All language subtitles for Deep Trouble_2

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:43,120 --> 00:00:47,440 It's only in the last 50 years with the invention of the aqualung that we've 2 00:00:47,440 --> 00:00:50,940 been able to get underwater and see some of the animals that live there. 3 00:01:10,320 --> 00:01:12,400 We all love dolphins. 4 00:01:12,890 --> 00:01:15,410 They're the playful, popular face of the ocean. 5 00:01:21,010 --> 00:01:26,870 But most of what lives underwater is out of sight, and so out of mind. 6 00:01:28,370 --> 00:01:32,830 Even in the 20 -odd years that I've been diving, there have been big changes in 7 00:01:32,830 --> 00:01:33,830 our seas. 8 00:01:34,270 --> 00:01:38,050 It's clear that our oceans are now in real danger. 9 00:01:49,390 --> 00:01:54,070 Flying over miles and miles of ocean, you get the impression that things 10 00:01:54,070 --> 00:01:55,029 too bad. 11 00:01:55,030 --> 00:01:58,630 But below the surface, there's a multitude of man -made problems. 12 00:02:00,350 --> 00:02:04,510 Of all of them, probably the most destructive is fishing. 13 00:02:04,830 --> 00:02:08,090 And it's the way we catch fish that's the problem. 14 00:02:19,560 --> 00:02:21,980 Bluefin tuna, king of the sea. 15 00:02:22,180 --> 00:02:25,100 They are exquisitely designed for the open ocean. 16 00:02:26,580 --> 00:02:31,840 They can grow up to three quarters of a ton and can swim at 50 miles an hour, 17 00:02:31,940 --> 00:02:37,320 faster than any other creature in the sea, apart from us. 18 00:02:39,620 --> 00:02:42,480 They have few natural predators when fully grown. 19 00:02:42,820 --> 00:02:46,240 It is believed that these bluefins are now endangered. 20 00:02:47,310 --> 00:02:50,810 There's no place in the ocean where we can't pursue them. 21 00:02:51,050 --> 00:02:53,450 They just can't escape us. 22 00:02:55,810 --> 00:03:00,370 Fishing has become incredibly high -tech, so much so that we can pretty 23 00:03:00,370 --> 00:03:02,990 capture anything anywhere in the world nowadays. 24 00:03:03,490 --> 00:03:07,350 These bluefin tuna boats beneath me have every mod con. 25 00:03:07,610 --> 00:03:11,950 They have incredibly big engines, they're using depth sounders, GPSes, and 26 00:03:11,950 --> 00:03:14,110 they've even got spotter planes in the air. 27 00:03:14,820 --> 00:03:18,380 spotting the fish for them. Yeah, Paul, I had about eight fish over here. 28 00:03:18,640 --> 00:03:19,860 They just went down. 29 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:22,120 They're on my left side. 30 00:03:25,600 --> 00:03:31,380 So the bluefin tuna, travelling at 50 miles an hour, hasn't really got much of 31 00:03:31,380 --> 00:03:34,840 chance. The moment it comes to the surface, somebody's going to spot it. 32 00:03:38,460 --> 00:03:39,339 Come left. 33 00:03:39,340 --> 00:03:41,840 Yeah, there you go. 12 o 'clock, five or six boats. 34 00:03:44,010 --> 00:03:47,410 Here they're being hunted on one of their major migration routes. 35 00:03:48,550 --> 00:03:53,090 It's thought they swim from the Gulf of Mexico up the eastern seaboard of the 36 00:03:53,090 --> 00:03:55,530 United States to Canada each summer. 37 00:03:56,730 --> 00:04:02,190 Their routes are so predictable that fishermen can catch them year after 38 00:04:08,950 --> 00:04:13,260 While these fishermen are still catching them, There are scientists who are 39 00:04:13,260 --> 00:04:17,760 tagging the fish, trying to discover how many separate populations there are, 40 00:04:17,899 --> 00:04:22,620 what their movements are, and just how many fish are left. 41 00:04:25,660 --> 00:04:31,100 Marine scientist and keen sports fisherman, Carl Safina, fishes off Long 42 00:04:31,260 --> 00:04:31,979 New York. 43 00:04:31,980 --> 00:04:36,620 He loves fishing for bluefin, but these days he has to target other species. 44 00:04:38,080 --> 00:04:44,570 I've been fishing offshore since i was 12 with my fathers and my uncles and we 45 00:04:44,570 --> 00:04:49,990 used to see lots of bluefin tuna a lot of small ones and a lot of big ones now 46 00:04:49,990 --> 00:04:56,470 uh there aren't so few tuna that people sport fish for sharks now 47 00:04:56,470 --> 00:05:03,250 safina is so concerned 48 00:05:03,250 --> 00:05:07,950 by the decline in numbers that he started a campaign with the National 49 00:05:07,950 --> 00:05:10,290 Society to try and save these tuna. 50 00:05:11,050 --> 00:05:15,290 What we do know about bluefins in the western part of the Atlantic, in other 51 00:05:15,290 --> 00:05:21,930 words, the part of the Atlantic off the U .S. and Canada, is that from the mid 52 00:05:21,930 --> 00:05:27,870 -1970s until the late 1990s, the population has declined by roughly 53 00:05:27,870 --> 00:05:29,130 85%. 54 00:05:30,090 --> 00:05:34,190 In New England, where most of the Western Atlantic bluefin are caught 55 00:05:34,190 --> 00:05:38,090 commercially, fishermen just don't believe these government figures. 56 00:05:40,010 --> 00:05:43,370 They claim there are consistent mistakes in the analysis. 57 00:05:44,310 --> 00:05:48,930 So they're naturally very skeptical about the quotas the government imposes 58 00:05:48,930 --> 00:05:49,930 them. 59 00:05:50,390 --> 00:05:55,670 Scientific research in the ocean is expensive, and the politics surrounding 60 00:05:55,670 --> 00:05:57,110 fish are complicated. 61 00:05:58,380 --> 00:06:00,700 But one thing is indisputable. 62 00:06:00,920 --> 00:06:03,940 These fish sell for vast amounts of money. 63 00:06:04,660 --> 00:06:11,460 The bluefin tuna was worth a few cents a pound and often sold as cat food until 64 00:06:11,460 --> 00:06:17,880 some people realized that if they airlifted them to Japan, if they sent 65 00:06:17,880 --> 00:06:23,720 Japan in airplanes, the price would go from a few cents to many dollars per 66 00:06:23,720 --> 00:06:24,720 pound. 67 00:06:29,580 --> 00:06:34,200 Tsukiji Market in Tokyo is the biggest push market in the world. 68 00:06:39,760 --> 00:06:45,280 Before I came to Japan, I'd heard a lot about it, but I just wasn't prepared for 69 00:06:45,280 --> 00:06:46,280 the scale of it. 70 00:06:47,160 --> 00:06:50,060 This warehouse is just the frozen section. 71 00:06:50,420 --> 00:06:56,180 In another section, there are rows and rows of fresh tuna, and amongst these 72 00:06:56,180 --> 00:06:58,520 a frightening quantity of bluefin. 73 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:19,440 The Japanese are by far the biggest importers of bluefin tuna in the world. 