David Lang: Let's protect the oceans like national parks
David Lang is a maker and the co-founder of OpenROV, a community of ocean lovers who build underwater robots. Full bio
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with me and my brothers,
from our house in Minneapolis,
we stopped at the Badlands,
I remember this as an adventure.
about the National Park System
to set aside the very best places,
in the country, for everyone.
just how prescient that idea was,
of the National Parks Service.
national park was Yellowstone, in 1872.
the poet, naturalist,
by the idea of conservation --
the best places and protect them.
of Teddy Roosevelt and John Muir
during his presidency,
just the two of them.
off the grid for four days?
on Theodore Roosevelt.
of national wildlife refuges.
but it wasn't a done deal.
after he created all of those new places,
was very much in doubt.
Stephen Mather,
to the Department of the Interior, saying,
protecting and preserving these places."
wrote him back.
so much about this,
and do it yourself?"
of the Interior,
he started a campaign.
two blocks from here, in 1914,
superintendents and a few other people
they hatched a campaign
National Park Service in 1916.
that we should protect these places
and carry that idea forward
and have these amazing experiences.
of the National Parks on land.
to talk to you about today,
100 years behind.
sanctuary was in 1972,
in taking that concept
to underwater environments.
who's Dr. Sylvia Earle,
protected areas around the world.
of bad news about the ocean,
coral bleaching, over-fishing --
places for nature is working.
set these places aside,
and we can keep the oceans healthy.
has been influential, like John Muir,
were both fantastic ocean presidents,
all around the country.
or a liberal idea,
to roll back a lot of the progress
Stephen Mather did 100 years ago.
to get people engaged with this idea.
of citizen scientists for the ocean.
and I know that it's possible.
underwater robots,
with lights that you can see underwater.
in his garage five years ago,
of people around the world,
should have access to these places.
to go and explore.
sea stars in her area were dying.
citizen science campaign,
for sea-star wasting syndrome,
what was happening there.
marine protected areas
to protect the future of this species.
people the tools,
Stephen Mather's playbook.
was he focused on infrastructure.
a time for the parks,
an important part of American culture.
associations around the country
out to these parks.
invented car camping.
didn't go to these places,
and they wouldn't care.
idea that he had.
on visionary philanthropy.
businessman from Chicago,
a parks association that needed funding,
association that needed funding,
the checks, make it happen.
of his friend William Kent,
of redwoods left on the base of Mount Tam,
to this National Parks effort.
national parks in the whole country.
from Minnesota,
care about this talk,
is going to Muir Woods.
around this new system, he said,
I want you to write about this.
to tell your clubs and your organizations.
I want you to pass regulation."
have a role to play
for future generations."
simple, three-point plan.
when Obama created
trying to get there."
on the technology of our time,
digital infrastructure
with the oceans.
wonderful VR 360 videos,
and see what these places look like.
the trident underwater drone,
you can fit it in a backpack,
deeper than most divers can go.
that most people have never had access to.
and we need even better tools.
more visionary philanthropists.
we didn't have any money,
we've raised on Kickstarter,
to get engaged
philanthropists themselves.
traditional philanthropists,
the Science Education and Exploration,
units out to people on the frontlines,
people who are telling the stories,
and see what people are doing,
spur you to get involved.
to get involved.
for telling these stories.
this is all about engagement.
new ways for people to participate
are going down and swimming transects
to protect these places.
participate in MPA Watch.
going on in these different areas.
to participate here.
for our grandkids' grandkids.
25 miles off the Gate.
as kind of a bird sanctuary,
at the life beneath the surface.
really important ecosystems.
wild world we haven't yet explored.
to keep people engaged.
order came out,
areas, under review,
who commented online.
is the right thing to do."
those 100,000 letters is:
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Lang - MakerDavid Lang is a maker and the co-founder of OpenROV, a community of ocean lovers who build underwater robots.
Why you should listen
David Lang is a maker whose craving for adventure turned him into an amateur ocean explorer. A few years ago Lang and NASA engineer Eric Stackpole went looking for lost gold (literally) in an underwater cave in the foothills of the Sierra Navada. But they weren't quite sure how to go about it. Without much expertise (or money), the two put initial designs for an underwater robot explorer online. Soon OpenROV was born: a community of citizen ocean explorers who build and constantly improve upon these small remote operated underwater robots.
Lang is also the author of Zero to Maker and a 2013 TED Fellow. He lives on a sailboat in the San Francisco Bay.
David Lang | Speaker | TED.com