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© 2025 Island Innovation. All rights reserved.

    News

    Curated stories and analysis from islands and sustainability leaders worldwide.

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    Showing 9 of 237 news items in Ocean & Biodiversity
    Indonesian women sustain seaweed traditions in a changing climate
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 16, 2025

    Indonesian women sustain seaweed traditions in a changing climate

    NUSA PENIDA, Indonesia — Storm clouds loom overhead as Nyoman Mitri peers out at rows of seaweed lines stretching across the shallow tidal waters of Nusa Penida. Her weathered hands move with practiced ease as she secures a strand of green seaweed to a rope. “It never used to be like this,” she says. “It’s only been the last 10 years or so that rain has begun to seriously damage the seaweed.” Ibu Mitri, or Mrs. Mitri, as she’s known by her community, is sharing her seaweed cultivation techniques with a few tourists. Together, they sort through fresh seaweed, discarding damaged strands and carefully tying healthy green ones onto lengths of rope, preparing them to be returned to the sea and fastened to wooden posts, where they’ll continue growing until the next harvest. As she ties hundreds of strands of seaweed back onto the lines, lulled into a methodical rhythm, she begins to share her concerns: the changing climate, increasing development, and the growing unreliability of each harvest. With a shy smile, she speaks of how increased rainfall and more frequent storms have threatened traditions once guided by the seasons, not by storms.

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    Japan’s ‘Ama’ divers fight to keep their heritage alive
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    Japan’s ‘Ama’ divers fight to keep their heritage alive

    In a coastal hut in Mie Prefecture, a charcoal fire burns at the center as ama — “sea woman” in Japanese, who make a living by free-diving for seafood — warm their hands, or grill fresh catch for curious visitors. Outside, Pacific waves break gently along the rocky shore of Shima City. For years, this ocean has been the workplace, provider, and spiritual companion for Machiyo Yamashita and Kaori Arai. “We can’t be afraid because it’s our own job,” said the 75-year-old Yamashita, who has been diving for 50 years. “I have to be strong.”

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    Turning the tide: enhancing ocean equity for Small Island Developing States
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    Turning the tide: enhancing ocean equity for Small Island Developing States

    Small Island Developing States (SIDS) depend heavily on the ocean for their livelihoods, economies and climate resilience. Yet they face stark and growing inequities in how ocean resources are accessed, governed and financed. A new briefing paper from ODI Global’s Resilient and Sustainable Islands Initiative (RESI) calls for bold action to place equity at the heart of the international oceans agenda – and ensure SIDS can thrive as stewards of the sea. Despite their size, SIDS are ocean giants — custodians of vast Exclusive Economic Zones and biodiversity-rich waters. But when it comes to reaping the benefits of the blue economy, they face barriers to fully participating in and benefiting from marine innovation and investment. Countries with greater financial and technical capacity are typically better positioned to access these opportunities, while SIDS remain particularly vulnerable to ocean-related risks such as pollution, overexploitation and climate change.

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    UNOC – The Catch: Sustainable fisheries in oceania and beyond
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    UNOC – The Catch: Sustainable fisheries in oceania and beyond

    Foreign Policy‘s hit fisheries podcast The Catch is headed to the United Nations Ocean Conference! Join us for a special live taping, in partnership with the Walton Family Foundation and Ocean Conservancy, to kick off our upcoming season on tuna in the Pacific Islands. Local fisheries around the world are under threat from a number of sources, including IUU fishing, climate change, and weak global governance that leaves local fishers vulnerable to multinational fleets. These dangers jeopardize both local economies and the biodiversity of the ocean. At the epicenter of these emerging threats is Oceania, where healthy fisheries are vital to the economies of its small Pacific Island nations.

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    For many island species, the next tropical cyclone may be their last
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    For many island species, the next tropical cyclone may be their last

    **Simon Valle**, Bangor University and **David Jorge Pereira**, University of Birmingham When a major cyclone tears through an island nation, all efforts rightly focus on saving human lives and restoring livelihoods. However, these storms have permanent consequences for other species that are often forgotten. As the world continues to heat, cyclones are expected to become [more frequent, intense and unpredictable](https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/chapter/chapter-11/). The International Union of Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the global authority on biodiversity, lists storms as one factor threatening species. But just how much of a threat is still poorly understood.

