by simon
Why are the oceans important? The importance of wildlife.

The importance of the oceans, their wildlife and ecosystems

The land and oceans are part of one system: Earth. So when we ask, why are the oceans important? We’re asking about our own future. Life began in the ocean billions of years before the first plants or animals colonised land. Oceans regulate the state of our atmosphere because they are 99 per cent of the volume of living space for animals and wildlife is the mechanism that drives stability.

Climate change has always been the symptom of biodiversity loss … that’s to say, the breakdown of the complex connectivity between lifeforms that allows Earth to flex in response to changing conditions. Ocean wildlife has, for the large part, acted as a buffer against the most catastrophic effects and since about fifty million years ago, has kept our climate quite stable.

Industrial fishing only happened recently in our planet’s history and this reduction in the abundance of wildlife represents our greatest challenge for survival.

Below you will find a range of articles designed to inspire an understanding of the magnitude of animal impact on our oceans.

What’s more important, the ocean or the land?

The importance we bestow on the land is anthropocentric because we live there. It’s naturally important to us that we protect it. Nonetheless, if life in the ocean dies, we suffer irreversible changes to land-based ecosystems and climate.

In this article, we take a look at many of the ways that land and oceans are linked together.

The answer to the question, ‘why are the oceans important’, is that we live on the land but the oceans regulate Earth’s temperature. The oceans are equally vital to the land we live on.

Latest posts about why the oceans are important

Sperm Whales chasing squid in the deep sea. Sperm Whales can eat almost a tonne of prey each day, which means catching between 350-700 squid. They do this using incredible sensory adaptations combined with an ability to know exactly where squid occur and contributing back to the health of supporting ecosystems. These social and cultural connections to the ocean have developed over many thousands of years and are a large part of the puzzle about how animals like Sperm Whales can make a living. Drawing by Simon Mustoe.

A new study on whale voice boxes shows how they can produce such complex sounds. But naturally, there are limitations to how loudly they can sing and the implications of this are vast for our own existence on Earth. How whale song and human survival are connected is a fascinating journey through the complexity of life that I cover in my book Wildlife in the Balance.

If we threaten the structural integrity of the soundscape it’s like moving the television into the office or the dishwasher into the living room. The complex acoustic scaffolding that wildlife produces is critical to ecosystem function. Animals are building rooms for themselves … we might call these ‘territories’. These are places where they can live in peace, and if we upset this, we destroy the ambience, increase anxiety and create conflict.

Quote from Wildlife in the Balance.

Communication between animals makes culture more stable

The language between animals like whales is not one we can understand. But we don’t need to. Culture is developed exactly the same way as ours through communication between individuals and societies. This ultimately leads to a balancing of ecosystems and the services on which we have built human civilization for the last few hundred years.

At the end of the day we are just another animal and our basic needs are clean air, water and food. The systems of noisy transport we create are not, of themselves, an evolutionary stable strategy as they don’t make the essential life support we need. We still depend on having animals as part of that ecosystem.

This is how whale song and human survival are connected. It’s why we cannot afford to allow whales not to hear each other … without this, we cannot survive.

Whales create a better climate for living

Sperm whales are the only species with individuals with that have a biologically world-wide home-range. Their entire life is spent listening for food and they would once have had a profound impact on our climate. Climate is simply the end-point of a system where energy is otherwise absorbed into providing food, clean air and water. Natural climate systems are built by animals.

Blue whales too, have a huge impact on our weather systems. They make the difference between bush fires and floods in Australia.

Sperm whales are among the world’s biggest (also in terms of body size) amplifiers and transporters of nutrients in the oceans, but have declined by as much as eighty per cent from pre-whaling numbers of 1.1 million animals. They are among the largest creatures to have ever lived and are the only animals that regard the whole of the world as their home range.

Quote from Wildlife in the Balance.

It’s one of the many reasons why the strapline of my book is ‘animals are humanity’s best hope’.

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