74 00:07:20,100 --> 00:07:21,700 This is big business. 75 00:07:22,060 --> 00:07:25,080 These bluefin are fetching £60 a kilo. 76 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:32,140 So in today's auction, a dealer would expect to get £12 ,000 for this one fish 77 00:07:32,140 --> 00:07:38,120 alone. But the market fluctuates madly, and there have been bluefin here that 78 00:07:38,120 --> 00:07:39,940 have fetched more than £100 ,000. 79 00:07:57,660 --> 00:08:02,760 Tuna fishermen don't accept the bluefin numbers are right down, but most 80 00:08:02,760 --> 00:08:05,280 scientists firmly believe that they are. 81 00:08:07,020 --> 00:08:10,880 Many people want bluefin tuna listed as slightly dependent one. 82 00:08:11,200 --> 00:08:14,160 In other words, a total ban on all fishing of them. 83 00:08:14,580 --> 00:08:19,240 Unless this is done, there is no way the fishermen, the wholesalers, everybody 84 00:08:19,240 --> 00:08:22,620 involved in the market will give up. There's simply too much in it for them. 85 00:08:25,860 --> 00:08:28,620 This market is not just about tuna. 86 00:08:28,840 --> 00:08:31,380 There's every conceivable type of fish here. 87 00:08:41,100 --> 00:08:46,500 Nearly 50 % of the food eaten in Japan comes from the sea, compared to the 88 00:08:46,500 --> 00:08:52,400 world's average of about 15%. They eat enormous quantities of fish, every 89 00:08:52,400 --> 00:08:53,760 species imaginable. 90 00:08:54,540 --> 00:08:59,060 But unfortunately, some of those species are in deep trouble. 91 00:09:01,000 --> 00:09:06,100 This is a swordfish. In the Atlantic, its numbers have more than halved since 92 00:09:06,100 --> 00:09:11,010 the 1960s. As a result... Many restaurants have now taken it off the 93 00:09:13,290 --> 00:09:19,490 Marlin are a favourite amongst game fishermen, and some species are down by 94 00:09:19,490 --> 00:09:26,490 While shark meat is on sale 95 00:09:26,490 --> 00:09:32,150 in many Japanese markets, by far the biggest trade is in shark fins, and that 96 00:09:32,150 --> 00:09:33,910 trade is Asia -wide. 97 00:09:35,190 --> 00:09:39,630 About 100 million sharks are caught every year. 98 00:09:41,870 --> 00:09:43,790 Admittedly, this is the biggest market. 99 00:09:44,070 --> 00:09:48,390 But there are hundreds of markets all over the world selling huge quantities 100 00:09:48,390 --> 00:09:53,330 fish. And it's not just one day a week. It's day after day after day. 101 00:09:53,890 --> 00:09:58,030 You might find some really strange creatures here, ones which are totally 102 00:09:58,030 --> 00:09:59,150 unfamiliar to us. 103 00:09:59,370 --> 00:10:03,350 But that's not the issue. It's often the more common species that are seriously 104 00:10:03,350 --> 00:10:06,830 threatened. And those you can find on sale at home. 105 00:10:09,130 --> 00:10:13,090 This is Billingsgate Market, the largest fish market in London. 106 00:10:13,910 --> 00:10:17,670 Here you can buy all the familiar fish, which we love to eat. 107 00:10:18,050 --> 00:10:23,130 But in the UK, every day we're eating fish whose stocks are dangerously low. 108 00:10:24,670 --> 00:10:29,750 Most of us have no idea that these fish are in trouble, even the most common 109 00:10:29,750 --> 00:10:31,310 ones, such as cod. 110 00:10:33,040 --> 00:10:37,980 At the moment, the worst problem is with cod in the Irish Sea, which is really 111 00:10:37,980 --> 00:10:41,340 in a very, very depressed state indeed. 112 00:10:42,660 --> 00:10:49,060 The northeast Arctic stock off the coast of Norway is not in very good shape. 113 00:10:49,120 --> 00:10:53,380 The Canadian stock is not in good shape. The North Sea stock is not in good 114 00:10:53,380 --> 00:10:57,740 shape. About the only one that's doing reasonably well at the moment is that 115 00:10:57,740 --> 00:11:01,440 Iceland. And if that one goes the same way... 116 00:11:01,770 --> 00:11:03,010 There will be no Atlantic cod. 117 00:11:03,610 --> 00:11:06,330 There simply will not be any cod for sale. 118 00:11:09,890 --> 00:11:13,630 So is this a normal tide for a cod these days? 119 00:11:13,910 --> 00:11:17,910 That's about an average side there, yeah. When you go and buy fish in the 120 00:11:17,910 --> 00:11:22,870 supermarket or in the fish and chip shop, you generally as a consumer have 121 00:11:22,870 --> 00:11:26,790 way to tell whether this has come from a stock that is overfished or a stock 122 00:11:26,790 --> 00:11:29,410 that isn't. Where are these ones from? They're from Aberdeen. 123 00:11:29,930 --> 00:11:35,510 Was it in the North Sea? We know that fish stocks do collapse and sometimes 124 00:11:35,510 --> 00:11:37,770 recover. The herring collapsed and recovered. 125 00:11:38,210 --> 00:11:44,070 There was a stock of mackerel in the North Sea in the 60s and 70s that 126 00:11:44,070 --> 00:11:50,590 under very heavy fishing pressure by Perth seine and it has not come back. In 127 00:11:50,590 --> 00:11:52,110 years it has not come back. 128 00:11:52,790 --> 00:11:58,510 The sole and the place are fully exploited and could not really sustain 129 00:11:58,510 --> 00:12:04,070 further. fishing pressure the herring also is fully exploited there's no room 130 00:12:04,070 --> 00:12:10,990 for expansion now with so much fishing pressure in surface waters fishermen are 131 00:12:10,990 --> 00:12:15,710 going deeper and deeper to find fish for the market we're seeing things here 132 00:12:15,710 --> 00:12:22,170 that we would never even have heard of 20 years ago this is a black 133 00:12:22,170 --> 00:12:26,690 scabbard and it lives at about a thousand meters so are these fish in 134 00:12:27,290 --> 00:12:30,530 It's hard to say, really, because like everything else that lives in the deep, 135 00:12:30,690 --> 00:12:35,170 very little is known about it. And that's the problem with deep -sea 136 00:12:35,470 --> 00:12:39,170 The scientists don't really know what's going on down there, and they're only 137 00:12:39,170 --> 00:12:41,070 just beginning to find out. 138 00:12:44,850 --> 00:12:49,690 Scientists from Tasmania are now using high -tech cameras mounted on 139 00:12:49,690 --> 00:12:53,670 submersibles to study the effects of fishing on the deep sea. 140 00:12:56,200 --> 00:13:00,560 Only in the last 30 years have we had the technology to fish the deep. 141 00:13:01,920 --> 00:13:05,540 But in many places, the fishing pressure has been very intense. 142 00:13:08,380 --> 00:13:12,160 This particular fish is now on our menus. 