Motion 035

English title

Protection of mesopelagic ecosystem integrity 

Titre en français

Protection of mesopelagic ecosystem integrity 

Título en español

Protection of mesopelagic ecosystem integrity 

Status
Published
Submission language
English
Working language
English

 

Fichiers en français
    No files yet
Archivos en español
    No files yet
Proponent (Sponsor)
Marine Conservation Biology Institute ( United States of America )
Co-sponsors
Asociación Conservacionista Misión Tiburón ( Costa Rica )
Australian Marine Conservation Society ( Australia )
Blue Marine Foundation ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
Center for Biological Diversity ( United States of America )
Coral Triangle Center ( Indonesia )
Fundación MarViva ( Costa Rica )
Natural Resources Defense Council ( United States of America )
SYLVIA EARLE ALLIANCE (DBA MISSION BLUE) ( United States of America )
The Pew Charitable Trusts ( United States of America )
UNDER THE POLE / Antipodes ( France )
Western Indian Ocean Marine Sciences Association ( United Republic of Tanzania )
MIGRAMAR ( Costa Rica )
BirdLife International ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
Conservation International ( United States of America )
Explanatory memorandum
The mesopelagic zone provides a critical link between surface waters and the abyss: what happens here will affect food supply and climate resilience throughout the ocean. Spanning the water column between roughly 200 and 1,000 meters, it comprises only 20% of the ocean by volume yet is home to 50-90% of the planet’s fish biomass.
Many species such as tunas, swordfish, sharks, marine mammals, and seabirds rely on mesopelagic-dwelling fishes, squids, jellyfish, and shrimp. The daily migration of many mesopelagic species to surface waters forms the largest migration of animals on the planet, acting as a “biological pump” for moving an estimated 2-6 gigatons of carbon from the surface to deep water, double the emissions produced by cars worldwide annually. About 90% of the carbon that gets into the mesopelagic remains there as consumable organic carbon, with the rest sinking to the deep ocean where it could be locked away for hundreds or thousands of years. The unique migration and biomass of mesopelagic species renders the mesopelagic zone crucial for climate regulation.
The abundant mesopelagic fish biomass is also spurring interest in commercial extraction. Pressure is rising as current stocks of small pelagics, such as anchoveta, critical inputs to fishmeal and fish oil production, are declining or shifting distributions due to climate change. The high concentration of omega-3 fatty acids and huge numbers of species such as Lanternfish (quadrillions) make them attractive for fish meal/oil for the aquaculture, pet food, and health food supplement industries. Yet such fisheries could undermine ecosystem health and climate resilience essential to a regenerative blue economy.
The mesopelagic environment is already feeling the impacts of climate change, with warming and deoxygenation documented globally. Toxic sediment plumes released into the mesopelagic zone from any future deep sea mining could add to these climate and fishery threats. Additionally, the impact of marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR) approaches aiming to draw down carbon from the surface to the deep ocean—through modifications to the chemical carbon pump (e.g., ocean alkalinity enhancement) or the biological carbon pump (e.g., ocean iron fertilization)—are critically understudied, but of significant concern.
It is thus imperative that action is taken to promote and protect the vital ecological and climate services of mesopelagic communities within EEZs and the high seas and that we do not trigger perverse impacts on natural carbon sequestration processes. Pathways for large-scale protections include a precautionary pause on expansion of mesopelagic fisheries or other activities so that a suite of research, assessment and conservation measures can be put in place under the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, regional fishery management organizations, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the London Protocol and the BBNJ Agreement. An important catalyst can be international resolutions by the IUCN World Conservation Congress and the United Nations General Assembly. Such resolutions could drive increased awareness and ambition, spur subsequent implementation actions and support collaborative research, capacity development, and consideration of further governance mechanisms needed.
WHOI, 2020. Value beyond View: https://twilightzone.whoi.edu/value-beyond-view
Geographic scope
Global
Nature and biodiversity
Fishes
Invertebrates
Marine & Coastal
Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF)
Target 1: Plan and manage all areas to reduce biodiversity loss
Target 8: Minimize the impacts of climate change on biodiversity and build resilience
Target 11: Restore, maintain and enhance nature’s contributions to people
Sustainable Development Goals
Goal 12 - responsible consumption and production
Goal 13 - climate action
Goal 14 - life below water
Threats and drivers
Climate change & severe weather
Fisheries & harvesting aquatic resources
Natural system modifications

 

 

We use a selection of our own and third-party cookies on the pages of this website: Essential cookies, which are required in order to use the website; functional cookies, which provide better easy of use when using the website; performance cookies, which we use to generate aggregated data on website use and statistics; and marketing cookies, which are used to display relevant content and advertising. If you choose "ACCEPT ALL", you consent to the use of all cookies. You can accept and reject individual cookie types and revoke your consent for the future at any time at "Settings".