Content Library

News

Curated stories and analysis from islands and sustainability leaders worldwide.

Showing 9 of 235 news items in Ocean & Biodiversity
Reef islands closure for nesting birds
Ocean & BiodiversityDecember 15, 2025

Reef islands closure for nesting birds

Excerpt from detsi.qld.gov.au Four islands in the northern Great Barrier Reef Coast Marine Park are now closed to campers and day-trippers as part of an annual push to ensure migratory birds can nest and raise their chicks without being disturbed. Woody Island, Sisters Island and Taylor Cay will remain closed until 1 March 2026, while Eagle Island will be closed until 1 April 2026. The Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation has asked boaties and campers to respect the annual breeding season closures.

Read more
Arctic fjord on Svalbard in Norway found to absorb more greenhouse gases than it emits: Study
Ocean & BiodiversityDecember 15, 2025

Arctic fjord on Svalbard in Norway found to absorb more greenhouse gases than it emits: Study

Excerpt from aa.com.tr A new Norwegian study has found that Kongsfjorden, a fjord on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, absorbs more greenhouse gases than it releases, NRK news reported on Friday. Researchers from the Norwegian Polar Institute, using new nitrogen and carbon measurement models, discovered that the fjord acts as a natural carbon sink. Their study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, combines years of water sampling with advanced ocean models to estimate the fjord’s “nitrogen and carbon budget.” “Kongsfjorden takes up more carbon and nitrogen than it emits. If this pattern is repeated in other fjords, it’s good news for both the climate and marine ecosystems,” said Pedro Duarte, senior researcher at the Norwegian Polar Institute and lead author of the study. Scientists describe Kongsfjorden, located near the research town of Ny-Alesund, as a “living laboratory” that changes faster than most fjords in the Arctic.

Read more
EU and Cook Islands renew their sustainable fisheries partnership
Ocean & BiodiversityDecember 15, 2025

EU and Cook Islands renew their sustainable fisheries partnership

Photo credit: Michael / Stock.Adobe.com via Oceans-and-Fisheries.ec.europa.eu Excerpt from oceans-and-fisheries.ec.europa.eu The European Union and the Cook Islands have signed a new protocol to the sustainable fisheries partnership agreement for a duration of 7 years (2025-2032). This renewed protocol will grant the European Union fleet operating in the Pacific Ocean access to some of the richest and healthiest tuna stocks worldwide, for a total of 40 fishing days per year. In return, the EU financial support will continue to foster the sustainable development of the fisheries sector and blue economy in Cook Islands.

Read more
Rethinking the Indo-Pacific as a single ocean system
Ocean & BiodiversityDecember 15, 2025

Rethinking the Indo-Pacific as a single ocean system

Excerpt from lowyinstitute.org Locals sometimes get so used to the scenery that they forget to marvel at the sights. This isn’t just true for people that live in beautiful holiday spots. The same tendency can hamper analysts focused on international affairs. It’s easy, for example, to see the Indo-Pacific as a scatter of distant landmasses and island chains. Yet an unexpected work trip to France recently offered me a clearer view of the region’s richness and potential. A few weeks ago I was privileged to join the 5th International Session for the Indo-Pacific at the invitation of France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Institute for Advanced Studies in National Defence. In a week-long program alongside 54 senior military and government officials, academics and policy experts from across the region – from East Africa to the Pacific Islands – I was struck not by our diversity but by how quickly a shared sense of purpose took shape.

Read more
Voyage Into the Art of Finding One’s Way at Sea
Ocean & BiodiversityNovember 27, 2025

Voyage Into the Art of Finding One’s Way at Sea

Photo credit: Chewy C. Lin via nytimes.com Excerpt from nytimes.com When leaving an atoll of the Marshall Islands, in the Pacific, Alson Kelen prefers to sail after sunset. It’s like navigating with his eyes closed — allowing him to feel the up, down and sideways movement of every swell. “That’s how the Marshallese navigate,” he said. “They navigate with their stomach.” For thousands of years, Marshallese navigators used traditional wave-piloting techniques to travel vast expanses of ocean. Wave piloting is the art of feeling and reading the swells and waves that hit and emanate from the region’s atolls. After a lifetime of studying these and other patterns, navigators pass a test devised by their chiefs to become a ri meto, or person of the sea.