143 00:13:15,100 --> 00:13:20,440 These white fish are the fillets of a deep -sea fish called orange roughy. You 144 00:13:20,440 --> 00:13:23,460 may have noticed them in your local fishmonger or supermarket recently. 145 00:13:24,400 --> 00:13:28,140 They can live at up to depths of 1 ,500 metres. 146 00:13:28,460 --> 00:13:31,820 And like a lot of deep -sea fish, they live a very long time. 147 00:13:32,880 --> 00:13:37,420 These ones could have been born during World War II. They could even have been 148 00:13:37,420 --> 00:13:39,460 around during the Victorian era. 149 00:13:40,140 --> 00:13:45,080 It's believed that orange roughy can live to a staggering 150 years old. 150 00:13:46,160 --> 00:13:51,860 As well as living longer, these fish mature later, at about 30 years old. 151 00:13:52,400 --> 00:13:55,860 If you take them out before this age, they won't be able to reproduce. 152 00:13:56,520 --> 00:14:00,380 There won't be a future generation of orange roughy. 153 00:14:05,860 --> 00:14:08,980 For many years, the fishing pressure here was huge. 154 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:14,060 Thousands of tons were scooped up for the market and sold around the world. 155 00:14:14,460 --> 00:14:20,280 At times, so many were caught, there wasn't even the market for them. They 156 00:14:20,280 --> 00:14:21,280 just dumped. 157 00:14:25,050 --> 00:14:29,710 Fortunately, the New Zealand and Australian fisheries recognise the 158 00:14:29,710 --> 00:14:32,830 time. They now monitor the fish stocks carefully. 159 00:14:33,630 --> 00:14:38,190 The fish may be safe, but the habitat they rely on isn't. 160 00:14:45,270 --> 00:14:51,530 In the deep sea, there are animals so new to us and so strange, it's as if we 161 00:14:51,530 --> 00:14:52,530 are in another world. 162 00:15:26,410 --> 00:15:30,890 Despite its remoteness, the deep -sea habitat is now under threat. 163 00:15:31,170 --> 00:15:36,630 And once again, it's the method of fishing that is causing the real damage. 164 00:15:40,510 --> 00:15:43,290 Deep -sea fishing nets are huge. 165 00:15:43,590 --> 00:15:46,490 They dredge up life indiscriminately. 166 00:15:47,370 --> 00:15:53,130 Corals and sponges hundreds of years old are being ripped off the seabed and 167 00:15:53,130 --> 00:15:54,130 destroyed. 168 00:15:55,020 --> 00:15:59,120 What it's all actually done, particularly in the deep sea, where 169 00:15:59,120 --> 00:16:03,740 is concentrated around seamounts, which are very hard rock, to protect the net 170 00:16:03,740 --> 00:16:07,660 from the rock, they've got huge steel balls on them. Those balls are about a 171 00:16:07,660 --> 00:16:12,520 half a metre in diameter, and they run along in a huge ground rope. Now that 172 00:16:12,520 --> 00:16:17,040 is pulled along, it's like three knots, smacking into the rock. Smack, smack, 173 00:16:17,080 --> 00:16:18,620 smack, smack, smack, smack, smack. 174 00:16:19,500 --> 00:16:24,080 So this net basically comes along and it physically mows that thing down, just 175 00:16:24,080 --> 00:16:26,760 rips it off, shoots it into the back of the net, it's history. 176 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:29,300 It's got no chance of living after that. 177 00:16:30,740 --> 00:16:33,100 You can't see the damage done at that. 178 00:16:33,520 --> 00:16:36,900 But if the same was done on land, you'd be horrified. 179 00:16:37,710 --> 00:16:42,090 If we wanted to catch cows, for instance, we'd get a net and we'd hang 180 00:16:42,090 --> 00:16:45,890 a helicopter and we'd drag that through the paddock. We would not only catch a 181 00:16:45,890 --> 00:16:51,190 few cows, we'd catch the dog, we'd catch the car, we'd catch the farmyard, the 182 00:16:51,190 --> 00:16:55,170 barn, we'd catch the farmer's wife, we'd catch all of the other stuff that we 183 00:16:55,170 --> 00:16:56,650 weren't originally going for. 184 00:16:58,110 --> 00:17:01,710 O'Shea is concerned about many of the animals that are being brought up from 185 00:17:01,710 --> 00:17:04,510 deep, most of them unintentionally. 186 00:17:07,050 --> 00:17:10,589 He's monitoring the damage being done from his lab in New Zealand. 187 00:17:11,150 --> 00:17:15,230 One of the most spectacular things we've received in fisheries bycatch is this 188 00:17:15,230 --> 00:17:16,230 large gorgonian. 189 00:17:16,630 --> 00:17:20,670 It's like a black coral, it's very closely related to it, and this 190 00:17:20,670 --> 00:17:25,630 specimen we've had aged at some 700 years old. So it's 700 years when the 191 00:17:25,630 --> 00:17:28,329 came down and basically ripped it off the bottom of the sea. 192 00:17:28,610 --> 00:17:32,790 It's dead, it's gone. When you add up the pieces together, you would have some 193 00:17:32,790 --> 00:17:34,190 three metres in... 194 00:17:34,800 --> 00:17:40,240 total height from the sea floor and that must be the equivalent of an underwater 195 00:17:40,240 --> 00:17:43,960 forest. It's just tragic that something like this should be ripped from the 196 00:17:43,960 --> 00:17:44,960 floor. 197 00:17:49,320 --> 00:17:54,340 This particular species used to be very common between 700 and 1100 metres off 198 00:17:54,340 --> 00:18:00,180 our coast but like everything that is very fragile and were we to put a steel 199 00:18:00,180 --> 00:18:03,580 bobbin straight over that it would be crushed to pieces. 200 00:18:09,250 --> 00:18:14,150 O'Shea has a particular fascination for deep -sea squid, but he's worried that 201 00:18:14,150 --> 00:18:18,450 many of them are disappearing before we've even had a chance to see them 202 00:18:18,450 --> 00:18:21,530 in the wild, let alone understand them. 203 00:18:25,190 --> 00:18:28,550 This species used to be very common around New Zealand. Along the entire 204 00:18:28,550 --> 00:18:30,390 Northland Beach coast, it's gone. 205 00:18:31,610 --> 00:18:36,190 And the only reason why an animal like this is gone... It's so stupid, it's so 206 00:18:36,190 --> 00:18:40,650 slow, it wasn't hurting anyone, it got attacked by a trawler net, and the 207 00:18:40,650 --> 00:18:44,030 trawlers have been going back and forth the same area for so long, we've 208 00:18:44,030 --> 00:18:45,650 basically made this animal extinct. 209 00:18:49,810 --> 00:18:55,270 With every single dive to the deep ocean, scientists are discovering new 210 00:18:55,270 --> 00:19:00,370 species. Some may have properties that could be invaluable to us. 211 00:19:02,690 --> 00:19:03,990 Sponges are animals. 