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China has been killing turtles, coral and giant clams in the South China Sea

boomslang

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China has been killing turtles, coral and giant clams in the South China Sea, tribunal finds
12 / 19

Los Angeles Times

Julie Makinen 51 mins ago


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© REUTERS/David Loh/Files Scuba divers swim above a bed of corals off Malaysia's Tioman island in the South China Sea in this May 4, 2008 file photo.

BEIJING — China struck back loudly and forcefully Wednesday after an international tribunal invalidated many of its claims in the South China Sea. But Beijing has largely been silent about some of the tribunal’s most damning findings: that its activities there have “caused devastating and long-lasting damage to the environment.”

The Permanent Court of Arbitration investigated The Philippines’ claims that China has been doing grave harm to the region’s ecology, in violation of its commitments under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.

The panel of five judges consulted numerous experts, and what they found shocked even them, the tribunal wrote in its final ruling of more than 500 pages. Damage to the coral reefs in the Greater Spratly Islands spread for 48 square miles, and China was responsible for 99 percent of that, they said.

The tribunal found that China not only failed to prevent Chinese fishing boats from harvesting endangered species — including sea turtles — but also provided armed protection for those vessels. And it concluded that China was “fully aware of” and “actively tolerated” a practice called propeller chopping to harvest endangered giant clams — an activity that basically kills coral reefs.

The South China Sea is one of the most biodiverse regions in the world — home to 76 percent of the world’s coral species and 37 percent of the world’s reef fish. Because coral reefs provide crucial habitats for fish and fish larvae, widespread loss can have a major economic and social effect.

Professor John McManus of the National Center for Coral Reef Research at the University of Miami, one of the experts the panel referred to, called on China and other countries in the region that have been fighting for years over territory in the South China Sea to set aside their differences and declare the region an international protected zone, the way Antarctica is managed.

“If we don’t do this, we are headed toward a major, major fisheries collapse in a part of the world where (that) will lead to mass starvation,” he warned in remarks Tuesday to a panel in Washington organized by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He noted that such a collapse would hurt not just China but many countries in the region. “Talk about military instability,” he said.

Although some of the damage was caused by dredging and island-building, the majority was blamed on the giant-clam harvesting using propellers. McManus called the practice “more thoroughly damaging to marine life than anything he had seen in four decades of investigating coral reef degradation,” the tribunal noted. Many of the clam shells are taken to the Chinese island of Hainan, where they are carved into decorative items and sold to tourists.

“There is no hope for many of these reefs to recover in the coming decades or centuries,” Kent Carpenter, a professor at Old Dominion University in Virginia and another coral expert consulted by the tribunal, said Wednesday from the Philippines, where he’s on a research trip. “China is trying to solidify its claims, and they obviously have decided not to worry about the environmental aspects. … The environment there is now just written off.”

China issued a white paper Wednesday in response to the tribunal’s ruling, but it did almost nothing to rebut the tribunal’s findings on the environmental issues.

Before the court’s ruling, the state-run China Daily newspaper ran a commentary Tuesday saying that “some countries slander that China developing the South China Sea islands and reefs has caused extensive damage of coral reefs. On the contrary, the truth is, China insisted on developing ‘green engineering and ecology reefs’ as the concept of environmental protection.”

The newspaper claimed that China had “conducted thorough in-depth research” and “applied dynamic protective measures during the whole process, to complete projects as well as achieve environment protection, to accomplish sustainable development” in the area. “After China completes the construction activities, it will greatly enhance the reefs environmental protection capability,” the paper added. “These practices can stand the test of time.”

China refused to participate in the tribunal’s proceedings, and did not respond to requests from the court to provide evidence of its efforts to protect the environment in the South China Sea or proof that it had conducted an environmental impact assessment — as required not only by UNCLOS but China’s own laws.

Dan Liu, a researcher at the Center for Polar and Deep Ocean Development at Shanghai Communications University, told the CSIS panel that the Philippine claims were “some kind of political mask” and questioned how the experts could evaluate the reefs unless they visited them personally — something nearly impossible given China’s non-cooperation with the tribunal.

But Carpenter said that satellite imagery and other available data made assessments relatively straightforward. The tribunal said that it and the experts it consulted found many of China’s public statements about its environmental stewardship in the South China Sea to be “contradicted by the facts” and that Beijing’s assessments of the effect of its construction was “largely in disagreement with the available information.”