Read more
Madeira-Tore and Gorringe Bank Marine Reserve: Portugal’s Landmark Ocean Conservation Effort
Ocean & BiodiversityNovember 27, 2025

Madeira-Tore and Gorringe Bank Marine Reserve: Portugal’s Landmark Ocean Conservation Effort

Excerpt from madinfo.pt In 2025, Portugal unveiled a monumental step forward in marine conservation with the creation of the Madeira-Tore and Gorringe Bank Marine Reserve. Covering nearly 200,000 square kilometers, this expansive marine protected area (MPA) ranks as the largest in Europe and significantly advances Portugal’s commitment to safeguard its ocean ecosystems. Situated in the North-East Atlantic, this marine reserve stretches from the Algarve coast near Cape St. Vincent to the Madeira archipelago, encompassing ecologically rich seamounts, deep ocean ridges, and diverse marine habitats. This initiative represents a critical milestone toward Portugal’s ambitious goal of protecting 30% of its marine waters by 2026, well in advance of the global 2030 biodiversity targets.

Read more
Indonesian islanders plant mangroves, seek justice as seas rise
Ocean & BiodiversityNovember 27, 2025

Indonesian islanders plant mangroves, seek justice as seas rise

Excerpt from context.news PARI ISLAND, Indonesia - Under the scorching midday sun, Asmania and several women from Indonesia's Pari Island walk toward Rengge Beach, a shoreline slowly receding from the rising sea, to plant dozens of young mangrove seedlings. The Women's Group of Pari Island hopes the mangroves, which also absorb planet-heating greenhouse gas emissions, will protect the coastline from worsening tidal floods, rising sea levels and stronger waves. "The sea is not like it used to be. It's hotter, rougher, and it scares us," said Asmania, a mother of three, as she dug with her hands into the sand beneath the shallow sea. Home to just 1,000 residents, Pari Island near the capital Jakarta is at the centre of a globally significant court case over the impact of climate change on its beaches. Asmania, who goes by a single name, and three other residents sued cement giant Holcim in Switzerland in 2023, accusing it of failing to cut emissions as their island faced repeated floods. Cement production contributes about 7% of the world's total carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, according to the Global Cement and Concrete Association. A court in the town of Zug, where Holcim has its headquarters, has not yet ruled on whether to hear the case.

Read more
Scientists are racing to save Madagascar’s iconic chameleons as flames close in
Ocean & BiodiversityNovember 27, 2025

Scientists are racing to save Madagascar’s iconic chameleons as flames close in

Excerpt from vox.com I watched the fire from the edge of a dense forest in central Madagascar, a few hours northwest of Antananarivo, the country’s capital. It’s a special spot. This is one of the last remaining forests in the highlands of central Madagascar — a region devastated by decades of deforestation — and home to a raft of rare animals, including several species of chameleons. This forest, which contains more than 400 species of trees, only exists because the area has been protected for decades. It’s part of a park called Ambohitantely Special Reserve that has managed to limit illegal logging, clearing land for agriculture, and other forces that have razed the other forests here and across much of Madagascar.

Read more
Island Homes Welcoming Back Over 7,000 ‘Glow-in-the-Dark’ Snails
Ocean & BiodiversityNovember 24, 2025

Island Homes Welcoming Back Over 7,000 ‘Glow-in-the-Dark’ Snails

Excerpt from businessmole.com On Tuesday 18 November, 2025, the team behind a decades-long zoo project celebrated a major milestone in the recovery of ‘extinct’ snails. The team has successfully reintroduced thousands of ‘glow-in-the-dark’ snails to French Polynesia as part of a global conservation program to save the species from extinction. This annual reintroduction of zoo-bred Extinct in the Wild and Critically Endangered Partula snails marked the largest release of these finger-nail sized snails to date, with over 7,000 snails being returned to four islands. Before their release, each snail was marked with a small dab of white UV reflective paint, which glows blue under UV light. This marking method helps the team locate and monitor the snails, as they are most active at night.

Read more