Economist Book of the Year --Audubon Book of the Year --American Library Association Award winner - Royal Society Winton prize Finalist - Winner of the Rachel Carson award
A Silent Spring for oceans by "the Rachel Carson of the fish world" (The New York Times) who appeared on the Imax film Wild Ocean and provided the scientific basis for the creation of the first high seas marine protected areas. For fans of Carl Safina and Elizabeth Kolbert.
"Immensely entertaining, although it chronicles a tragedy… No account of the cataclysm is more engaging."
-Mark Kurlansky, The Washington Post
The sea feeds and sustains us, but everywhere we look marine life is under threat, from Caribbean reefs to arctic fisheries to the deepest regions of the sea. In this passionate paean to the sea and its creatures one of the world's foremost marine conservation biologists tells the story of man and the sea, from the earliest traces of life on earth to the oceans as we know them today. He considers the impact of fishing and ocean acidification, rising tides and warming seas, plastics and shifting currents, and reveals what we must do now to preserve our precious oceans. The struggles of Turtles, Dolphins, Whales and Tuna are relatively well known, but few people appreciate just how much our seas have changed in the last fifty years and how many species are now under acute stress. At once passionate and persuasive, The Ocean of Life will appeal to readers of Four Fish and The Sixth Extinction -to those who care about environmental sustainability, and to anyone who loves the sea and its creatures.
"Excellent and engrossing… I hope a great many people read this book."
-G. Bruce Knecht, Wall Street Journal
"Authoritative and furious, urgent and persuasive"
-Sunday Times
ISBN: | 9780143123484 |
Publication date: | 30th April 2013 |
Author: | Callum Roberts |
Publisher: | Penguin Books an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 432 pages |
Genres: |
Oceanography (seas and oceans) Marine biology The Earth: natural history: general interest |