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Pico Blanco, Ventana Wilderness, California. July 2009. |
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
I am Wilderness
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
"Postive News" on Bottom Trawling
In this quarter’s Positive News, a U.K.-based international newspaper with affiliates in New York, Hong Kong, Madrid and Argentina, the author of this blog was interviewed on the international effort to ban deep sea bottom trawling on the high seas. This auxillary article compliments the month’s feature story, which covers an announcement from the nation of Belize to ban bottom trawling in their national waters. Joining the ranks of Venezuela and Palau, both countries of which have taken similar measures, Belize put this legislation into effect on December 31, 2010.
Arlo's contribution covers some of numerous achievements made through an international campaign to promote a U.N. moratorium on high seas bottom trawling that was spearheaded by the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition. He also touches on the momentum to build a network of marine protected areas on the high seas, which in concept would offer permanent protection to the seamounts and coldwater coral reefs currently threatened by trawling and other destructive fishing practices.
Read the full Positive News article: Towards and International Ban on Trawling by Sarah Wilkinson.
For more information on bottom trawling and high seas marine protected areas, check out the following sites:
- Deep Sea Conservation Coalition
- IUCN-WCPA High Seas Task Force
- Marine Conservation Biology Institute (MCBI)
- Pew Environment Group: Protecting the Deep Sea
- Greenpeace: The Pacific Commons
Monday, January 24, 2011
Science on Ice
"The test of man's willingness to pull back from the destruction of the Antarctic wilderness is the test also of his willingness to avert destruction globally. If he cannot succeed in Antarctica he has little chance of success elsewhere." - Edwin Mickleburgh
Many of us dream of going to Antarctica. A few of us have had the good fortune of visiting. For Dr. Rodolfo Werner, travel to White Continent is a regular part of life. As a marine scientist, Dr. Werner has spent much of his life studying marine mammals of the Southern Ocean and the Southwest Atlantic, off of Argentina's wild Patagonian coast. These days, he's the scientific advisor for the Pew Environment Group's Antarctic Krill Conservation Project. Much of his time is spent in the political sphere, where he provides scientific support for the case of protecting key areas used by Antarctic wildlife to forage on krill - a shrimp-like crustacean that forms the basis of the Antarctic food chain. But when not hammering out new protections for Antarctic wildlife, his life is on ice - literally.
During the Antarctic summer, when much of the northern hemisphere is blanketed in snow, Rodolfo guides groups to Antarctica as an expedition leader with National Geographic's Lindblad Expeditions.
Currently at sea on the National Geographic Explorer, Rodolfo's Antarctic voyage can be followed online. Drop in for your own taste of this icy realm.
Many of us dream of going to Antarctica. A few of us have had the good fortune of visiting. For Dr. Rodolfo Werner, travel to White Continent is a regular part of life. As a marine scientist, Dr. Werner has spent much of his life studying marine mammals of the Southern Ocean and the Southwest Atlantic, off of Argentina's wild Patagonian coast. These days, he's the scientific advisor for the Pew Environment Group's Antarctic Krill Conservation Project. Much of his time is spent in the political sphere, where he provides scientific support for the case of protecting key areas used by Antarctic wildlife to forage on krill - a shrimp-like crustacean that forms the basis of the Antarctic food chain. But when not hammering out new protections for Antarctic wildlife, his life is on ice - literally.
During the Antarctic summer, when much of the northern hemisphere is blanketed in snow, Rodolfo guides groups to Antarctica as an expedition leader with National Geographic's Lindblad Expeditions.
Currently at sea on the National Geographic Explorer, Rodolfo's Antarctic voyage can be followed online. Drop in for your own taste of this icy realm.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Sunsets of Big Sur
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Sunset over the Pacific. Big Sur, California. |
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Rabbit crosses a fallen redwood in Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park |
Here's a few photos from October. I wish I was in Big Sur now.
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McWay Falls, Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park |
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McWay Falls, Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park |
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Rabbit crosses the fallen redwood, Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park |
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Big Sur Sunset |
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Rabbit, Big Sur. October 2010 |
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Arlo Hemphill, Big Sur. October 2010. |
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Of Frogs and Photos
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Glass frog - Centrolene antioquensis |
Photography is one of the most powerful tools for communicating the irreplaceable value of wilderness. Conservation photographers bring the beauty, majesty and spiritual essence of remote wilderness areas - as well as their diverse biological inhabitants - back to the everyday world. Without images such as the few featured here, many in the "modern" world would have no understanding or sense of relationship to the remaining wilderness areas of our planet.
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Endangered Rothschild Giraffe, the only subspecies with five horns (two behind the ears!) - less than 690 individuals survive in the wild, many of them around Giraffe Manor |
To see more of Robin's work, visit his photography website at robindmoore.com and follow him on Facebook at Robin Moore Conservation Photographer.
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Blog author Arlo Hemphill and Robin Moore enjoy a lighter moment at an iLCP "12 Shots" event during Wild9 in Merida, Mexico - Nov 2010 |
Friday, December 17, 2010
Shark Sucker
Beqa Lagoon, Fiji. This past July I had the wonderful opportunity of traveling to Fiji and diving with the shark feeders of Beqa Lagoon. To the people of Beqa, sharks are sacred spirits with whom they share a special relationship. Divers visiting Fiji may accompany the islanders on a shark feeding for an up close and personal look at bull, silvertip, tawny nurse, blacktip reef, whitetip reef and tiger sharks.
The above picture is one of my favorite from the experience. This is one of the Fijian divers ascending to the surface following the shark feeding. The fish swarming around him are primarily remoras and rainbow runners, attracted to the remaining food in his feed bucket. Ocean conditions were extremely excellent this day, offering top to bottom visibility at 100ft of water. This is the kind of scene I can lurk in forever. I never want to leave the blue on warm, clear days like this.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Big Sur Rattlesnake
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Western Rattlesnake, Crotalus oreganus |
Thursday, August 5, 2010
The Great Marlin Race: “ Billfishers, billfishers, billfishers, start fi...
The Great Marlin Race: “ Billfishers, billfishers, billfishers, start fi...: "The tournament began promptly at 7:30 a.m. this morning, under hazy skies with west winds around 7 mph. Randy and I met the anglers on the ..."
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Big Asilomar
Monterey, California. Terrific storm systems have been moving through Monterey Country for the past couple of days, generating tons of rains, hail, lightening strikes and a really big swell. The storm system, which is expected to persist for awhile, is believed to be a result of the strong El NiƱo event rocking our world this year. Below is a little video footage from one our local surf breaks, Asilomar, maxing out at 35ft this morning.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Speak Wild
Merida, Yucatan, Mexico. This past November, this inspiring young man spoke at Wild9 in the Yucatan, Mexico:
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