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Brian Skerry reveals ocean's glory -- and horror


Poziom:

Temat: Środowisko

I would like to share with you this morning
some stories about the ocean
through my work as a still photographer
for National Geographic magazine.
I guess I became an underwater photographer
and a photojournalist
because I fell in love with the sea as a child.
And I wanted to tell stories
about all the amazing things I was seeing underwater,
incredible wildlife and interesting behaviors.
And after even 30 years of doing this,
after 30 years of exploring the ocean,
I never cease to be amazed
at the extraordinary encounters that I have while I'm at sea.
But more and more frequently these days
I'm seeing terrible things underwater as well,
things that I don't think most people realize.
And I've been compelled to turn my camera towards these issues
to tell a more complete story.
I want people to see what's happening underwater,
both the horror and the magic.
The first story that I did for National Geographic,
where I recognized the ability to include
environmental issues within a natural history coverage
was a story I proposed on harp seals.
Now the story I wanted to do, initially,
was just a small focus to look at the few weeks each year
where these animals migrate down from the Canadian arctic
to the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada
to engage in courtship, mating and to have their pups.
And all of this is played out against
the backdrop of transient pack ice
that moves with wind and tide.
And because I'm an underwater photographer,
I wanted to do this story from both above and below,
to make pictures like this that show one of these little pups
making its very first swim in the icy 29 degree water.
But as I got more involved in the story,
I realized that there were two big environmental issues I couldn't ignore.
The first was that these animals continue to be hunted,
killed with hakapiks at about eight, 15 days old.
It actually is the largest marine mammal
slaughter on the planet,
with hundreds of thousands of these seals being killed every year.
But as disturbing as that is,
I think the bigger problem for harp seals
is the lost of sea ice due to global warming.
This is an aerial picture that I made that shows
the Gulf of St. Lawrence during harp seal season.
And even though we see a lot of ice in this picture,
there's a lot of water as well, which wasn't there historically.
And the ice that is there is quite thin.
The problem is that these pups need a stable platform of solid ice
in order to nurse from their moms.
They only need 12 days from the moment they're born until their on their own.
But if they don't get 12 days,
they can fall into the ocean and die.
This is a photo that I made showing
one of these pups that's only about 5 or 7 days old --
still has a little bit of the umbilical cord on its belly --
that has fallen in because of the thin ice,
and the mother is frantically trying to push it up to breathe
and to get it back to stable purchase.
This problem has continued to grow each year since I was there.
I read that, last year, the pup mortality rate
was 100 percent in parts of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
So, clearly, this species has a lot of problems going forward.
This ended up becoming a cover story at National Geographic.
And it received quite a bit of attention.
And with that, I saw the potential to begin
doing other stories about ocean problems.
So I proposed a story on the global fish crisis,
in part because I had personally witnessed
a lot of degradation in the ocean over the last 30 years,
but also because I read a scientific paper
that stated 90 percent of the big fish in the ocean
have disappeared in the last 50 or 60 years.
These are the tuna, the billfish and the sharks.
And when I read that, I was blown away by those numbers.
I thought this was going to be headline news in every media outlet.
But it really wasn't, so I wanted to do a story
that was a very different kind of underwater story.
I wanted it to be more like war photography,
where I was making harder hitting pictures
that showed readers what was happening
to marine wildlife around the planet.
The first component of the story that I thought was essential, however,
was to give readers a sense of appreciation
for the ocean animals that they were eating.
You know, I think people go into a restaurant,
and somebody orders a steak, and we all know where steak comes from,
and somebody orders a chicken, and we know what a chicken is,
but when they're eating bluefin sushi,
do they have any sense of the magnificent animal that they're consuming?
Now, these are the lions and tigers of the sea.
In reality, these animals have no terrestrial counterpart;
they're unique in the world.
These are animals that can practically swim
from the equator to the poles
and can crisscross entire oceans in the course of a year.
If we weren't so efficient at catching them, because they grow their entire life,
would have 30-year-old bluefin out there that weigh a ton.
But the truth is we're way too efficient at catching them,
and their stocks have collapsed worldwide.
This is the daily auction at the Tsukiji Fish Market
that I photographed a couple years ago.
And every single day these tuna, bluefin like this,
are stacked up like cordwood,
just warehouse after warehouse.
And as I wandered around and made these pictures,
it sort of occurred to me that the ocean's not a grocery store, you know.
We can't keep taking without expecting
serious consequences as a result.
I also, with the story, wanted to show readers
how fish are caught, some of the methods that are used to catch fish,
like a bottom trawler, which is one of the most common methods in the world.
This was a small net that was being used in Mexico to catch shrimp,
but the way it works is essentially the same everywhere in the world.
You have a large net in the middle
with two steal doors on either end.
And as this assembly is towed through the water,
the doors meet resistance with the ocean,
and it opens the mouth of the net,
and they place floats at the top and a lead line on the bottom.
And this just drags over the bottom, in this case to catch shrimp.
But as you can imagine, it's catching everything else in its path as well.
And it's destroying that precious benthic community on the bottom,
things like sponges and corals,
that critical habitat for other animals.
