• @shalafi
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    1 month ago

    Only scanned the first bit so far, but this deserves a deep read.

    I’ve noted before, our ecosystems are so far gone that most people, especially the youngest of us, don’t have a clue. To add more to that comment, last night my daughter pointed and said, “Daddy! There’s a moth on the wall! Right there!”

    She’s 12, not 2, that was unworthy of comment, shows what I mean. My second year of college ('91), we had a moth invasion. It was wild! Dead moths everywhere, moths swarming every light. No one noticed. And now a single moth is worthy of notice.

    The animals are already gone. I don’t know what the line is for “collapse”, but given what I grew up with, the ecosystems are collapsed today. Maybe once we hit the point they cannot recover? Call that collapse?

    I walked miles and miles through the woods today. Saw a few deer tracks, lots of coyote prints, that was about it. Maybe some trash pandas. Zero large birds or small mammals. This was in NW Florida, after the rains washed the sandy trails flat, perfect tracking situation. Spit in the creek and 6 minnows swarmed on it. Felt good about at least that much. Fuck. (Fish should be boiling out of this ecosystem.)

    The Chinese are keenly aware of how much protein they’re pulling from the oceans, and how much they’ll need in the future. So far, this article make me hopeful.

  • lemmyng
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    31 month ago

    Hour about they start by not depleting the sea with their shadow fishing fleets?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      That doesn’t make building hundreds of artificial reefs a bad thing though, even if restoring the environment has economic benefits.

      • @x00z
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        21 month ago

        It’s greenwashing, especially since they claim everything is perfectly fine with the fishing.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 month ago

          Building hundreds of artificial reefs that will probably never pay for themselves is not greenwashing.

          Setting limits too high and potentially destroying the fisheries is bad, but that’s hardly specific to China.

          At least they’re doing something positive, as opposed to nothing and continuing to overfish as we’re doing with snow crab as it’s collapsing right now.