|
From the polar ice caps, to the tropics, David
Attenborough reveals how our actions are pushing the
world’s oceans ever closer to the brink of destruction.
The Census of Marine Life is the most comprehensive
inventory of the oceans ever undertaken and draws on
the work of 2,000 scientists from 90 countries. It will
transform how we see the ocean, giving us a better
picture of what lives there, our impact and what the
future holds. In this film, Horizon reveals the techniques,
meets the scientists and explores some of the findings
from this massive project.
Our appetite for fish is fast emptying the seas and one
of the key aims of the census is to monitor fish stocks.
Horizon takes a trip with a research vessel, off Cape
Cod, Massachusetts, and meets Nicholas Makris, a
scientist from Massachusetts Institute of Technology
who has pioneered a sonar tracking system, allowing
scientists to scan large areas of the seas.
Horizon also visits the Great Barrier Reef to meet the
scientists struggling to save this unique habitat from
the effects of a new peril, ocean acidification, caused
by climate change. By limiting coral’s ability to grow,
acidification threatens the inhabitants of this entire
ecosystem.
So what can be done to save this most fragile of
ecosystems? The Census of Marine Life will provide
the information required to make informed decisions,
based on real data. All that is needed is the political will,
and economic foresight to make those calls, before it is
too late.
Presenter
David Attenborough
Producer
Peter Oxley
Series Editor
Aidan Laverty
DURATION
1 x 50
|