Climate Change 

Climate change is making oceans hotter, promoting acidification, and making it harder for marine life to breathe by reducing dissolved oxygen levels. We can reduce our own carbon footprint and help decelerate climate change by making smart choices about what we eat and how we travel.

What can you do?

Our oceans are massive, they cover about 70% of the earth’s surface. Over 80% of the global carbon cycle is circulated through the ocean. The ocean absorbs over 90% of excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions over the past 50 years. Our planet can sustain life because of one universally unique feature: the ocean. It produces half the oxygen we breathe, shapes our weather and climates, provides food for all people and it has to be one of the places that foster inspiration for anyone who lays eyes upon the vastness of the sea. But our marine ecosystems are under attack and not only that but they are woefully underexplored and poorly understood.

Climate change is making oceans hotter, promoting acidification, and making it harder for marine life to breathe by reducing dissolved oxygen levels. The ocean is home to millions of marine species, some of who we have yet to even discover yet, this sea contributes to the biodiversity of our planet. How are our actions impacting these lives?

We can reduce our own carbon footprint and help decelerate climate change by making smart choices about what we eat and how we travel.

Climate change has been called the greatest challenge of our time. We need to make a change and help our earth, our home, to heal.

Don’t Stop Here

More To Explore

So we saw some sharks…

Our incredible shark adventure started out with some weather delays but once we got on-site there was plenty of shark action. We saw multiple Tiger

Jelly, Jelly, Jelly

What can we say about jellyfish? These squishy, jellylike creatures pulse along on ocean currents and are abundant in both cold and warm ocean water, in deep water, and along coastlines. They have no blood, brains, or a heart yet they are still an invertebrate.

Sharks are not evil, senseless killers 

It is estimated that 100 million sharks are killed by humans every year, that is about 200 sharks per minute, 3 sharks a second. Humans are driving sharks to the brink of extinction at unsustainable rates. By removing sharks from the ocean we threaten a much wider diversity of life.