212 00:19:04,570 --> 00:19:08,570 but they're rooted to the bottom and can't get away from something that's 213 00:19:08,570 --> 00:19:11,650 to eat them or something that's trying to grow over them. 214 00:19:12,150 --> 00:19:17,770 So they produce chemicals to ward off predators or other encroaching sponges. 215 00:19:25,710 --> 00:19:29,850 It's these chemicals that interest marine scientists in Florida. 216 00:19:30,590 --> 00:19:34,730 They collect sponges from the deep and take them back to the lab for analysis. 217 00:19:36,170 --> 00:19:42,610 The challenge to us as drug discoverers and marine biologists is to figure out 218 00:19:42,610 --> 00:19:49,150 why the organism is producing it and then apply that knowledge to try and 219 00:19:49,150 --> 00:19:54,490 out what might be an appropriate drug target for that chemical compound. 220 00:19:56,230 --> 00:19:59,930 Pomponi and her team have been using the chemicals from these sponges in a 221 00:19:59,930 --> 00:20:00,930 series of trials. 222 00:20:01,450 --> 00:20:05,390 They believe the chemicals will prevent the growth of cancer cells in humans. 223 00:20:08,850 --> 00:20:13,630 Ideally we want something that will kill a certain type of cancer cell, so it 224 00:20:13,630 --> 00:20:16,070 will be very specific for certain types of cancer. 225 00:20:16,610 --> 00:20:19,910 And so far the results are very encouraging. 226 00:20:21,480 --> 00:20:26,860 So, yes, we think that this will be useful as a treatment for certain forms 227 00:20:26,860 --> 00:20:27,860 cancer. 228 00:20:29,780 --> 00:20:33,700 So far, we've only explored 2 % of the deep. 229 00:20:34,160 --> 00:20:40,020 We could be in danger of losing a treasure trove of species before we've 230 00:20:40,020 --> 00:20:41,020 discovered them. 231 00:20:42,320 --> 00:20:49,260 If we lose that biological diversity that occurs in 232 00:20:49,260 --> 00:20:54,840 the deep ocean, and it does, then we lose that chemical diversity and we lose 233 00:20:54,840 --> 00:20:57,700 the opportunity to discover new drugs. 234 00:21:05,520 --> 00:21:08,400 It's not just the deep that's in danger. 235 00:21:08,940 --> 00:21:13,460 Shallow water habitats like coral reefs are having a hard time too. 236 00:21:19,590 --> 00:21:25,030 Part of the problem is the growing trade in reef fish, and it's often the market 237 00:21:25,030 --> 00:21:30,370 demand for luxury fish like groupers, coral trout and wrasse that's behind the 238 00:21:30,370 --> 00:21:33,970 problem. They're being fished out at an alarming rate. 239 00:21:39,630 --> 00:21:45,510 Fish on coral reefs that were once a staple food for local people are now in 240 00:21:45,510 --> 00:21:49,910 high demand as a delicacy for people in major cities around the world. 241 00:21:56,150 --> 00:22:00,890 The majority goes to mainland China and cities like Hong Kong. 242 00:22:01,170 --> 00:22:07,670 It's a huge market and some 30 ,000 tonnes of reef fish come into Hong Kong 243 00:22:07,670 --> 00:22:08,730 every year. 244 00:22:12,590 --> 00:22:17,490 But the fishermen are having to go to coral reefs further and further afield 245 00:22:17,490 --> 00:22:18,490 stocks dry up. 246 00:22:18,830 --> 00:22:25,050 Some now travel 3 ,000 miles on a single fishing trip to find reefs with fish. 247 00:22:25,950 --> 00:22:30,070 People like their fish fresh, very fresh. 248 00:22:30,290 --> 00:22:36,310 So much so that the cost of live fish is ten times the cost of fresh dead fish. 249 00:22:36,830 --> 00:22:40,670 And the fish in the marketplace are getting smaller and smaller. 250 00:22:41,900 --> 00:22:47,340 Dr. Yvonne Sadovi is worried about the amount of juveniles being sold here. 251 00:22:48,640 --> 00:22:53,080 This beautiful animal is a humphead wrasse, and he's called humphead wrasse 252 00:22:53,080 --> 00:22:54,900 because of his hump on his head. 253 00:22:55,900 --> 00:23:00,420 And the other one is the giant grouper. This is the giant grouper. 254 00:23:01,200 --> 00:23:02,400 There's several of them. 255 00:23:02,640 --> 00:23:04,460 And these are juveniles. 256 00:23:05,080 --> 00:23:07,560 This one is probably a late teenager. 257 00:23:08,520 --> 00:23:12,180 but still not particularly old or well -developed fish. 258 00:23:12,420 --> 00:23:16,340 And the majority that we see of these species are young juvenile fish. 259 00:23:17,480 --> 00:23:22,560 Humphead wrasse should be able to live for more than 20 years, but they rarely 260 00:23:22,560 --> 00:23:26,440 reach that age these days. They're taken out far too young. 261 00:23:26,740 --> 00:23:32,400 If you have fisheries which take large numbers of juveniles, these animals have 262 00:23:32,400 --> 00:23:33,560 not had a chance to reproduce. 263 00:23:33,760 --> 00:23:35,780 So you start to wonder... 264 00:23:36,300 --> 00:23:38,320 Where's the next generation going to come from? 265 00:23:39,660 --> 00:23:44,960 If you take too many juveniles, slowly what happens is you don't get enough 266 00:23:44,960 --> 00:23:50,380 adults in the next generation, and slowly the populations or stocks decline 267 00:23:50,380 --> 00:23:51,380 numbers. 268 00:23:55,480 --> 00:24:01,500 So that's what my concern is, that if this is part of a trend... that we're 269 00:24:01,500 --> 00:24:04,820 seeing more and more juveniles being taken in this trade, then that does not 270 00:24:04,820 --> 00:24:07,340 augur well for these particular species. 271 00:24:08,920 --> 00:24:14,720 But much more serious than the possible loss of a few species is the loss of an 272 00:24:14,720 --> 00:24:20,960 entire habitat, especially one which supports thousands upon thousands of 273 00:24:20,960 --> 00:24:21,960 species. 274 00:24:27,560 --> 00:24:33,180 reef are the most diverse communities in our oceans many of them have grown up 275 00:24:33,180 --> 00:24:39,640 over hundreds sometimes thousands of years and over that time a fantastic 276 00:24:39,640 --> 00:24:46,420 of animals and plants have evolved with them the intricate 277 00:24:46,420 --> 00:24:51,080 structure built by the corals themselves provides animals with protection from 278 00:24:51,080 --> 00:24:55,800 predators important breeding sites and endless feeding opportunities 279 00:25:18,350 --> 00:25:22,950 But now the coral itself is under threat from man. 280 00:25:40,710 --> 00:25:43,550 Today, dynamiting is commonplace. 