by | May 11, 2020 | 0 comments

OGL partners with Mission Blue to promote ocean conservation

OGL is excited to announce our new partnership with Mission Blue! Through a worldwide network, Mission Blue works to inspire action, exploration, and the protection of our incredible ocean.

Led by world-renowned marine biologist, ocean advocate, and explorer Dr. Sylvia Earle, Mission Blue helps to build and support marine protected areas by drawing attention to the world’s “hope spots.” Hope spots are special places that are critical to the health of the ocean. They are, as Dr. Earle likes to call them, Earth’s blue heart. Hope spots are about recognizing, empowering, and supporting individuals and communities around the world in their efforts to protect the ocean.

“I wish you would use all means at your disposal—films, the web, expeditions, new submarines, a campaign!—to ignite public support for a network of global marine protected areas, hope spots large enough to save and restore the ocean, the blue heart of the planet.” —Dr. Sylvia Earle’s 2009 TED Prize wish that launched Mission Blue

Dozens of Mission Blue hope spots are also OGL collection sites, including the Agulhas Front; Aliwal Shoal; Bahamian Reefs; Bay of Fundy; Bocas del Toro Archipelago; California Seamounts; Central Arctic Ocean; Coastal Southeast Florida; Coral Sea; Coral Triangle; Eastern Pacific Seascape; Exmouth Gulf and Ningaloo Coast World Heritage Area; Florida Gulf Coast; Gulf of Mexico Deep Reefs; Gulf of the Farallones; Mayan Riviera; Mesoamerican Reef; Micronesian Islands; Monterey Bay; Moreton Bay; New Zealand Coastal Waters; Northwest Passage; Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone; Patagonian Shelf; Ross Sea; Sargasso Sea; and the Subantarctic Islands and surrounding seas. OGL already holds samples from more than 5,400 specimens collected in these important locations.

Aerial view of the Caribbean Sea’s Bocas del Toro Archipelago, which is both a Mission Blue hope spot and an OGL collection site. Photo credit: Aaron O’Deaf

OGL’s mission to explore and preserve the biological diversity of the sea through genome banking dovetails with Mission Blue. OGL provides resources that can help document the importance of these locations to assist Mission Blue in better understanding and protecting these unique and important habitats and ecosystems.

We are beyond excited to help our Mission Blue partners build a global wave of community support for ocean conservation!

Are you interested in helping OGL’s ocean conservation efforts? Support OGL’s mission to preserve and explore the biodiversity of the sea here.

RECENT NEWS BRIEFS

UN Reaches Historic High Seas Agreement

Last weekend, the United Nations reached an agreement on a landmark treaty aimed to protect life in the high seas! This treaty focuses specifically on resources that are contained in ocean areas beyond national jurisdiction. These areas, which are currently largely...

Watch Dan Distel’s Darwin Festival Talk!

Did you know that there is currently a marine ecosystem off the coast of Alabama that is being powered by an ancient undersea forest!? OGL's Dan Distel gave an amazing talk about how this is possible at Salem State's Darwin Festival in February. If you missed it, you...

How our DNA got all marked up

We are all familiar with the genetic code—the simple set of three-letter words that translate the As, Ts, Cs, and Gs of DNA into the diverse and complex forms we know as animal life. But, if every cell in an animal has the same DNA, how does one cell know to become a...

A new paper from OGL solves an old mystery

Shipworms are wormlike wood-eating clams that have been the nemesis of mariners since the first wooden boat set out to sea—and for good reason. Shipworms can gnaw their way through a wooden hull in a matter of months. Since at least 350 BCE, scientists have pondered...

X