Obama Creates World's Largest Marine Reserve
October 13, 2020 | News | No Comments
President Barack Obama announced on Thursday the creation of the world’s largest marine reserve.
The action expands the biodiversity-rich Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, which covers seven atolls and islands, from roughly 87,000 square miles to 490,000 square miles.
That expansion falls short of what Obama proposed in June, which would have created a 782,000 square mile-reserve.
The action bans commercial fishing and “any appropriation, injury, destruction, or removal of any object” from the reserve. The Marine Conservation Institute outlines some of what will be protected:
- 130 seamounts: undersea mountains which can provide essential rest-stops for tunas and sea turtles migrating across thousands of miles of Pacific Ocean.
- Several million seabirds representing 19 species, many of which find the fish and squid they eat in the now-expanded marine monument waters.
- Habitat for whales and dolphins, including the newly discovered Palmyra beaked whale.
- Nearly-pristine coral reef ecosystems.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services states that the areas within the Monument “represent one of the last frontiers and havens for wildlife in the world, and comprise the most widespread collection of coral reef, seabird, and shorebird protected areas on the planet.”
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