
David is a view at once in Atonboro’s ocean documentary
A huge, scaling sandworm outside Frank Herbert DuneThere is an indispensable maw, where all in its destructive path – from fish struggling to fish to the mesh – are doom.
But this is not a desert planet Arakis, it is the Earth – and the animal is a lower traler, which grinds the indiscriminate sea level for fish.
This is a shocking point-off-view moment Ocean with David EtanbaroOne of the last documentaries of the latest and potentially a famous broadcaster, released in selected Canadian theaters on Saturday and streaming on Disney+ on 8 June.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elxmubqesau
The film states, “After living on this planet for almost a hundred years, I now understand that the most important place on Earth is not on the ground … but in the sea,” this month turned 99 years old, says in the film.
But beyond the horrors of industrial fishing, the film also brings an incredible form on the world’s grandeur, delicate and community under the waves.
A ocean, many miracles
In particular, the film is called oceanAnd not the oceans, to run the water interrelationship on the planet and all the lives depending on it.

“Fish where they go, they don’t need a visa,” Rashid Sumella, Ocean and Fisher’s Economist jokingly said at the British Columbia University.
“We put all these lines: Atlantic, Pacific, High Seas and Country Water. And so this connected ocean is important if we are going to be able to manage our oceans.”
From the huge border in the open ocean to the “enchanted” coral reefs and coastal seas of the coastal seas, the film brings the audience to the “delicate balance in a world”, which has ever seen closely in such an expansion.
Ivan Tregrot, marine ecology and underwater photographers with Pritsmouth University in England know the attempt to filming in these ecosystems.
“I was amazed by the provision of life and dynamics,” Tregrot described. His divers have taken him to French Guyana, French Polynesia and Martinic in Caribbean.

“It takes a lot of patience. It is really difficult because we are also very limited in time and depth,” Tregrot told CBC News near Nice, France. “So you have to choose your moment.”
Painted in beauty and vastness ocean Also a major misconception has been highlighted which experts say that people have.
“It’s too big, the ocean, many people think that we can never hurt it,” Sumaila said in an interview by Whitehors. “But it is also quite delicate that we have to take down this thing, technology, greed really to take this thing down.”
Lose an amazon every year
The trolling scene is all made more clear because the practice is not only approved, but is repetitive.

Aneboro said in the film, “Amazon Renforest -shaped area gets stuck every year and most of that seabed rotates frequently.”
Ana Quiros, the chief exploiter of the Plymouth Marine Laboratory in Devon, England, called it a difficult reality to struggle.
“In the UK, where we feel that we have very good environmental security,” Quiros explained, “when you realize the trewing range, it’s really shocking.”
The film suggests that a large amount of stored carbon has been disturbed in the continuous dredging of these ocean sedes, which contributes to more contribution to global warming. Quirus has warned that this may be an incomplete picture.
“Not all sea levels are uniform, and there are areas, which are in fact, very old and very long carbon stores, which we definitely need to protect us from these types of activities,” Quiro described, describing, saying that there are other areas that keep low carbon. However, she says that more mapping and knowledge is required to consider any future activities how to limit their carbon effects.
Uneven security
To be clear, the film is not a book against fishing. If anything, it states that the current methods are unstable and uneven. Like 2009 End of lineCommunity sounds help bring the message alive, including indigenous and coastal fishermen who struggle to compete against large commercial operations.

One of those voices, Alani Wilhelme, introduces us to a maritime protected area (MPA) in the north -west of the Hawaiian islands, Papahunumokuakia. Whereas ocean Shows us the amazing variety found in this large Pacific protection, it creates a broad point that MPA can actually help promote permanent fishing.
“All scientific research shows that marine protected areas can develop and maintain themselves, actually enhancing grips in surrounding areas,” said Aka Maharaj said, “All scientific research shows the head of the policy to Nature Canada.
Canada There are currently 14 mpasAtlantic, Pacific and Arctic Waters and Nature in Canada Push for more To pledge to protect the government 30 percent of its water by 2030,
Maharaj said, “In the Arctic, those areas are especially weak for climate change, and in fact, climate change is moving at the fastest pace on the poles,” Maharaj said, even though the ecosystem is threatened, even though there is a threat to the future of shipping traffic in the Pacific.
However, he and other experts warns that MPAs are not always effectively protected and lacks enforcement, causing so -called “paper parks”. Protection also cannot be permanent, as has recently been seen with another Hawaiian Reserve, in which A new American Executive Order Commercial is trying to allow fishing.
Global responsibility
ocean Widely opens on streaming just before 2025 United nations ocean conferenceWhere governments, researchers and other stakeholders work on the issues of permanent ocean management.

Experts see a significant moment to prevent damage caused by the multiplication hazards of overfing, pollution and climate change.
“Many of us are working to try and fix these problems,” Quiro said. “I really want to make people feel that it is really important to continue to do this work for our children and for the children coming after them.”
Sumila agrees, saying that we have more than the power to destroy.
“We also have sympathy, knowledge, knowledge, to actually work to protect our ocean, make sure it continues. Because it is very important.”