The Ocean Ecosystem
After Earthjustice spent years working alongside east coast fisherman and built a groundswell of public support, in 2012 the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission finally imposed the first-ever coast-wide cap on the catch of menhaden—one of the most important fish in the sea.
OUR OCEANS ARE IN CRISIS.
Overfishing, pollution and habitat fragmentation are wearing down the health of our oceans. Add to that ocean acidification—a process caused by increased carbon emissions that can degrade coral reefs and corrode the shells of sea creatures—and warming, and it's not surprising that ocean ecosystems are rapidly collapsing.
EARTHJUSTICE PROTECTS OUR OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS BY:
- PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE FISHERIES AND HEALTHY OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS through work with fisheries managers to reduce bycatch and adopt ecosystem-based, precautionary approaches to ocean management.
- SAFEGUARDING MARINE SPECIES through litigation that holds polluters accountable and stops harmful fishing practices that put our oceans’ inhabitants at risk.
- BUILDING RESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE by working with local and international stakeholders to reduce environmental stressors like pollution so that marine animals and corals reefs can withstand increasing acidification and warming.
We're Restoring Ocean Health, One Fish at a Time.
VICTORY! In 2011, more than a decade of Earthjustice litigation resulted in better protections for seal lions’ primary food sources. Our landmark court victories closed Steller sea lion rookeries to industrial-scale trawling gear, marking one of the first times fishing was reduced to provide prey needed for an endangered marine species’ survival. In July 2013, the 9th Circuit upheld additional fisheries closures of cod and mackerel in areas where sea lions forage for food.
"Since we began working on the oceans, we've had significant wins in the courts that set precedents with respect to how the federal government manages ocean resources in a sustainable way." – Steve Roady, Managing Attorney for Oceans
By the Numbers
Number of hours that Earthjustice attorneys spent with coastal communities, international stakeholders and policymakers to build more sustainable oceans in the first eight months of 2013 alone.
Letters sent by Earthjustice supporters opposing an industry attempt to strip endangered species protections from Puget Sound’s orcas.