TED Prize wish Protect our oceans Sylvia Earle

fifty years ago when I began exploring

the ocean no one not Jacque Perrin not

Jacques Cousteau or Rachel Carson

imagined that we could do anything to

harm the ocean by what we put into it or

what we took out of it it seemed at that

time to be a sea of Eden but now we know

and we are now facing Paradise Lost I

want to share with you my personal view

of changes in the sea that affect all of

us

and to consider why it matters that in

50 years we’ve lost actually we’ve taken

we’ve eaten more than 90% of the big

fish in the sea why you should care that

nearly half of the coral reefs had

disappeared why a mysterious depletion

of oxygen in large areas of the Pacific

should concern not only the creatures

that are dying but it really should

concern you it does concern you as well

I’m haunted by the thought of what ray

Anderson calls tomorrow’s child asking

why we didn’t do something on our watch

to save sharks and bluefin tuna and

squids and coral reefs and the living

ocean while there still was time well

now is that time I hope for your help to

explore and protect the wild ocean in

ways that will restore the health and in

so doing secure hope for humankind

health to the ocean means health for us

and I hope Jill Tartars wish to engage

Earthlings includes dolphins and whales

and other sea creatures and this quest

to look for intelligent life elsewhere

in the universe and I hope Jill that

someday that we’ll find evidence that

there is intelligent life among humans

on this planet

huh did I say that I guess I did for me

as a scientist it all began in 1953 when

I first tried scuba it’s when I first

got to know fish swimming in something

other than lemon slices and butter I

actually loved diving at night you see a

lot of fish then you don’t see in the

daytime

diving day and night was really easy for

me in 1970 when I led a team of

aquanauts living underwater for weeks at

a time at the same time that astronauts

were putting their footprints on the

moon

in 1979 I had a chance to put my

footprints on the ocean floor well using

this personal submersible called Jim six

miles offshore and twelve hundred and

fifty feet down it’s one of my favorite

bathing suits but since then I’ve used

about 30 kinds of submarines and I’d

even started three companies and the

nonprofit foundation called deep search

to design and build systems to access

the deep sea I led a five-year National

Geographic expedition the sustainable

seas expeditions using these little subs

they’re so simple to drive that even a

scientist can do it and I’m living proof

astronauts and aquanauts alike really

appreciate the importance of air food

water temperature all the things you

need to stay alive in space or under the

sea

I heard astronaut Joe Allen explained

how he had to learn everything he could

about his life-support system and then

do everything he could to take care of

his life-support system and then he

pointed to this and he said life-support

system we need to learn everything we

can about it and do everything we can to

take care of it

the poet Auden said thousands have lived

without love none without water 97% of

Earth’s water is ocean no blue no green

if you think the ocean is an important

imagine earth without it Mars comes to

mind no ocean no life-support system I

gave a talk not so long ago at the World

Bank and I showed this amazing image of

Earth and I said there it is the World

Bank that’s where all the assets are ha

ha we’ve been drawing them down much

faster than the natural systems can

replenish them Tim Wirth’s says the

economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of

the environment with every drop of water

you drink every breath you take you’re

connected to the sea no matter where on

earth you live most of the oxygen in the

atmosphere is generated by the sea over

time most of the planet’s organic carbon

has been absorbed and stored there

mostly by microbes the ocean drives

