A beautiful collection of video from Cocos Island, Costa Rica
shot by videographer Tobias Meinken. Footage of hundreds of hammerhead, tiger, silvertip, silky, rays, and galapagos sharks.
shot by videographer Tobias Meinken. Footage of hundreds of hammerhead, tiger, silvertip, silky, rays, and galapagos sharks.
From OurAmazingPlanet
Costa Rica this week announced the creation of a vast new marine park several hundred miles offshore.
Officials said the move is aimed at protecting the rich diversity of life in this Pacific Ocean region, as well as a group of undersea mountains.
The park, called Seamounts Marine Management Area, covers about 3,900 square miles (10,000 square kilometers) around Cocos Island, an uninhabited speck just over half the size of Manhattan, located 340 miles (550 km) off the coast of this Central American country.
The island is sometimes known as Shark Island for the variety of its finned denizens.
White-tipped reef sharks, whale sharks and scalloped hammerhead sharks prowl the island's tropical waters, which also support more than 30 marine species unique to the region.
Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla Miranda signed the executive decree that established the new park yesterday (March 3), and conservation groups are applauding the move.
"Creating a protected seamount area sets an important precedent," said Marco Quesada, the Costa Rican marine program coordinator for the group Conservation International.
"Seamounts host endemic species, and the deep water that upwells along their sides brings nutrients that support rich feeding grounds for sea life on the surface," Quesada said. "Seamounts serve as stepping stones for long-distance, migratory species, including sharks, turtles, whales and tuna."
A school of sharks lurks just below the ocean surface near Cocos' rocky shore.
Photograph by Octavio Aburto
Photograph by Octavio Aburto
Cocos Island, the center point of the new marine park, is sometimes called Shark Island for the species that congregate around it.
The newly established protected area, which is more than two-thirds the size of Connecticut, expands by five times what was already a no-fishing zone around Cocos Island.
Known as Area Marina de Manejo Montes Submarinos in Spanish, the park is likely to include both fully protected and low-impact fishing zones, and will encourage the sustainable management of the ocean to protect two of the region's threatened species: leatherback turtles and scalloped hammerhead sharks.
Leatherback turtles are listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
The Costa Rican population of these turtles has declined by 40 percent in the last eight years, and 90 percent in the past 20 years, due in part to the loss of eggs to illegal harvest.
Scalloped hammerhead sharks are on the globally endangered species list, and are often targeted by fishermen for their fins, a prized commodity used in shark fin soup, and a lucrative product on the Chinese market.
Both scalloped hammerhead sharks and leatherback turtles are accidentally captured in commercial fishing operations.
National parks and reserves cover more than 25 percent of Costa Rica's land area.
Links :
- Conservation Int. : Massive new marine protected area offers oasis and hope for endangered sharks and sea turtles
- NationalGeographic : Costa Rica expands Marine Protected Area around Cocos Island
HuffingtonPost : One World One Ocean's Cocos Island Expedition highlights the wonders below
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