Skip to content
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbons
    • Shoreline Armoring + Coastal Engineering
    • Dams + Sand Supply Reduction
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitat | Ecosystem Destruction
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbons
    • Shoreline Armoring + Coastal Engineering
    • Dams + Sand Supply Reduction
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitat | Ecosystem Destruction
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact

Day: December 9, 2018

Gambian environmental activists take swift Action against Chinese plant polluting their ocean water

After activists said a Chinese-run fish processing plant – that arrived in 2014 – had failed to remove a pipe accused of spewing toxic waste into the sea, local youth issued an ultimatum: Dig the pipe up, or we will. They did, storming the beach.

Industrial fisheries are starving seabirds all around the world

Industrial fisheries are starving seabirds like penguins and terns by competing for the same prey sources. Seabirds are now the most threatened bird group.

Menu
  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
Instagram Facebook Twitter

© 2010 – 2022 CoastalCare.org