climate and weather stabilizes

temperature shapes Earth’s chemistry

water from the sea forms clouds that

return to the land and the sea is rain

sleet and snow and provides home for

about 97% of life in the world maybe in

the universe no water no life no blue no

green yet we have this idea we humans

that the earth all of it the oceans the

skies are so vast so resilient it

doesn’t matter what we do to it that may

have been true 10,000 years ago and

maybe even a thousand years ago but in

the last hundred especially the last 50

we’ve drawn down the assets the air of

the water the wildlife that make our

lives possible new technologies are

helping us to understand the nature of

nature the nature of what’s happening

showing us our impact on the earth I

mean first you have to know that you’ve

got a problem and fortunately in our

time we’ve learned more about the

problems than in all preceding history

and with knowing comes caring with

caring there’s hope that we can find an

enduring place for ourselves within the

natural systems that support us but

first

we have to know three years ago I met

John Hanke who’s the head of Google

Earth and I told him how much I love

being able to hold the world in my hands

and go exploring vicariously but I asked

him when are you going to finish it he

did a great job with Al and the dirt

what about the water since then I had

the great pleasure of working with the

Googlers with do-er marine with the

National Geographic with dozens of the

best institutions and scientists around

the world ones that we could enlist to

put the ocean in Google Earth and as of

just this week last Monday Google Earth

is now whole consider this starting

right here at the convention center we

can find the nearby aquarium we can look

at where we’re sitting and then cruise

up the coast to the big aquarium the

ocean and California’s four national

marine sanctuaries and a new network

state marine reserves that are beginning

to protect and restore some of the

assets we can flit over to Hawaii and

see the real Hawaiian Islands not just

the little bit that pokes through the

surface but also what’s below to see

wait a minute we can go slash zoom right

there ah under the ocean and see what

the whale see we can go explore the

other side of the Hawaiian Islands we

can go actually and swim around on

Google Earth and visit with humpback

whales these are gentle giants that I’ve

had the pleasure of meeting face-to-face

many times underwater there’s nothing

quite like being personally inspected by

a whale

we can pick up and fly to the deepest

place seven miles down the Mariana

Trench where only two people have ever

been imagine that it’s only seven miles

but only two people have been there

forty-nine years ago one-way trips are

easy we need new deep diving submarines

how about some X prizes for ocean

Explorer

raishin hmm we need to see deep trenches

the undersea mountains and understand

life in the deep sea we can now go to

the Arctic just ten years ago I stood on

the ice at the North Pole an ice-free

Arctic Ocean may happen in this century

that’s bad news for the polar bears it’s

bad news for us too excess carbon

dioxide is not only driving global

warming it’s also changing ocean

chemistry making the sea more acidic

that’s bad news for coral reefs and

oxygen producing plankton also bad news

for us we’re putting hundreds of

millions of tons of plastic and other

trash into the sea millions of tons of

discarded fishing nets gear that

continues to kill were clogging the

ocean poisoning the planet circulatory

system and were taking out hundreds of

millions of tons of wildlife all

carbon-based units barbarically were

killing sharks for shark fin soup

undermining food chains that shape

planetary chemistry and drive the carbon

cycle the nitrogen cycle the oxygen

cycle the water cycle our life support

system incredibly we’re still killing

bluefin tuna truly endangered and much

more valuable alive than dead all of