This photograph I made of the fisherman
holding the shrimp that he caught after towing his nets for one hour.
So he had a handful of shrimp, maybe seven or eight shrimp,
and all those other animals on the deck of the boat are bycatch.
These are animals that died in the process,
but have no commercial value.
So this is the true cost of a shrimp dinner,
maybe seven or eight shrimp
and 10 lbs of other animals that had to die in the process.
And to make that point even more visual, I swam under the shrimp boat
and made the this picture of the guy shoveling
this bycatch into the sea as trash
and photographed this cascade of death,
you know, animals like guitarfish, bat rays,
flounder, pufferfish, that only an hour before,
were on the bottom of the ocean, alive,
but now being thrown back as trash.
I also wanted to focus on the shark fishing industry
because, currently on planet earth,
we're killing over 100 million sharks
every single year.
But before I went out to photograph this component,
I sort of wrestled with the notion of how do you make a picture of a dead shark
that will resonate with readers
You know, I think there's still a lot of people out there who think
the only good shark is a dead shark.
But this one morning I jumped in and found this thresher
that had just recently died in the gill net.
And with its huge pectoral fins and eyes still very visible,
it struck me as sort of a crucifixion, if you will.
This ended up being the lead picture
in the global fishery story in National Geographic.
And I hope that it helped readers to take notice
of this problem of 100 million sharks.
And because I love sharks -- I'm somewhat obsessed with sharks --
I wanted to do another, more celebratory, story about sharks,
as a way of talking about the need for shark conservation.
So I went to the Bahamas
because there's very few places in the world
where sharks are doing well these days,
but the Bahamas seem to be a place where stocks were reasonably healthy,
largely due to the fact that the government there
had outlawed longlining several years ago.
And I wanted to show several species
that we hadn't shown much in the magazine and worked in a number of locations.
One of the locations was this place called Tiger Beach,
in the northern Bahamas where tiger sharks
aggregate in shallow water.
This is a low-altitude photograph that I made
showing our diving boat with about a dozen of these big old tiger sharks
sort of just swimming around behind.
But the one thing I definitely didn't want to do with this coverage
was to continue to portray sharks as something like monsters.
I didn't want them to be overly threatening or scary.
And with this photograph of a beautiful
15-ft., probably 14-ft. I guess,
female tiger shark,
I sort of think I got to that goal,
where she was swimming with these little barjacks off her nose,
and my strobe created a shadow on her face.
And I think it's a gentler picture, a little less threatening,
a little more respectful of the species.
I also searched on this story
for the elusive great hammerhead,
an animal that really hadn't been photographed much
until maybe about seven or 10 years ago.
It's a very solitary creature.
But this an animal that's considered data deficient by science
in both Florida and in the Bahamas.
You know, we know almost nothing about them.
We don't know where they migrate to or from,
where they mate, where they have their pups,
and yet, hammerhead populations in the Atlantic
have declined about 80 percent in the last 20 to 30 years.
You know, we're losing them faster than we can possibly find them.
This is the oceanic whitetip shark,
an animal that is considered the fourth most dangerous species,
if you pay attention to such lists.
But it's an animal that's about 98 percent in decline
throughout most of its range.
Because this is a pelagic animal and it lives out in the deeper water,
and because we weren't working on the bottom,
I brought along a shark cage here,
and my friend, shark biologist Wes Pratt is inside the cage.
You'll see that the photographer, of course, was not inside the cage here,
so clearly the biologist is a little smarter than the photographer I guess.
And lastly with this story,
I also wanted to focus on baby sharks nurseries.
And I went to the island of Bimini, in the Bahamas,
to work with lemon shark pups.
This is a photo of a lemon shark pup,
and it shows these animals where they live for the first two to three years of their lives
in these protective mangroves.
This is a very sort of un-shark-like photograph.
It's not what you typically might think of shark picture.
But, you know, here we see a shark that's maybe 10 or 11 inches long
swimming in about a foot of water.
But this is crucial habitat and it's where they spend the first two, three years of their lives,
until they're big enough to go out on the rest of the reef.
After I left Bimini, I actually learned
that this habitat was being bulldozed
to create a new golf course and resort.
And other recent stories have looked at
single, flagship species, if you will,
that are at risk in the ocean
as a way of talking about other threats.
One such story I did documented the leatherback sea turtle.
This is the largest, widest ranging,
deepest diving and oldest of all turtle species.
Here we see a female crawling
out of the ocean under moonlight
on the island of Trinidad.
These are animals whose lineage dates back about 100 million years.
And there was a time in their lifespan
where they were coming out of the water to nest
and saw Tyrannosaurus rex running by.
And today, they crawl out and see condominiums.
But, despite this amazing longevity,
they're now considered critically endangered.
In the Pacific, where I made this photograph,
their stocks have declined about 90 percent
in the last 15 years.
This is a photograph that shows a hatchling
about to taste saltwater for the very first time
beginning this long and perilous journey.
Only one in a thousand
leatherback hatchlings will reach maturity.
But that's due to natural predators
like vultures that pick them off on a beach
or predatory fish that are waiting offshore.
Nature has learned to compensate with that,
and females have multiple clutches of eggs
to overcome those odds.