281 00:25:43,930 --> 00:25:47,250 It's an efficient way to kill all the nearby fish. 282 00:25:48,080 --> 00:25:52,700 but just one blast will completely flatten a patch of reef. 283 00:25:54,200 --> 00:25:58,040 And there are lots of other threats to reef right across the world. 284 00:25:58,500 --> 00:26:03,300 Sometimes it's pollution, sometimes they get covered by sediment, and global 285 00:26:03,300 --> 00:26:05,920 warming is certainly playing its part too. 286 00:26:07,620 --> 00:26:14,400 Here in Southeast Asia, 80 % of reefs are either in danger of dying or are 287 00:26:15,660 --> 00:26:21,020 A lot of it's been dynamited, but now a more sinister method of fishing is being 288 00:26:21,020 --> 00:26:25,300 used. It's fast, it's effective, but it's highly illegal. 289 00:26:26,040 --> 00:26:28,880 Fishermen are using the poison cyanide. 290 00:26:31,780 --> 00:26:36,220 Fishermen squirt sodium cyanide into crevices where fish take refuge. 291 00:26:37,220 --> 00:26:41,200 Cyanide starves the fish of oxygen, and so they come out into the open 292 00:26:41,200 --> 00:26:44,700 temporarily dazed and much easier to catch. 293 00:26:48,080 --> 00:26:53,040 Not all these fish are for food. Many of them are for the aquarium trade. 294 00:26:53,440 --> 00:26:55,880 They're purely a luxury item. 295 00:27:01,400 --> 00:27:07,920 The corals themselves die in just a few weeks, and the whole reef becomes 296 00:27:07,920 --> 00:27:09,300 smothered in algae. 297 00:27:13,780 --> 00:27:17,300 That was a reconstruction, but this is real life. 298 00:27:17,930 --> 00:27:22,290 Members of the International Marine Alliance in the Philippines are trying 299 00:27:22,290 --> 00:27:24,110 save their few remaining reefs. 300 00:27:24,910 --> 00:27:27,610 They suspect these men have been fishing illegally. 301 00:27:28,290 --> 00:27:32,850 They're trying to find out where and how they've been fishing, but the fishermen 302 00:27:32,850 --> 00:27:33,850 are wary. 303 00:27:37,170 --> 00:27:43,410 They're afraid to tell us where the places are because there might be some 304 00:27:43,410 --> 00:27:44,410 retaliation. 305 00:27:45,150 --> 00:27:47,690 from the other villagers in this village. 306 00:27:49,390 --> 00:27:55,230 They hide the bottles underneath the boat and when another 307 00:27:55,230 --> 00:28:02,030 boat approaches, they just ditch this so that nobody could see it. 308 00:28:03,130 --> 00:28:06,590 These men know they could end up in jail. 309 00:28:07,590 --> 00:28:12,530 It's so hard to police the coastal areas of the Philippines because it's... 310 00:28:12,940 --> 00:28:14,720 It's a very long coastal area. 311 00:28:15,280 --> 00:28:19,580 Another thing is that if you jail them, you don't have enough room in jail. 312 00:28:23,940 --> 00:28:27,020 We were taken to a jail on the island of Coron. 313 00:28:29,360 --> 00:28:33,460 These men have been arrested for illegal fishing and they're waiting trial. 314 00:28:35,200 --> 00:28:39,960 They've been locked up for months, but the trader, the middleman, is still 315 00:28:43,459 --> 00:28:49,520 I don't think we can lump in all the blames into the fishermen because first 316 00:28:49,520 --> 00:28:52,500 that they do not know anything better. 317 00:28:53,420 --> 00:28:58,660 They're afraid of being caught, but they say there's no other method to catch 318 00:28:58,660 --> 00:28:59,660 fish. 319 00:29:02,060 --> 00:29:06,440 When they've been squirted with cyanide, fish don't die immediately. 320 00:29:06,740 --> 00:29:12,140 But the damage has been done, and their internal organs gradually pack up. 321 00:29:12,730 --> 00:29:17,890 The trader has to move them fast as they will die in just a few weeks. 322 00:29:21,450 --> 00:29:26,550 Cruz is sure that the importers know when cyanide has been used because the 323 00:29:26,550 --> 00:29:28,410 mortality rate is so high. 324 00:29:28,670 --> 00:29:31,150 But they simply choose to ignore it. 325 00:29:32,070 --> 00:29:35,510 Importers would know immediately that there's something wrong with these 326 00:29:36,550 --> 00:29:38,330 But yet they... 327 00:29:38,680 --> 00:29:43,980 start and keep on importing from the same exporter in the Philippines or in 328 00:29:43,980 --> 00:29:44,980 other countries. 329 00:29:47,700 --> 00:29:52,340 The majority of tropical fish caught in Indonesia and the Philippines are 330 00:29:52,340 --> 00:29:54,580 exported to America and here to the UK. 331 00:29:55,580 --> 00:29:59,680 Fortunately, there are a lot of responsible importers, like the owner of 332 00:29:59,680 --> 00:30:04,080 shop, who refuse to buy fish that have been caught by cyanide. But as a 333 00:30:04,080 --> 00:30:06,260 customer, you can't tell how a fish was caught. 334 00:30:07,040 --> 00:30:10,540 The responsibility lies with us to check with the shopkeeper. 335 00:30:11,540 --> 00:30:17,140 And if you don't, it may only take a couple of weeks before your ornamental 336 00:30:17,140 --> 00:30:20,780 is as dead as the reef it came from. 337 00:30:31,550 --> 00:30:32,489 Really loud. 338 00:30:32,490 --> 00:30:39,150 I'm wishing I could be that kind of fool. Shall I twist your arm? I'd say no 339 00:30:39,150 --> 00:30:40,430 more work for mine. 340 00:30:40,710 --> 00:30:41,930 Welcome to the club. 341 00:30:42,310 --> 00:30:44,450 On my door I'd hang a sign. 342 00:30:45,250 --> 00:30:47,130 Gone fishing. 343 00:30:49,150 --> 00:30:53,790 Instead of just a wishing. 344 00:31:22,760 --> 00:31:28,540 This abandoned net is made of tough nylon, which won't easily disintegrate. 345 00:31:33,940 --> 00:31:38,900 If it isn't removed, it could carry on killing like this for years and years to 346 00:31:38,900 --> 00:31:39,900 come. 347 00:31:44,760 --> 00:31:49,330 If one small net on one reef can cause this much damage. 348 00:31:49,730 --> 00:31:52,850 Imagine what fishing nets do on a global scale. 349 00:31:53,470 --> 00:31:57,550 Our fishing methods today ensure that we catch more and more. 350 00:31:57,890 --> 00:32:04,090 But a lot of what is caught is thrown away, simply chucked overboard, usually 351 00:32:04,090 --> 00:32:05,090 dead. 352 00:32:07,190 --> 00:32:08,790 Modern fisheries are very destructive. 353 00:32:09,170 --> 00:32:12,550 They don't just catch what they're after. They catch everything else that's 354 00:32:12,550 --> 00:32:13,489 there as well. 355 00:32:13,490 --> 00:32:19,350 The United Nations tells us that up to 30 million metric tons a year are caught 356 00:32:19,350 --> 00:32:22,570 by fisheries and simply thrown overboard, dead or dying. 357 00:32:23,870 --> 00:32:27,670 That's one -quarter to one -third of the annual catch around the world. 