Alasdair Harris: How a handful of fishing villages sparked a marine conservation revolution
TED Fellow Alasdair Harris is a social entrepreneur and ocean conservationist working at the interface of marine protection and poverty alleviation. Full bio
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about the crisis in our oceans,
with a message you've heard before,
that if the survival of the oceans
that I've learned
healthy and productive
but from fishermen and women
countries on earth.
"How do we keep people out?"
that coastal people throughout the world
to our own survival
our forests or our soils.
ranks fisheries with farming
into an extinction emergency,
failed abysmally to tackle.
and humanitarian crisis.
we've so far dealt our oceans
deeper, further afield.
is a great paradox:
and entirely reversible,
productive resources on the planet.
we can reverse overfishing.
on either side of our equator.
of the species in our ocean,
depends on our seas.
"small-scale fishers,"
of the world's fishermen and women.
more selective and sustainable
by bigger industrial boats.
to gain from conservation
from poverty, hunger or forced migration,
is often unable to help.
on the front lines of climate change,
catastrophic storms,
taking more than their share.
of Madagascar two decades ago,
its marine natural history.
by the coral reefs I explored,
simply needed to fish less.
in the village of Andavadoaka
coral reefs to all forms of fishing
after five or so years,
would be much bigger,
27 million people
took no account
on fishing for survival.
of Latin species names mean to Resaxx,
who fishes every day
that conservation is, at its core,
and realities that communities face
the founding principle for my work
that brought a new approach
with coastal communities.
started by listening,
was immensely important for villagers:
was depleting an economic lifeline.
grows astonishingly fast,
every one or two months.
just a small area of fishing ground
increases in catches,
to this community's bottom line
just be acceptable.
to octopus fishing temporarily,
to prevent poaching.
to fishing six months later,
for what happened next.
more and bigger octopus
along hundreds of miles of coastline.
among the poorest on earth,
in a matter of months, by fishing less.
half your balance every year
opportunity on earth
what fisheries can.
was happening in these communities.
with two dozen neighboring communities
along dozens of miles of coastline.
and mosquito nets
coral reefs and mangroves,
just two years earlier
was so roundly rejected.
protected area,
for local marine governance
just a few years earlier.
legal rights from the state
industrial trawlers from the waters.
recovery of those critical reefs
for greater recognition
that reward sustainability.
the beginning of the story,
of fishing villages taking action
conservation revolution
are managed by communities
approach to conservation
from mud crabs to mackerel.
through East Africa and the Indian Ocean
into Southeast Asia.
from India to Indonesia,
that go far beyond protecting nature,
along entire coastlines,
to face the injustice of poverty
throughout the tropics,
to this global opportunity
with communities
to act and learn from one another;
standing with communities
to manage their fisheries;
in the ocean economy;
overcapitalized industrial fleets
and foreign vessels
in the hands of communities
to the target species or habitat.
donors and the conservation establishment
to the scale of investment
marine conservation
and empowerment,
on healthy seas for their survival,
is just one step to fixing our oceans.
acidification and pollution grow each day.
a much-needed boost
of our ocean emergency.
by taking them on one by one.
on our ocean is the solution
about small-scale fishers.
and provide nutrition to billions.
conservationists
and global reach needed
with our oceans.
is the most powerful thing we can do
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Alasdair Harris - Ocean conservationist, entrepreneurTED Fellow Alasdair Harris is a social entrepreneur and ocean conservationist working at the interface of marine protection and poverty alleviation.
Why you should listen
Alasdair Harris works in some of the world's poorest countries, where his organization Blue Ventures seeks to demonstrate that effective marine conservation requires pragmatic, entrepreneurial and locally led approaches to ocean protection. His work focuses on developing scalable solutions to marine environmental challenges that make marine conservation make sense to coastal communities.
Alasdair Harris | Speaker | TED.com