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From the Editors... | |||||
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Centers of human population (i.e., cities) historically have been located on coastlines because there are many benefits, including transportation, food sources, commerce, and recreation. The result has been a natural migration of populations toward coastal areas. The problem is that we may be reaching “coastal saturation,” a phenomenon that is putting huge ecological pressure on our coastal regions.
At the beginning of this century, the world's population was less than two billion. By about
Today, more people than inhabited the entire globe in 1950 - 44% of the world's population - live within 100 miles of the coast. The rate of population growth in coastal areas is accelerating; in 2001 over half the world's population lived within 125 miles of a coastline. One example of this incredible growth is
In the
Top Ten Largest Cities:
Coastal areas are some of the most productive and biologically diverse on the planet. Of the 13,200 known species of marine fish, almost 80% are coastal. The oceans play a crucial role in maintaining the health of the earth's ecosystems and serve as an important food source. Ironically, the great productivity of coastal areas is what attracts these abundant populations, making them party to their own destruction.
The more people that crowd into coastal areas, the more pressure they impose both on land and sea. Natural landscapes are altered and overwhelmed, coastal habitats are 'reclaimed', wetlands are drained and covered with trash, the floodplains around estuaries are built over and reduced, and mangroves and other forests are cut down. Entire ecosystems are damaged, frequently lost forever. Fish stocks, fresh water, soils and beach sands are often overexploited. Increasing volumes of waste, particularly sewage, are sluiced out into coastal waters. Rubbish is often dumped on important habitats which are destroyed while contaminants leach into coastal waters.
With this kind of pressure, it’s small wonder that our oceans and coastal waters are suffering. It’s not too late though. Those of you who are old enough will remember the film footage of
Hey, better yet, let's all do something about it. One person, one thing. Pretty soon those 10 billion things will add up. As sailors, we already do one small part the moment we raise our sails and shut off our engines. So let's enjoy our coastal sailing territory and do what we can to protect it. Now that's "going coastal"!
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