358 00:32:29,430 --> 00:32:34,730 I'm talking about not just non -target fish species, but sea turtles, marine 359 00:32:34,730 --> 00:32:39,890 mammals, seabirds such as albatrosses and so forth, even whales on occasion. 360 00:32:53,930 --> 00:32:59,650 No matter how magnificent no animal is spared in our hunt for food 361 00:32:59,650 --> 00:33:06,410 But what's even 362 00:33:06,410 --> 00:33:12,110 more ridiculous is that often the fish that we would eat are thrown away if the 363 00:33:12,110 --> 00:33:18,950 boat is targeting a different species and There's one particular fishery 364 00:33:18,950 --> 00:33:20,870 where the waste is phenomenal 365 00:33:22,140 --> 00:33:26,320 Prawn or shrimp trawling is the worst example of destructive fisheries in the 366 00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:31,400 world. Prawn and shrimp trawling is ubiquitous throughout the tropics. The 367 00:33:31,400 --> 00:33:35,360 are dragged along the bottom. The shrimp live in the habitat along the bottom. 368 00:33:35,480 --> 00:33:38,120 Those nets hoover up everything in their path. 369 00:33:38,420 --> 00:33:45,300 Up to 15 pounds of other species are taken aboard and discarded for every one 370 00:33:45,300 --> 00:33:46,880 pound of shrimp that's caught. 371 00:33:50,000 --> 00:33:54,500 Worse still are the quantities of juvenile fish that get thrown away. 372 00:34:02,560 --> 00:34:08,440 Hundreds of thousands of tons of young fish are discarded every year. Fish that 373 00:34:08,440 --> 00:34:13,060 would otherwise grow to become an important and very valuable source of 374 00:34:13,920 --> 00:34:18,260 And all this for just a handful of prawns. 375 00:34:20,110 --> 00:34:23,530 The fishermen have recognized the problem and have asked for help. 376 00:34:23,770 --> 00:34:29,330 So Dr. Steve Kennelly is now looking at the prawn fishing industry in New South 377 00:34:29,330 --> 00:34:30,469 Wales, Australia. 378 00:34:33,150 --> 00:34:35,449 Here the industry is huge. 379 00:34:35,730 --> 00:34:39,270 They catch over a thousand tons of prawns a year. 380 00:34:46,130 --> 00:34:49,489 Kennelly has invented a bycatch reduction device. 381 00:34:50,319 --> 00:34:55,060 a BRD, which lets the smaller, immature fish escape from the net. 382 00:34:56,139 --> 00:34:59,500 This is the cod end that actually gets towed along behind at the back of the 383 00:34:59,500 --> 00:35:03,620 and right down the back of the whole operation, and all the catch that goes 384 00:35:03,620 --> 00:35:06,500 a trawl net ends up in this bag, at the back of this bag. 385 00:35:06,760 --> 00:35:11,320 We did some trials in flume tanks and other experiments, and we found that at 386 00:35:11,320 --> 00:35:14,180 certain point in the cod end, just in front of where this... 387 00:35:14,570 --> 00:35:18,710 cotton material changes, you get a back pressure of water and by putting in this 388 00:35:18,710 --> 00:35:23,630 panel of open square meshes just at that point where that back pressure of water 389 00:35:23,630 --> 00:35:28,310 is occurring, the water will tend to flow up and out through that square mesh 390 00:35:28,310 --> 00:35:33,490 panel. Now little fish, as they're swimming along inside this net, feel 391 00:35:33,490 --> 00:35:36,410 back pressure of water and their immediate escape response is to head 392 00:35:36,410 --> 00:35:39,190 and out through the open square mesh panels. 393 00:35:42,110 --> 00:35:44,610 Kennelly is experimenting with two different nets. 394 00:35:45,170 --> 00:35:48,450 This first one is a conventional prawn fishing net. 395 00:35:50,910 --> 00:35:54,770 Okay, this is the catch from the control caught in, that is from the 396 00:35:54,770 --> 00:35:57,390 conventional caught in without any BRD in it. 397 00:35:58,130 --> 00:36:03,210 As you can see, there's quite a large number of small fish in the catch, and 398 00:36:03,210 --> 00:36:08,130 hopefully in the other caught in with the BRD installed, there'll be a lot 399 00:36:08,130 --> 00:36:10,330 fish and still the same quantity of prawns. 400 00:36:12,710 --> 00:36:16,790 This is the net with its bycatch reduction device in it. It's immediately 401 00:36:16,790 --> 00:36:19,870 obvious that fewer fish have been accidentally caught. 402 00:36:25,470 --> 00:36:27,430 So that's the difference in bycatch there. 403 00:36:27,990 --> 00:36:32,810 Most of the smaller fish have escaped, so at least they should have a chance to 404 00:36:32,810 --> 00:36:36,770 breed. You've just got to have a look for your own eyes and there's no doubt 405 00:36:36,770 --> 00:36:40,970 that there's, I'd say there's at least... Probably a 60 % maybe even more 406 00:36:40,970 --> 00:36:42,430 reduction in bycatch there. 407 00:36:43,610 --> 00:36:46,750 Kennelly's device has gone a long way to reducing the waste. 408 00:36:48,630 --> 00:36:51,310 But he knows that it's not the whole answer. 409 00:36:51,630 --> 00:36:54,990 I don't think it's possible to ever have a situation where we can go out and 410 00:36:54,990 --> 00:36:58,150 confidently only catch the things we're trying to catch. 411 00:36:58,510 --> 00:37:04,370 Just about every fishing method you're going to catch undersized organisms of 412 00:37:04,370 --> 00:37:05,430 the target species. 413 00:37:07,340 --> 00:37:11,760 To get it down to the position where we don't catch any bycatch at all for 414 00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:15,020 things like prawns and shrimp and so on, I don't think we're ever going to get 415 00:37:15,020 --> 00:37:18,160 to that particular point, at least not in the foreseeable future. 416 00:37:20,980 --> 00:37:26,480 But there is possibly another way, one where there may be no bycatch at all. 417 00:37:27,860 --> 00:37:30,580 It's fish farming or aquaculture. 418 00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:34,000 Already it's producing huge quantities of fish. 419 00:37:40,560 --> 00:37:41,960 fish farming be the solution? 420 00:37:42,540 --> 00:37:47,480 At the moment, one in every four fish that we eat is farmed. But over the next 421 00:37:47,480 --> 00:37:52,260 25 years, it's thought that figure will double, that half the fish we eat will 422 00:37:52,260 --> 00:37:57,340 be farmed. So is this the answer? Can we really protect our fish stocks, protect 423 00:37:57,340 --> 00:37:59,880 the juveniles, protect the fragile marine habitats? 424 00:38:00,700 --> 00:38:04,920 In fact, is fish farming the solution to all our fishing problems? 