PROTECTING CHINA’S YELLOW SEA


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2006

13 Dec 2006 - Haikou, China – In an attempt to protect the Yellow Sea’s rich biodiversity from pollution, WWF is pushing for a joint marine protected area in the shared waters between China and the Republic of Korea.

The Yellow Sea, one of the largest shallow areas of continental shelf in the world, is home to a diverse range of species, including dugongs, gray whales, marine turtles and rich fish life.

The call for the establishment of a network of protected areas came at recent meeting of the East Asian Seas Congress, where WWF disclosed a map of potential priority areas for biodiversity conservation in the Yellow Sea Ecoregion. A total of 23 priority areas have been identified by scientists from China, Korea, as well as Japan, after an extensive assessment of the marine habitat was conducted.

“The Yellow Sea’s biodiversity, including its fishery resources, has been deteriorating for decades due to shortsighted economic activities and unsustainable uses of the natural resources in the region,” said Tobai Sadayosi, head of WWF-Japan’s marine programme and coordinator for the Yellow Sea Eco-region Planning Programme (YSEPP).

“It is time for all stakeholders to join hands in creating a trans-boundary network of marine protected areas to protect the priority conservation areas being identified.”

In 2005, the YSEPP signed a memorandum of understanding with the Yellow Sea Large Marine Ecosystem (YSLME) project, a UN-sponsored project that aims to strengthen and coordinate cooperation between China and Korea on trans-boundary environmental and sustainable development issues in the Yellow Sea. The agreement allow WWF and the United Nations Development Programme forge regional collaboration on a Yellow Sea protection strategy.

The Yellow Sea is one of WWF’s Global 200 Ecoregions, a science-based global ranking of the Earth's most biologically outstanding terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats. It provides a critical blueprint for biodiversity conservation at a global scale. The Yellow Sea Ecoregion encompasses the Baihai Sea, the Yellow Sea and the northern part of the East China Sea up to a depth of 200m.
Tan Rui, Communications Officer
Wang Songlin, Marine Programme Office

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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