Vancouver, August 15, 2012 - The health of
the world's oceans received a score of 60 out of 100 from a team of
international scientists, including fisheries researchers at the
University of British Columbia.
The team undertook the first global quantitative assessment of
ocean health and created the Ocean Health Index (http://oceanhealthindex.org),
published today in the journal Nature. To calculate the overall
score, ecological, social, economic, and political conditions were
evaluated for every coastal nation in the world.
The scores for individual countries ranged widely: from Sierra
Leone, with a failing scores of 36, to Jarvis Island, an
uninhabited, relatively pristine island in the South Pacific, with
the highest scores of 86.
Canada is among the top performers with a score of 70 while the
U.S. received 63 and the U.K. received 62.
Researchers from UBC's Fisheries Centre were responsible for
measuring the amount of seafood that is sustainably generated by
fisheries and marine aquaculture for human consumption. "Fisheries
are one of the most important 'services' the ocean offers us, and
one of the areas where we're making the biggest impact on the
sustainability and ecosystems of the ocean," says Kristin Kleisner,
a postdoctoral fellow with the Sea Around UsProject and a
co-author of the study.

"The Ocean Health Index offers an excellent framework to assess
if things are getting better or worse in response to our actions,"
says Daniel Pauly, principal investigator with the Sea Around
Us project and the study's co-author. "Although Canada did
comparatively well, it has so far set aside only one per cent of
its waters as marine protected areas. We would like to see progress
in this area and others."
The study's lead author, Ben Halpern from the University of
California, Santa Barbara, says the scores provide a baseline
against which to measure future change and the effectiveness of our
efforts.