425 00:38:07,960 --> 00:38:13,060 If aquaculture is one of the answers, then surely the people with the highest 426 00:38:13,060 --> 00:38:15,360 incentive to get it right are the Japanese. 427 00:38:16,080 --> 00:38:18,980 They're already very advanced in farming fish. 428 00:38:19,620 --> 00:38:24,860 They're now even trying to raise large predatory fish like tuna, and in 429 00:38:24,860 --> 00:38:26,760 particular, bluefin tuna. 430 00:38:28,020 --> 00:38:31,940 Here in Kushimoto in western Japan, they're going for broke. 431 00:38:32,880 --> 00:38:36,640 Swimming around beneath me in this enclosure, there are 50... 432 00:38:37,100 --> 00:38:44,080 fully mature bluefin tuna these tuna were caught in the 433 00:38:44,080 --> 00:38:49,700 wild and are now being fattened up for market they're being fed generously so 434 00:38:49,700 --> 00:38:56,400 they'll be in prime adult condition when they're sold here they've taken tuna 435 00:38:56,400 --> 00:39:00,720 farming to the next stage they're not just holding them they're actually 436 00:39:00,720 --> 00:39:05,970 breeding these captive bluefin They hope that these fish will themselves breed 437 00:39:05,970 --> 00:39:12,650 in three years time and so complete the whole life cycle in captivity Then 438 00:39:12,650 --> 00:39:17,250 they won't have to take any more bluefin tuna from our oceans 439 00:39:17,250 --> 00:39:24,150 Japan is 440 00:39:24,150 --> 00:39:26,890 the largest tuna consuming nation in the world 441 00:39:29,930 --> 00:39:34,710 And we're also very concerned about the diminishing stocks of bluefin tuna in 442 00:39:34,710 --> 00:39:35,710 the wild. 443 00:39:39,250 --> 00:39:42,390 Aquaculture has its own set of well -known problems. 444 00:39:42,730 --> 00:39:47,450 The most worrying are pollution, as well as the mixing of captive -bred fish 445 00:39:47,450 --> 00:39:48,590 with wild stocks. 446 00:39:50,390 --> 00:39:52,010 But there's another issue. 447 00:39:53,990 --> 00:39:58,210 These tuna are fed a staggering amount of fish every day. 448 00:40:00,880 --> 00:40:05,880 They're being fed valuable protein, which should be food for the poorer 449 00:40:05,880 --> 00:40:06,880 of Asia. 450 00:40:08,100 --> 00:40:13,080 So now the Japanese are trying to develop a substitute feed, either from 451 00:40:13,080 --> 00:40:15,580 vegetable matter or from animal products. 452 00:40:19,660 --> 00:40:24,220 And we hope further development will enable us to use more and more 453 00:40:24,220 --> 00:40:25,620 feed in the future. 454 00:40:33,160 --> 00:40:38,320 But they haven't succeeded yet, and they still take huge quantities of low 455 00:40:38,320 --> 00:40:42,240 -value fish to feed one big luxury fish. 456 00:40:46,460 --> 00:40:51,340 In other parts of Asia, which are poorer than Japan, and where fish stocks are 457 00:40:51,340 --> 00:40:55,380 already heavily depleted, they are also turning to agriculture. 458 00:41:01,900 --> 00:41:06,760 And tiger prawns are the biggest money earner. More than half a million tonnes 459 00:41:06,760 --> 00:41:10,620 of prawns are produced a year, nearly all of which are exported. 460 00:41:11,520 --> 00:41:14,720 It's big business and it employs a lot of people. 461 00:41:16,840 --> 00:41:22,380 But just like tuna, the prawns are carnivorous and they need to eat fish, 462 00:41:22,380 --> 00:41:24,180 that have been ground into pellets. 463 00:41:24,560 --> 00:41:29,620 And when they're farmed as intensively as they are here, they need a lot of 464 00:41:29,620 --> 00:41:30,620 feed. 465 00:41:31,080 --> 00:41:37,720 If you have three square meters of pond for one tiger prawn, that's extensive. 466 00:41:37,920 --> 00:41:41,020 You don't have to feed anything. Nature will feed the prawn. 467 00:41:41,500 --> 00:41:46,560 But if you have 30 of them in one square meter, then you have to provide some 468 00:41:46,560 --> 00:41:47,560 kind of food. 469 00:41:47,940 --> 00:41:54,180 Now, I think the latest figures are about two, two kilos of fish 470 00:41:54,180 --> 00:41:58,320 to produce one kilo of prawn. 471 00:41:59,850 --> 00:42:03,450 Substitute feeds may help, but they could come too late. 472 00:42:03,750 --> 00:42:09,410 In the meantime, low -value fish are fed to prawns, which are then exported to 473 00:42:09,410 --> 00:42:10,288 the West. 474 00:42:10,290 --> 00:42:13,390 These fish should be feeding local people. 475 00:42:14,270 --> 00:42:21,150 It's the little fish that's there that's being bought by 476 00:42:21,150 --> 00:42:27,090 people, by Filipino families for their food, low -income families and middle 477 00:42:27,090 --> 00:42:28,570 -income families. 478 00:42:29,610 --> 00:42:31,770 That will not be available to these families. 479 00:42:33,830 --> 00:42:35,450 But there's another issue. 480 00:42:35,770 --> 00:42:40,770 Thousands of intensive farms have been built in coastal areas, destroying a 481 00:42:40,770 --> 00:42:43,670 valuable marine habitat, mangrove forests. 482 00:42:47,070 --> 00:42:50,450 Mile upon mile of mangroves have been cut down. 483 00:42:54,210 --> 00:42:57,890 The coastline has been stripped of its natural protection. 484 00:43:00,010 --> 00:43:04,850 And there are many important ecological reasons why mangroves should be 485 00:43:04,850 --> 00:43:05,850 protected. 486 00:43:06,850 --> 00:43:11,370 To many people, mangroves are just a mass of gnarled roots where the bottom 487 00:43:11,370 --> 00:43:14,750 sludgy and muddy and yuck, and the air is full of mosquitoes. 488 00:43:15,410 --> 00:43:18,490 But get underwater, and it's a very different world. 489 00:43:26,440 --> 00:43:30,680 The intricate root system provides a natural nursery for young fish. 490 00:43:31,000 --> 00:43:35,060 They spend their later life out on coral reefs or in the open sea. 491 00:43:35,580 --> 00:43:40,960 The roots provide protection from predators which is vital for small, 492 00:43:40,960 --> 00:43:41,960 fish. 493 00:43:46,840 --> 00:43:51,800 In the shelter of mangroves, fish can feed and grow in relative safety. 494 00:43:55,960 --> 00:43:58,820 Again, it's the habitat that's under threat. 495 00:43:59,140 --> 00:44:03,560 We're carelessly destroying it without a thought for the animals that depend on 496 00:44:03,560 --> 00:44:04,560 it. 497 00:44:08,140 --> 00:44:13,040 Perhaps the answer might be to set aside some areas of the sea so that the 498 00:44:13,040 --> 00:44:16,480 animals that live there, whatever they are, have a chance. 