Coral reefs are some of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet - home and nursery for almost a million fish and other species. Unfortunately, about 70 percent of the world's coral reefs are threatened or destroyed, and 20 percent of those are damaged beyond repair. The resources coral reefs provide are worth about $375 billion each year - and they cover only one percent of the earth's surface. 2008 has been designated as the International Year of the Reef to raise awareness about the increasing threats to coral reefs. Whether you live near the ocean or thousands of miles away, you can help restore this amazing habitat.
Pledge to:
- Use ENERGY STAR qualified compact fluorescent light bulbs to reduce greenhouse gas emissions which contribute to coral bleaching and ocean acidification, and threaten coral reef survival. Long lasting light bulbs are a bright idea. If every household replaced a burned out bulb with and energy-efficient compact fluorescent bulb, it would prevent greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to that produced by about 800,000 cars.
- Use naturally-derived and biodegradable detergents and cleaning products. The chemicals we use end up in our waterways and are carried to the oceans. Just one pound of phosphorus in water produces about 500 pounds of algae, blocking sunlight and starving coral reefs. Outside the house, minimize the impacts of fertilizer by using zero-phosphorus products or no more than one pound per 1,000 square feet of turf area for nitrogen.
- Not give coral as presents. Corals are popular as souvenirs, for home decor and in costume jewelry, but corals are living animals that grow and reproduce. It takes corals decades or longer to create reef structures, so leave corals and other marine life on the reef.
- If I use the ocean for recreational purposes, I will use reef-mooring buoys for my boat whenever possible, or anchor in sandy areas away from coral and sea grasses so the anchor doesn't drag on corals or tear up sea grass beds. When diving and snorkeling, I will maintain proper buoyancy control, never touch the reefs and spread the word about coral reef stewardship.
We signed the “Protect Ocean Life During International Year of the Reef” Pledge!
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9:07 am PDT, Jul 20,Name not displayed, Oregon
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8:46 am PDT, Jul 20,Alexandra Kanoff, Pennsylvania
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8:16 am PDT, Jul 20,Bonnie J. Turnbull, California
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8:12 am PDT, Jul 20,Russell Nadel, Virginia
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8:10 am PDT, Jul 20,Name not displayed, Oregon
If we can do it for a year, we can do it forever !!!
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8:06 am PDT, Jul 20,Kathy Rau, California
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7:59 am PDT, Jul 20,Brian Wells, Oregon
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7:50 am PDT, Jul 20,Name not displayed, New York
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7:46 am PDT, Jul 20,Antoinette Raymond, Massachusetts
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7:46 am PDT, Jul 20,Dr. Pamela Benbow, North Carolina
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7:35 am PDT, Jul 20,Charity Dennington, Arkansas
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7:18 am PDT, Jul 20,Olivia LeBlanc, Georgia
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6:37 am PDT, Jul 20,Name not displayed, New York
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6:33 am PDT, Jul 20,Brian Lackner, Oregon
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6:11 am PDT, Jul 20,Allison Aigner, Illinois
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6:08 am PDT, Jul 20,Pam Alleman, Ohio
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4:39 am PDT, Jul 20,Janet Rosenthal, Michigan
Coral reefs are being distroyed at an alarming rate, we need to save what is left before it is too late.
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4:10 am PDT, Jul 20,Sampa Biswas, India
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3:36 am PDT, Jul 20,Carolyn Harrison, Alaska
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3:27 am PDT, Jul 20,Vercknocke Pascal, France
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2:36 am PDT, Jul 20,Kimberly Tanz, Nevada
We need coral reefs!
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1:13 am PDT, Jul 20,Iro Kapeloni, Greece
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1:00 am PDT, Jul 20,Mia Zennaro, Italy
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12:45 am PDT, Jul 20,Gina Rangel, Macao
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12:42 am PDT, Jul 20,Ellen Mcclamrock, North Carolina
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12:17 am PDT, Jul 20,Jamie Putnam cozatt, Florida
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12:06 am PDT, Jul 20,Arghavan Sheykh, Iran, Islamic Republic Of
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11:59 pm PDT, Jul 19,Robin Kitching, Australia
What we are doing to the marine ecology is going to have serious repercussions on the land because we are interfering with the natural food chain. The damage we have done to our forshore ecology in the last 50 years is horrific, let alone the depletion of deep sea marine species. When will we realise that we are talking here about our survival on this planet!
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11:57 pm PDT, Jul 19,ELAINE ROBINSON, United Kingdom
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11:55 pm PDT, Jul 19,Lora Condon, California
If the Oceans die, we die. Enough said.
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11:18 pm PDT, Jul 19,Carla Haim, California
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10:32 pm PDT, Jul 19,Jessy Burnie, Texas
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10:28 pm PDT, Jul 19,Loren Vasquez, California
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10:24 pm PDT, Jul 19,Carolyn Matini, California
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10:13 pm PDT, Jul 19,Amanda Nichols, Arizona
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9:15 pm PDT, Jul 19,Theresa Brooks, Illinois
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9:12 pm PDT, Jul 19,Hannah Sanders, California
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8:43 pm PDT, Jul 19,Muriel Pridgen, North Carolina