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- The Youth Climate Report film series curates video reports of new climate research around the world each year. Student reporters interview their local climate researchers to provide the latest scientific data to delegates and negotiators attending the annual United Nations climate summits known as the COP conferences.
- UNEP has partnered with syndicated cartoonist Jim Toomey to bring you this series of ocean video shorts. Hosted by Jim, the series uses animation and humor to explain complex scientific issues in simple terms to the general public.
- This two-minute video public service announcement discusses the importance of marine coastal habitats in mitigating climate change, ocean acidification, and other issues related to the increase in atmospheric CO2.
- A lot of our trash ends up in the ocean, even trash discarded far upstream. Marine litter can travel hundreds of miles via rivers and waterways to even the most remote parts of the planet. It's a threat to sea life or even to human health.
- Many species of land creatures found their way back to the seas, requiring another round of evolutionary adaptation. Some became full time sea-dwellers, like whales and dolphins, who outclass predator fishes. Others became amphibious, like Galapagos iguanas, or nest and bread on land, like penguin colonies, who as birds also gave up flying. On the other hand, various sea creatures with gills, like crabs and even some fishes, regularly seek food on land.
- The blue seas are full of aquatic life, such as many species of fish and their predators. Some species are huge, like whales, other rather fast, like dolphins, or ancient, like sharks. Many migrate.
- However fragile the microscopic organisms that build coral reefs, no natural structure on earth is larger then theirs, especially the Great Barrier Reef. They change conditions completely for many hosted species hiding or hunting in, on and around the coral, from algae to sharks, and even contribute to island-building and shifting currents. Their own seed is confided to the sea once a year, drifting even to different oceans and starting colonies on any surfaces, including wrecked ships.
- Like the waters of the seas, their bottoms present a diverse series of biotopes, for one at very different depths, hence well-lit or dependent on whatever nutrients float down. Some look like flooded deserts, where most life forms hide in the barren sand. Others rather resemble prairies, either due to actual sea-grass or to kelp, where wildlife can graze, hide and chase.