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    UNOC3: Azores bring to Nice the largest protected maritime zone in the North Atlantic
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    UNOC3: Azores bring to Nice the largest protected maritime zone in the North Atlantic

    From June 9-13, the third United Nations Ocean Conference (UNOC3) is taking place in Nice, France. Political leaders from around the world, along with scientists, civil society organisations, and the private sector are gathering to discuss solutions for ocean preservation and sustainability. Located in the North Atlantic, the Azores archipelago plays a notable role: it has one of the largest Exclusive Economic Zones in Europe and has been strengthening its position as a model of commitment to marine conservation. A prime example of this is the Blue Azores program, an initiative of the Regional Government of the Azores, in partnership with the Oceano Azul Foundation and the international organisation Waitt Institute, as Luís Bernardo Brito e Abreu, Advisor to the President of the Government of the Azores and Coordinator of the Blue Azores Program, explained to RFI’s reporting team.

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    Four new snake species discovered in Papua New Guinea
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    Four new snake species discovered in Papua New Guinea

    Photo Credit: Photo by Fred Kraus for [Mongabay.](https://imgs.mongabay.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2025/06/05233410/The-Dendrelaphis-melanarkys-or-black-net-tree-snake-Fred-Kraus.jpg) Herpetology has long navigated through tangled terrain in Papua New Guinea, where species mislabeling and sparse sampling have clouded scientific understanding. But a recent revision has brought rare clarity—and four unexpected discoveries, [reports Akhyari Hananto](https://mongabay.co.id/2025/05/03/ilmuwan-temukan-spesies-ular-baru-yang-membelit-elang-hidup-hidup/) for Mongabay-Indonesia. In April 2025, Fred Kraus of the University of Michigan published [a study inZootaxa](https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/article304177086.html) identifying four new tree snakes in the genus Dendrelaphis, each endemic to a different island in the Louisiade and Woodlark archipelagos in PNG’s Milne Bay.

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    Coralligenous Ecosystems around Fourni Island Officially Recognised and Protected
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 10, 2025

    Coralligenous Ecosystems around Fourni Island Officially Recognised and Protected

    “The globally significant coralligenous ecosystems in the Fourni island complex have now been officially designated as a protected natural formation and landscape.” This marks a key milestone for marine conservation efforts in Greece, as it is the first time coralligenous ecosystems have received formal legal protection. Although relevant legislation existed for decades, it had never been enforced until now. The coralligenous ecosystems of the Fourni island complex are among the most ecologically rich yet least explored marine habitats in the Mediterranean. Found at depths of 60-150 meters, these underwater structures have formed over centuries or even millennia and serve as vital habitats for a rich marine biodiversity. So far, over 300 species across 113 taxonomic genera have been identified, and our research continues, as there are many more to be discovered. Red gorgonians (Paramuricea clavata) and black coral (Antipathella subpinnata) form extensive marine animal forests beneath these seas. The ecosystems are of international environmental importance and remain a central focus of our ongoing scientific efforts. This achievement follows years of ongoing research by Archipelagos Institute of Marine Conservation, in close collaboration with the Municipality of Fourni, local fishermen, and scientific partners, including [Oceana](https://oceana.org/), [Under the Pole](https://underthepole.org/?lang=en), and[Ionian University](https://ionio.gr/gr/). Supported by the Costas M. Lemos Foundation and [Pure Ocean](https://www.pure-ocean.org/en/), this effort was executed without any public funding. This research is ongoing, aiming to gather further data about these remote, understudied, yet ecologically critical marine ecosystems.

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    Islands are Solutions: the Case for Island-Ocean Coalitions
    Ocean & BiodiversityJune 3, 2025

    Islands are Solutions: the Case for Island-Ocean Coalitions

    SEATTLE, Washington / SAN DIEGO, California / AUSTIN, Texas, May 26 (IPS) – As the world confronts escalating climate impacts, biodiversity loss, and ocean degradation, islands stand as critical test cases—not just as sites of vulnerability, but as living laboratories of resilience, restoration, and innovation. Too often, they are framed as victims of global circumstances, awaiting salvation from external forces. But they have long been proving grounds for ecological restoration, climate adaptation, and scalable conservation solutions that both draw from and help protect [Indigenous and local knowledge](https://www.islandconservation.org/stewards-in-community/), cultural practices, and local economies of island communities. From the [Republic of Seychelles’ pioneering blue bonds](https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2018/10/29/seychelles-launches-worlds-first-sovereign-blue-bond), which finance marine protection in the Westen Indian Ocean, to New Zealand’s ambitious [Predator Free 2050](https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/predator-free-2050/) initiative restoring native bird populations and ecosystems, to the [Galapagos Islands](https://www.islandconservation.org/return-of-the-rails-signs-of-recovery-on-floreana-island/) improving livelihoods and rewilding species on the brink of extinction, islands have time and again demonstrated that large-scale ecological recovery is both possible and rapid. Mona Island, Puerto Rico is one of the most ecologically and culturally important islands in the archipelago. Credit: Tommy Hall/Island Conservation

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