Ashley Townsend, a visiting fellow at the Asia-Pacific Center at Fudan University in Shanghai, said the tribunal’s strong language on the environmental effect of China’s activities could shift the political dynamics, which until now have been dominated by strategic, military and economic concerns.

“Environmental degradation and depletion of endangered species by Chinese activities and island construction… essentially has been a background story to what’s been happening in the South China Sea,” he said. “Now there is a strong legal grounding” to criticize China on its environmental stewardship and open a “second front.”

“There’s a capacity to … leverage global environmental activist networks to make this not just an issue about sovereignty and geopolitics but about the health and well-being of the global commons,” he said. “That’s more likely under the ruling.”

(Nicole Liu in The Times’ Beijing bureau contributed to this report.)

As a diver, I think this blowz.........BIG TIME !!:nana:
 
When America passes the cap and trade like we have and start investing like we have in renewable energy, we'll talk.

But if you feel threatened just talk to your presidential nominee and your GOP members. They will explain why climate change is just a myth propagated by the liberals and communist dictators.
 
As if we give a damn!

Actually we give lots of damn. Hence, China has been investing heavily in marine science in SCS.

But, development will have certain side effects. That's justified to achieve wealth and prosperity.

We will not sacrifice our development rights to let the West exploit all the world's resources.
 
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Boomslang lecturing China again? :lol: Americans are so environment friendly people that they felt it was necessary to spray the Vietcongs with pesticides disregarding the consequences for the environment. Rather worrying about Marine lives in SCS the yankee needs to worry about the growing tension of the black community :rofl: Ya White cops enjoy killing Blacks as if was a pasttime hobby and now the Black strikes back at ya White boys. I call it the rise of the cop killers :agree:
 
Yeah save the Turtles and Fcuk mankind to oblivion. Americans sure have some twisted priorities yet still not enough to stop china and its land reclamation efforts.
 
Boomslang lecturing China again? :lol: Americans are so environment friendly people that they felt it was necessary to spray the Vietcongs with pesticides disregarding the consequences for the environment. Rather worrying about Marine lives in SCS the yankee needs to worry about the growing tension of the black community :rofl: Ya White cops enjoy killing Blacks as if was a pasttime hobby and now the Black strikes back at ya White boys. I call it the rise of the cop killers :agree:

Well, good luck to them with lots of angry Black people.


Looks like they know what they want.

As if marine ecology in SCS has ever been US concern.
 
does China care about the enviroment and marine ecology??


nah, they don't.
 
New research progress on marine fish iridovirus entry


  A research team led by Prof. Qin Qiwei from South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, collaborated with another research team led by Prof. Wang Hongda from Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, firstly applied single particle tracking technology in exploring the infection mechanism of fish DNA viruses. The research results have been published in Journal of virology (2014,88(22),13047-13063).

  Viruses can only replicate in host cells and develop many strategies for successful infection. Investigation of the mechanism of virus entry will provide new insights into understanding of virology and cell biology. Iridoviruses are nucleocytoplasmic DNA viruses which cause great economic losses in the aquaculture industry but also show significant threat to global biodiversity. However, a lack of host cells has resulted in poor understanding of iridovirus behavior. Singapore grouper iridovirus (SGIV) is a novel marine fish DNA virus which belongs to genus Ranavirus, family Iridoviridae. The researchers investigated the crucial events during virus entry using a combination of single-virus tracking and biochemical assays, based on the established virus-cell infection model for SGIV. They observed that SGIVs could travel along filopodia-like protrusions and entered into the cells, by tracking individual SGIV particles in real time. Furthermore, making use of single particle imaging, immunofluorescence microscope and western blotting, they demonstrated that SGIV entered grouper cells via the clathrin-mediated endocytic pathway in a pH-dependent manner but not via caveola-dependent endocytosis, and proposed for the first time that macropinocytosis was involved in iridovirus entry. In addition, they monitored the transport of single virus particles in live cells, and found that SGIV depended on microtubules or actin filaments for intracellular transport. This work not only contributes greatly to understating iridovirus pathogenesis but also provides an ideal model for exploring the behavior of DNA viruses in living cells.

  The work is supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China and the National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program).

http://english.scsio.cas.cn/
 
does China care about the enviroment and marine ecology??


nah, they don't.

Sure we care but we don't need American to lecture us, you should tell that to your Japanese ally that their nuclear reactor leak and contaminated Pacific ocean all the way to American coast, and you guys dare not say a single word....oh I forgot American double standard policy...because Japanese is your ally:disagree:
 
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