But what they can't deal with is anthropogenic stresses,
human things, like this picture that shows
a leatherback caught at night in a gill net.
I actually jumped in and photographed this,
and with the fisherman's permission,
I cut the turtle out, and it was able to swim free.
But, you know, thousands of leatherbacks each year
are not so fortunate,
and the species' future is in great danger.
Another charismatic megafauna species that I worked with
is the story I did on the right whale.
And essentially, the story is this with right whales,
that about a million years ago, there was
one species of right whale on the planet,
but as land masses moved around and oceans became isolated,
the species sort of separated,
and today we have essentially two distinct stocks.
We have the Southern right whale that we see here
and the North Atlantic right whale that we see here
with a mom and calf off the coast of Florida.
Now, both species were hunted to the brink of extinction
by the early whalers,
but the Southern right whales have rebounded a lot better
because they're located in places
farther away from human activity.
The North Atlantic right whale is listed as
the most endangered species on the planet today
because they are urban whales; they live along the east coast
of North America, United States and Canada,
and they have to deal with these urban ills.
This photo shows an animal popping its head out at sunset off the coast of Florida.
You can see the coal burning plant in the background.
They have to deal with things like toxins and pharmaceuticals
that are flushed out into the ocean,
and may be even affecting their reproduction.
They also get entangled in fishing gear.
This is picture that shows the tail of a right whale.
And those white markings are not natural markings.
These are entanglement scars.
72 percent of the population has such scars,
but most don't shed the gear, things like lobster traps and crab pots.
They hold on to them, and it eventually kills them.
And the other problem is they get hit by ships.
And this was an animal that was struck by a ship
in Nova Scotia, Canada
being towed in, where they did a necropsy
to confirm the cause of death,
which was indeed a ship strike.
So all of these ills are stacking up against these animals
and keeping their numbers very low.
And to draw a contrast with that beleaguered North Atlantic population,
I went to a new pristine population of Southern right whales
that had only been discovered about 10 years ago
in the sub-Antarctic of of New Zealand, a place called the Auckland Islands.
I went down there in the winter time.
And these are animals that had never seen humans before.
And I was one of the first people they probably had ever seen.
And I got in the water with them,
and I was amazed at how curious they were.
This photograph shows my assistant standing on the bottom at about 70 feet
and one of these amazingly beautiful, 45 ft.,
70 ton whales,
like a city bus just swimming up, you know.
They were in perfect condition,
very fat and healthy, robust, no entanglement scars,
the way they're suppose to look.
You know, I read that the pilgrims, when they landed at Plymouth Rock
in Massachusetts in 1620,
wrote that you could walk across Cape Cod Bay
on the backs of right whales.
And we can't go back and see that today,
but maybe we can preserve what we have left.
And I wanted to close this program with a story of hope,
a story I did on marine reserves
as sort of a solution
to the problem of overfishing, the global fish crisis story.
I settled on working in the country of New Zealand
because New Zealand was rather progressive,
and is rather progressive in terms of protecting their ocean.
And I really wanted this story to be about three things.
I wanted it to be about abundance,
about diversity and about resilience.
And one of the first places I worked
was a reserve called Goat Island
in Leigh of New Zealand.
What the scientists there told me was that
when protected this first marine reserve in 1975,
they hoped and expected that certain things might happen.
For example, they hoped that certain species of fish
like the New Zealand Snapper, would return
because they had been fished to the brink of commercial extinction.
And they did come back. What they couldn't predict was that other things would happen.
For example, these fish
predate on sea urchins.
And when the fish were all gone,
all anyone ever saw underwater
was just acres and acres of sea urchins.
But when the fish came back
and began predating and controlling the urchin population,
low and behold, kelp forests emerged in shallow water.
And that's because the urchins eat kelp.
So when the fish control the urchin population,
the ocean was restored to its natural equilibrium.
You know, this is probably how the ocean looked here
one or 200 years ago, but nobody was around to tell us.
I worked in other parts of New Zealand as well,
in beautiful, fragile, protected areas
like in Fiordland, where this sea pen colony was found.
Little blue cod swimming in for a dash of color.
In the northern part of New Zealand,
I dove in the blue water, where the water's a little warmer,
and photographed animals like this giant sting ray
swimming through an underwater canyon.
Every part of the ecosystem in this place
seems very healthy,
from tiny, little animals like a nudibrank
crawling over encrusting sponge
or a leatherjacket
that is a very important animal in this ecosystem
because it grazes on the bottom and allows new life to take hold.
And I wanted to finish with this photograph,
a picture I made on a very stormy day in New Zealand
when I just laid on the bottom
amidst a school of fish swirling around me.
And I was in a place that had only been protected
about 20 years ago.
And I talked to divers that had been diving there for many years,
and they said that the marine life was better here today
than it was in the 1960s.
And that's because it's been protected,
that it has come back.
So I think the message is clear.
The ocean is, indeed, resilient and tolerant to a point,
but we must be good custodians.
I became an underwater photographer
because I fell in love with the sea,
and I make pictures of it today because I want to protect it,
and I don't think it's too late.
Thank you very much.
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