these parts are part of our life support

system we kill using long lines with

baited hooks every few feet that may

stretch for fifty miles or more

industrial trawlers and draggers are

scraping the seafloor like bulldozers

taking everything in their path using

Google Earth you can witness trawlers in

China the North Sea the Gulf of Mexico

shaking the foundation of our

life-support system leaving plumes of

death in their path the next time you

dine on sushi or sashimi or a swordfish

steak or shrimp cocktail or whatever

wildlife you happen to enjoy from the

ocean think of the real cost

for every pound that goes to market more

than ten pounds even a hundred pounds

may be thrown away is bycatch this is

the consequence of not knowing that

there are limits to what we can take out

of the sea this chart shows a decline in

ocean wildlife from 1900 to 2000 the

highest concentrations are in red in my

lifetime

imagine 90% of the big fish have been

killed most of the turtles sharks tunas

and whales are way down in numbers but

there is good news 10% of the big fish

still remain there’s still some blue

whales there’s still some krill in

Antarctica there are a few oysters in

Chesapeake Bay half the coral reefs are

still in pretty good shape a jeweled

belt around the middle of the planet

there’s still time but not a lot to turn

things around

but business as usual means that in 50

years there may be no coral reefs and no

commercial fishing because the fish will

simply be gone imagine the ocean without

fish imagine what that means to our

life-support system natural systems on

the land are in big trouble too but the

problems are more obvious and some

actions are being taken to protect trees

watersheds and Wildlife and in 1872 with

Yellowstone National Park the United

States began establishing a system of

parks that some say was the best idea

America ever had about 12% of the land

around the world is now protected

safeguarding biodiversity providing a

carbon sink generating oxygen protecting

watersheds and in 1972 this nation began

to establish a counterpart in the sea

national marine sanctuaries it’s another

great idea the good news is that they’re

now more than 4,000 places in the sea

around the world have some kind of

protection and you can find them on

Google Earth the bad news is that you

have to look hard too

find them in the last three years for

example the u.s. protected three hundred

and forty thousand square miles of ocean

his national monuments but it only

increased from 0.6 of one percent to 0.8

of one percent of the ocean protected

globally protected areas do rebound

but it takes a long time to restore

50-year old rock fish or monkfish sharks

or sea bass or 200 year old orange

roughy we don’t consume 200 year old

cows or chickens protected areas provide

hope that the creatures of ed Wilson’s

dream of an encyclopedia of life or the

census of marine life will live not just

as a list a photograph or a paragraph

with scientists around the world I’ve

been looking at the 99 percent of the

ocean that is open to fishing and mining

and drilling and dumping and whatever to

search out hope spots and try to find

ways to give them and us a secure future

such as the Arctic we have one chance

right now to get it right or the

Antarctic where the continent is

protected but the surrounding ocean is

being stripped of its krill whales and

fish Sargasso sees 3 million square

miles of floating forest is being

gathered up to feed cows 97% of the land

and the Galapagos Islands is protected

but the adjacent sea is being ravaged by

fishing it’s true too in Argentina on

the Patagonian shelf now in serious

trouble

the high seas were whales tunas and

dolphins travel the largest least

protected ecosystem on earth filled with

luminous creatures living in dark waters

that average 2 miles deep they flesh and

sparkle and glow with their own living

light there’s still places in the sea as

pristine as I knew as a child the next

10 years may be the most important in

