, mammals, birds) that depend on these habitats for food and shelter.

Sea-bed trawling

Trawl nets for marine resources living near the sea floor (such as prawns, kingklip) are pulled along the sea floor and scrape away everything in their path (such as corals). In South Africa these nets have some of the heaviest bobbins (weights) that keep the net down and bounce along the floor over reefs and other areas. Trawling in this manner is also unselective, so many organisms which are not the target in the fishery are also caught and mostly thrown away and wasted.