The seas are a tremendous resource for humanity. They contain fish and sea food, which have important nutrients for humans and the seas also act as a reservoir for carbon dioxide, where trillions of tonnes of it are stored. Ninety percent of sea life lives in the first two hundred metres of so of the [...]
Filed under: biodiversity, carbon emissions, climate change, global warming, pollution | Tagged: aphhotic, dead zones, disphotic, euphotic, fishing, Galloway Hills, no take fishing zones, ocean zones, sea acidity | 3 Comments »