The other long-form census

The head count is almost complete in the first tally of the world’s marine species

by Tom Henheffer on Thursday, August 19, 2010 2:40pm - 0 Comments

Antonina Rogacheva/Shirshov Institute/ Kevin Raskoff/Monterey Peninsula

The International Census of Marine Life, which has taken 10 years and the involvement of thousands of scientists across 80 countries to develop, is still a work in progress.

The effort to catalogue every species in the ocean, work that largely revolves around consolidating sometimes centuries-old information scattered across the globe into a central database, has already listed over 110,000 species. Scientists say that’s only a paltry 20 to 40 per cent of ocean life, and they hope to double that percentage as the October deadline for the unveiling of the comprehensive, publicly accessible guide to what lives beneath the waves approaches.

The point is to examine underwater biodiversity in order to understand how the oceans are threatened by human activity, and Canada—with 2,636 species being catalogued in its Pacific, 3,038 species in its Arctic and 3,160 in its Atlantic regions—has contributed more then its fair share to the study, including the project’s senior scientist, Dalhousie University’s Ron O’Dor. The five animals shown are only a modicum of that research, but they represent some of the strangest and most interesting life in Canadian waters.

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  • lutz

    Good intentions, but nevertheless futile.What is the use in counting marine species when we kill them off by the dozen each year.Yes ,it's developing countries that discharge untreated sewage and industrial waste into rivers and directly into oceans.But there are several cities in good old Canada, and in the USA for that matter,that do exactly the same.And look at the open sewer called the Mediterranean.Been to Venice,Italy, in the month of August? Or to the harbour of Athens,Greece[Piraeus] ?
    Unless we fix these problems first,the ocean census remains a tremendous waste of time and money.

  • http://mergerlawassociates.com Julius C

    Amazing all the new species being discovered all the time.

  • Tony LaJeunesse

    How do we find out how many there are? Do we ask each dolphin and manitee how many young they have? And what if they don't cooperate? Do we jail them or fine them? And what about those deep sea species that haven't even been discovered by humans yet? Nice try, but it will never work.

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