the next 10,000 years the best chance

our species will have to protect what

remains of the natural systems that give

us

life to cope with climate change we need

new ways to generate power we need new

ways better ways to cope with poverty

Wars and disease we need many things to

keep and maintain the world is a better

place but nothing else will matter if we

fail to protect the ocean our fate and

the ocean are one we need to do for the

ocean what Al Gore did for the skies

above a global plan of action with a

World Conservation Union the IUCN is

under way to protect biodiversity to

mitigate and recover from the impacts of

climate change on the high seas and in

coastal areas wherever we can identify

critical places new technologies are

needed to map photograph and explore the

95 percent of the ocean that we have yet

to see the goal is to protect

biodiversity provide stability and

resilience we need deep diving söze new

technologies to explore the ocean we

need maybe an expedition at ed at sea

that could help figure out next steps

and so I suppose you want to know what

my wish is

I wish you would use all means at your

disposal films expeditions the web new

submarines a campaign to ignite public

support for a global network of marine

protected areas hope spots large enough

to save and restore the ocean the blue

heart of the planet how much some say

ten percent some say thirty percent you

decide how much of your heart do you

want to protect whatever it is a

fraction of one percent is not enough my

wish is a big wish but if we can make it

happen it can truly change the world

and help ensure the survival of what

actually is as it turns out my favorite

species that would be us

for the children of today for tomorrow’s

child as never again now is the time

you

五十年前,当我开始探索海洋时,

除了 Jacque Perrin、

Jacques Cousteau 或 Rachel Carson 之外

,没有人认为我们可以做任何事情来

破坏海洋,只要我们投入海洋或从海洋

中取出什么,

当时似乎 伊甸园的海洋,但现在我们知道

,我们现在正面临失乐园 我

想与你分享我个人

对影响我们所有人的海洋变化的看法,

并考虑为什么在

50 年里我们实际上失去了我们

我们已经吃掉了海洋中 90% 以上的

大鱼 为什么你应该关心

近一半的珊瑚礁已经

消失 为什么

太平洋大片地区神秘的氧气耗尽

不仅应该

关注 正在死去,但它真的应该

让你担心 它也确实让你担心

和活着的

o 海洋虽然还有时间,

现在是

时候了 鞑靼人希望与地球人接触,

包括海豚、鲸鱼

和其他海洋生物,以及在宇宙

其他地方寻找智慧生命的探索

,我希望吉尔

有一天我们会找到证据证明

这个星球上的人类中有智慧生命,

吧? 说我想我作为一名科学家为我所做的

一切始于 1953 年,当

我第一次尝试水肺潜水时,当我第

一次知道鱼在

柠檬片和黄油以外的东西中游泳时,我

真的很喜欢晚上潜水,你会看到

很多鱼 那么你不会在 1970 年的

白天和黑夜潜水中看到对我来说真的很容易,

当时我带领一队

潜水员在水下生活了几个星期,

同时宇航员

们正在把他们的 f 1979 年月球上

的 ootprints 我有机会将我的

脚印很好地用

这艘名为 Jim 的个人潜水器在

离岸 6 英里和 1250

英尺深的地方留下了我的脚印,这是我最喜欢的泳衣之一,

但从那以后我用了

大约 30 种潜艇,我

什至创办了 3 家公司,

非营利性基金会名为 deep search

来设计和建造

进入深海的系统 我领导了一个为期五年的国家

地理

探险队

驾驶简单,即使是

科学家也能做到,而且我是活生生的证明

宇航员和水族宇航员都非常

理解空气食物水温的重要性

所有你

需要在太空或海底维持生命的东西

我听到宇航员乔艾伦解释

了如何 他必须尽可能地

了解他的生命支持系统,然后

尽其所能照顾

他的生命支持系统,然后他

指出了这一点 d 他说生命支持

系统 我们需要尽我们

所能了解它并尽我们所能来

照顾

它诗人奥登说成千上万的人

没有爱就没有水

地球上 97% 的水是海洋 没有蓝色 没有绿色

如果 你认为海洋很重要

想象没有它的地球 想到火星

没有海洋 没有生命支持系统

不久前我在世界银行做了一个演讲

我展示了

地球的惊人图像 我说那里就是世界

银行就是所有资产的所在

哈哈,我们提取它们的

速度比自然系统

补充它们的速度要快得多蒂姆沃思说,

经济是环境的全资子公司,

你喝的每一滴水,你呼吸的每一口水 “

无论你住在地球上的哪个地方,都与海洋相连

大气中的

大部分氧气随着时间的推移

由海洋产生 s

气候和天气 稳定

温度 形状 地球的化学

来自海洋的水形成云,

返回陆地,海洋是

雨夹雪和雪,为

世界上大约 97% 的生命提供家园 也许

在宇宙中 没有水 没有生命 没有蓝色 还没有

绿色 我们人类有这样的想法

地球所有的海洋 海洋

天空如此广阔如此有弹性

无论我们对它做什么都无所谓

10,000 年前甚至可能 1000 年前可能是真的

在过去的 100 年,尤其是最近的 50 年中,

我们提取了资产

水的空气 使我们的

生活成为可能的野生动物 新技术正在

帮助我们了解自然的

本质 正在发生的事情的本质

向我们展示了我们对地球的影响 我的

意思是首先你必须知道你

有一个问题,幸运的是,在我们这个

时代,我们比以往所有的历史都了解了更多关于这些

问题的知识

,知道了就会有

关心,有希望我们可以

在支持我们的自然系统中为自己找到一个持久的地方,

首先

我们必须知道三年前我遇到

了谷歌地球的负责人

约翰汉克,我告诉他我多么喜欢

能够将世界掌握在我的手中

, 去探索,但我问

他你

什么时候完成 世界上数十个

最好的机构和科学家

,我们可以招募他们

将海洋放入谷歌地球,

就在本周上周一,谷歌地球

现在已经完整

了,从会议中心开始,我们

可以找到附近的水族馆 我们可以

看看我们坐的地方,然后

沿着海岸巡游到海洋的大水族馆

和加利福尼亚的四个国家

海洋保护区和一个新的国家海洋保护区网络

为了保护和恢复一些

资产,我们可以飞到夏威夷,

看到真正的夏威夷群岛,不仅是

从地表探出的一点点

,还有下面要看到的东西

等等,我们可以在那里进行斜线缩放

啊下面 海洋,看看鲸鱼看到了什么

,我们可以去探索

夏威夷群岛的另一边,

实际上我们可以去

谷歌地球上游泳,和座头鲸一起参观,

这些都是温和的巨人,我

有幸与他们面对面- 在

水下多次面对 没有什么比

被鲸鱼亲自检查更

令人兴奋的了,

我们可以拿起并飞到

马里亚纳海沟下七英里的最深处

,那里只有两个人

曾经想象它只有七英里,

但只有两个人去过那里

四十九年前,单程旅行很

容易,我们需要新的深潜潜艇

,海洋探险者的X奖品怎么样?

