Friday, October 30, 2009
Halloween is just a day away and while there are bound to be plenty of spooky ghosts and goblins roaming the streets and searching out candy, some seriously scary real-life “monsters” are among us and they’ve been created (or encouraged) by global warming and pollution. Here are five reminders that things could get really scary (peak oil scary even!) if we don’t make an effort to improve things for the environment.

1. Giant Jellyfish
Seas full of enormous toxic jellyfish sound like something out of a bad scary movie, but due to overfishing the scary swarms are a reality in several parts of the world. With their natural predators fished out of commission and global warming linked to increasing jellyfish populations, these giant jellyfish (some of which can be deadly to both fish and humans) are a very valid threat and one that’s worth switching to sustainable seafood to avoid.

2. Two Headed Fish
They’re not quite the deadly sea creatures that were chasing down human meals in the movie Piranha, but two-headed fish and fish larvae are becoming more common and while there are a few things linked to the problem (including genetic mutation) many scientists feel pollution plays a huge role, with now-famous two-headed fish showing up in an Alberta lake near an oil sands operation and schools of two-headed fish larvae appearing in Australian waters near a pesticide-heavy macadamia plant. Click here to read more
Monday, July 6, 2009

Sometimes it takes fear to incite change and what’s going on in our oceans is certainly frightening enough to get you rethinking the ways our over-consumption has affected the underwater world. If we don’t change our ways soon we’re facing a future where swarms of oversized jellyfish rule the seas and—brace yourselves—there’s no more sushi.
The biggest problem in our oceans today is extreme overfishing, to the point that some researchers have estimated the planet could run out of seafood by 2048 if we continue to consume at the rates we are now. While the end of fresh-from-the-ocean food as we know it would have some effect on the American diet, in other countries it could be downright devastating through lost livelihoods and crucial food sources. But all that overfishing doesn’t just mean fish are disappearing, it also means that jellyfish are appearing in ever increasing amounts—and sizes.
Without fish around to eat small jellyfish and compete with jellyfish for their food sources, the jellyfish population has been rapidly expanding and the jellyfish themselves have been doing the same. The boosted numbers of jellyfish have resulted in swarms of jellyfish destroying entire fish farms (jellyfish like fish eggs and larvae) and jellyfish the size of sumo wrestlers. Scientists are even warning about frightening increases in the highly-poisonious box jellyfish species, which could actually result in human harm as the toxic creatures move closer to shorelines to look for diminishing food supplies. There’s nothing like an incredibly venomous creature with four brains and 24 eyes to get you thinking about how we can work to rebalance our oceans, is there? Click here to read more