A Canadian journalist, author, and
playwright, Alanna Mitchell says on her website that she is “fascinated with
the intersection of science, art and society.”
She titled this book Sea Sick – not “Seasick,” please note.
She writes intelligently and passionately, and travelled around the world to do
her research. The book is strongly based on science. “The issue is that all
over the world,” she writes, “groups of specialists who rarely put their
information together, are finding that global climate change and other human
actions are beginning to have a measurable effect on the ocean. The vital signs
of this critical medium of life are showing clear signs of distress.”
Mitchell writes about a much greater problem than the
well-known idea that oceanic fish and other species are in decline. The ocean,
she explains in the prologue, contains some 97 percent of Earth's water, covers
more than 70 percent of the planet’s surface, and makes up 99 per cent of our
world’s living space. “Even more significant than the ocean’s breadth and width
is its depth, or third dimension” she continues. “That total volume, with its
immense biological importance, is what I came to think of as the deeps – both
the source of life and the future of life on the planet.”
To research this book, she visited the ocean’s threatened
areas, where she saw the tragic results of human ignorance and
irresponsibility, and talked to scientists who may be able to suggest
solutions. Her writing is riveting; her travels, delights; and her findings,
intellectually stimulating. Here are a few examples.
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef she calls “The Last Best Place
on Earth.” But the corals that made the
reef are dying, she says. “The worldwide decay of coral reefs – caused by the
pollution from land, too much fishing, nasty practices to capture wild fish for
the aquarium trade and waters that are too hot because of global climate change
– has already started to take its toll.”
Another example, closer to home. In the Gulf of Mexico, there
are enormous “dead zones” – oxygen-free regions where nothing can live because
of the toxic chemical runoff into the delta of the Mississippi River system.
In Plymouth, England, she visited a marine laboratory where a
precipitous decline in plankton is being studied, a problem she calls “maybe
the most important question human beings will ever grapple with.” Plankton
forms the bottom layer of the entire oceanic food pyramid, so anything that
happens to plankton affects everything that lives in the ocean. Also, it
affects land animals whose diet includes seafood – for example, people on every
continent including, one assumes,
research scientists active in Antarctica.
Her book is not only backed up by travels, but by interviews
with researchers, and by reference to their work. For example, she cites a 2006
paper titled “Impacts
of Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem Services” led by two profs at Canada’s
Dalhousie University – Boris Worm and Ransom Myers – that is dreadful in its
conclusions. According to these researchers, in the half-century since
industrial fishing took hold in the world’s oceans, 90 per cent of all oceanic predatory
fishes - cod, tuna, swordfish, sharks - were gone. Today, we are fishing the few
remaining percentages. Fish farms are today’s answer to the virtual absence of
wild fish in the ocean – an absence brought on by overfishing. More than half
of the seafood we and our pets consume today – a decade after Mitchell
published her book – is the product of aquaculture. Raising saltwater fish
takes place in farms in the ocean itself, with species confined in mesh cages too deep for them to escape, with
much of their food being sea creatures that can float or drift on currents through
the mesh.
She also went to China, the world’s largest emitter of
greenhouse gases, where the waters are polluted – often by the vast pens the
Chinese use to raise more farmed fish than any other country. China now
provides 62 per cent of the world's farmed fish.
Mitchell’s final trip is to the Florida Keys, the last
research expedition of the book, where she had the opportunity to go to the
ocean’s bottom in the submersible vessel Johnson Sea Link. When offered the
ride, her immediate reaction was, “Why keep going? Why should another research
trip make any difference?”
It did, though. As the submersible sits on the bottom, she had a kind of epiphany. “Shivering in my undersea womb, peering at these wondrous, ancient life forms,” she writes, “it occurs to me that we are in an era that holds out the potential of magnificent regeneration. We could, if we wanted to, form a new relationship with our planet. We could become the gentle symbionts we were meant to be instead of the planetary parasites we have unwittingly become.”
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