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 sea, which is called the sunlight or Euphotic zone. Continue reading
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 »