深海生活 我们现在可以

去北极 就在十年前 我

站在北极的冰面上

本世纪可能会出现一个不结冰的北冰洋 这

对北极熊来说是个

坏消息 对我们来说是个坏消息

二氧化碳不仅推动了全球

变暖,它还改变了海洋

化学,使海洋变得更加酸性

,这对珊瑚礁和

产生氧气的浮游生物来说是个坏消息,对我们来说也是个坏消息

,我们正在将

数亿吨塑料和其他

垃圾投入大海 数百万吨

丢弃的渔网 渔具

继续造成死亡,堵塞

海洋,毒化地球

循环系统,带走

数亿吨野生动物,所有

碳基单位都在野蛮地

杀死鲨鱼以获得鱼翅汤,

破坏形成食物链的食物链

行星化学和驱动碳

循环 氮循环 氧

循环 水循环 我们的生命支持

系统 难以置信的是我们仍在杀死

蓝鳍金枪鱼 没有真正濒临灭绝,

活着比死更有价值所有

这些部分都是我们生命支持

系统的一部分我们使用带有

诱饵的钩子每隔几英尺用长线杀死,可能会

延伸五十英里或

更远工业拖网渔船和拖网拖船正在

像推土机一样在海底刮擦

使用

谷歌地球,你可以看到拖网渔船在

中国、北海、墨西哥湾

动摇我们生命维持系统的基础,

下次你

在寿司、生鱼片或箭鱼牛排上用餐时,会在他们的路径上留下死亡的羽毛

或虾鸡尾酒或任何

你碰巧从海洋中享受的野生动物

想想每磅上市的实际成本

超过 10 磅甚至 100 磅

可能被扔掉是兼捕 这是

不知道

有限制的结果

这张图表显示了

从 1900 年到 2000 年海洋野生动物数量的下降

在我的生活中最高浓度是红色的

想 90% 的大鱼已经被

杀死 大多数海龟、鲨鱼、金枪鱼

和鲸鱼的数量都在下降,

但好消息是 10% 的大鱼

仍然存在,还有一些蓝

鲸,南极洲还有一些磷虾

切萨皮克湾

的几只

牡蛎 一半

的珊瑚礁状况良好 珊瑚礁和没有

商业捕鱼,因为鱼

会消失 想象一下没有鱼的海洋

想象一下这对我们的

生命维持系统意味着什么

陆地上的自然系统也遇到了大麻烦,但

问题更加明显,

正在采取一些行动 保护树木

分水岭和野生动物,1872 年,

美国与黄石国家公园

开始建立

公园系统,有人说这是美国有史以来最好的想法,

约占 12%

如果世界各地的土地现在受到保护

保护生物多样性 提供

碳汇 产生氧气 保护

流域 1972 年这个国家开始

在海洋

国家海洋保护区建立一个对应物 这是另一个

好主意 好消息是它们

现在不仅仅是 全世界有 4,000 个地方

有某种

保护,你可以在谷歌地球上找到它们,

坏消息是你

必须努力

寻找,在过去三年中找到它们,

例如美国 保护了

34 万平方英里的海洋

他的国家古迹,但

仅从百分之一的 0.6 增加到百分之一的 0.8

全球受保护的海洋保护区确实反弹,

但恢复

50 岁的岩鱼需要很长时间 或安康鱼鲨鱼

或鲈鱼或 200 岁的橙色

粗鱼 我们不食用 200 岁的

奶牛或鸡 保护区提供了

希望 ed Wilson

梦想的生命百科全书或

海洋生物普查的生物将

生活 一张清单 与世界各地的科学家合影一张或一段话

一直在研究 99% 的

海洋,它对捕鱼、采矿

、钻探和倾倒以及任何东西都是开放的,以

寻找希望的地方并试图

找到给予它们的方法 和我们一个安全的未来,

例如北极,我们

现在

有一个机会把它做好 es 和

鱼 马尾藻看到 300 万

平方英里的漂浮森林正在被

收集起来喂奶牛 97% 的土地

和加拉帕戈斯群岛受到保护,

但邻近的海洋正被

捕鱼蹂躏在阿根廷

的巴塔哥尼亚大陆架上也是如此 严重的

麻烦 公海是鲸鱼 金枪鱼和

海豚

在地球上最大的受保护最少的生态系统中 充满了

生活在

平均 2 英里深的黑暗水域中的发光生物 它们

以自己的生命光发光、发光和发光

海中仍然有

原始的地方 正如我小时候所知道的那样,未来

10 年可能是

未来 10,000 年中最重要的一年

我们的物种将有最好的机会来保护

为我们提供生命的自然系统的剩余部分

应对气候变化 我们需要

新的方法来产生 力量 我们需要新的

方法 更好的方法来应对贫困

战争和疾病 我们需要很多东西来

保持和维持世界是一个更美好的

地方,但没有别的了 如果我们

不能保护海洋,那么我们的命运

和海洋就是我们需要为海洋做的事情,

就像阿尔戈尔为天空所做的那样,

高于

世界自然保护联盟的全球行动计划,国际自然保护联盟

正在努力保护生物多样性

减轻

气候变化对公海和

沿海地区的影响并从中恢复,只要我们可以确定

关键位置,就需要新技术

来绘制照片并探索

我们尚未看到的 95% 的海洋

目标是保护

生物多样性 提供稳定性和

弹性 我们需要深潜 söze 新

技术来探索我们需要的海洋

也许在海上进行一次探险

可以帮助确定下一步

,所以我想你想知道

我的愿望是什么

我希望你会使用一切手段

电影 探险 网络 新

潜艇 激发公众

对全球海洋保护区网络的支持

希望点大到

足以拯救和恢复海洋 地球的蓝色之

心 多少人说

百分之十有人说百分之三十你

决定你想保护多少你的心

无论它是

百分之一的一小部分都不够我的

愿望是一个很大的愿望但如果我们可以 它

发生了它可以真正改变世界

并帮助确保实际存在的生存,

因为事实证明,我最喜欢的

物种将成为

今天的孩子的我们,明天的

孩子,因为现在再也不是你的时候了