499 00:44:17,820 --> 00:44:22,060 As soon as we recognise that land animals need protecting, we usually do 500 00:44:22,060 --> 00:44:23,060 something about it. 501 00:44:23,550 --> 00:44:29,110 The huge game reserves of Africa are a classic example, but for some reason we 502 00:44:29,110 --> 00:44:30,730 treat our seas very differently. 503 00:44:31,610 --> 00:44:36,690 This is the island of Skoma, a very beautiful reserve that offers excellent 504 00:44:36,690 --> 00:44:39,530 protection for all the birds and plants that live here. 505 00:44:40,250 --> 00:44:45,390 It also calls itself a marine nature reserve, one of only two in the whole of 506 00:44:45,390 --> 00:44:46,390 Britain. 507 00:44:46,570 --> 00:44:51,690 You'd think a marine reserve would offer total protection for all life under the 508 00:44:51,690 --> 00:44:52,690 sea. 509 00:44:52,750 --> 00:44:57,670 But amazingly, you can fish here. Even commercial fishermen can operate here. 510 00:44:59,970 --> 00:45:04,210 In the time of our grandfathers, there were natural marine reserves, 511 00:45:04,650 --> 00:45:06,530 inaccessible to fishing fleets. 512 00:45:07,270 --> 00:45:11,030 There, the fish could grow to maturity undisturbed. 513 00:45:11,450 --> 00:45:16,350 But with modern fishing technology, there's practically nowhere we now can't 514 00:45:16,350 --> 00:45:21,430 fish. Only a tiny percentage of the ocean is a safe sanctuary. 515 00:45:23,150 --> 00:45:28,390 Something like one -third of one percent of the oceans are currently within 516 00:45:28,390 --> 00:45:29,930 marine protected areas. 517 00:45:30,130 --> 00:45:34,430 That's a very tiny fraction, and it's equivalent to something like the size of 518 00:45:34,430 --> 00:45:35,430 South Africa. 519 00:45:35,670 --> 00:45:41,870 However, we're not really protecting those areas well enough at the moment, 520 00:45:41,870 --> 00:45:46,170 only something like one -tenth -thousandth of the surface of the oceans 521 00:45:46,170 --> 00:45:48,670 protected from all forms of fishing at the moment. 522 00:45:49,310 --> 00:45:51,210 That's equivalent to the size of Holland. 523 00:45:51,470 --> 00:45:55,070 It's a tiny fraction and it isn't nearly enough. 524 00:45:56,290 --> 00:45:59,810 Roberts wants areas set aside which are totally protected. 525 00:46:01,950 --> 00:46:06,590 There are some small areas where they've done this, like this reserve off the 526 00:46:06,590 --> 00:46:07,930 North Island of New Zealand. 527 00:46:11,070 --> 00:46:16,530 Since they stopped fishing 25 years ago, the stocks have recovered and the water 528 00:46:16,530 --> 00:46:18,270 is now teeming with fish. 529 00:46:24,970 --> 00:46:28,070 And it's not just fish, everything's doing well. 530 00:46:28,670 --> 00:46:32,030 Lobsters are abundant again and they're getting a lot bigger. 531 00:46:34,370 --> 00:46:39,470 Scientists monitor stocks carefully and keep a close eye on how all the animals 532 00:46:39,470 --> 00:46:40,530 in the reserve are doing. 533 00:46:41,770 --> 00:46:46,770 This five kilometre wide reserve produces the same number of lobsters as 534 00:46:46,770 --> 00:46:50,050 hundred kilometre stretch of unprotected coastline. 535 00:46:52,890 --> 00:46:55,690 Fishermen are allowed to fish right up to the boundaries. 536 00:46:56,330 --> 00:47:01,250 The lobsters are now so abundant within the reserve, there isn't room, so they 537 00:47:01,250 --> 00:47:03,350 spread out into the surrounding waters. 538 00:47:04,110 --> 00:47:10,310 And so what these no -take zones provide to fisheries is an increase in the 539 00:47:10,310 --> 00:47:14,410 replenishment to their fisheries. They're spawning stocks which are being 540 00:47:14,410 --> 00:47:17,370 protected. They're like deposits in a bank account. 541 00:47:19,880 --> 00:47:22,260 Even the behaviour of the fish has changed. 542 00:47:22,620 --> 00:47:27,760 Once scared of man, the fish are now perhaps a little over -friendly. 543 00:47:32,500 --> 00:47:38,160 Roberts believes that between 10 and 20 % of our oceans should become no -take 544 00:47:38,160 --> 00:47:44,380 zones, that we should protect large areas of different marine habitats, the 545 00:47:44,380 --> 00:47:48,920 sea, coral reefs, mangroves, as well as key spawning grounds. 546 00:47:49,770 --> 00:47:54,750 That way, fish can grow bigger and older, and stocks will recover. 547 00:47:59,910 --> 00:48:04,550 And he also believes that migration routes and feeding grounds should be 548 00:48:04,550 --> 00:48:09,410 protected, particularly the routes taken by the largest marine animals of all, 549 00:48:09,630 --> 00:48:13,730 the whales, as they circumnavigate the globe. 550 00:48:23,660 --> 00:48:29,000 It's a simple idea, and one that Roberts believes, with the public's help, is 551 00:48:29,000 --> 00:48:30,000 possible. 552 00:48:30,820 --> 00:48:36,660 Once people realize what's going on, and they begin to bring to bear pressure on 553 00:48:36,660 --> 00:48:41,340 the politicians and decision makers, then I think we'll see moves taking 554 00:48:41,340 --> 00:48:45,460 to establish the areas that we need to set aside from fishing. 555 00:48:48,750 --> 00:48:53,070 We can make that choice. We've done it before. We brought back some of the 556 00:48:53,070 --> 00:48:54,430 whales from near extinction. 557 00:48:55,050 --> 00:48:59,610 Most of them can now spend their entire lives free from the threat of a whaling 558 00:48:59,610 --> 00:49:05,210 boat. But it took international cooperation, and that only came about 559 00:49:05,210 --> 00:49:08,790 public realised how close the whales were to being wiped out. 560 00:49:16,840 --> 00:49:21,480 Whaling was a huge industry right up until the 1970s. 561 00:49:22,640 --> 00:49:26,760 Some species very nearly disappeared from our oceans altogether. 562 00:49:27,920 --> 00:49:33,120 We recognised this just in time, so we did something about it. 563 00:49:40,920 --> 00:49:44,380 We do now know what's happening in our oceans. 564 00:49:45,000 --> 00:49:47,100 We know they're in trouble and that we're to blame. 565 00:49:47,980 --> 00:49:52,480 We can't hide behind an out -of -sight, out -of -mind attitude anymore. 566 00:49:53,040 --> 00:49:57,480 We know what's down there, the extraordinary diversity of life. 567 00:49:58,460 --> 00:50:03,080 Our oceans are so precious, so vital to the planet. 568 00:50:03,420 --> 00:50:08,000 If we care about that, then surely we can look after them. 52478

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.