Global Reef Expedition: Indian Ocean
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- Опубликовано: 13 июн 2019
- In this episode of The Global Reef Expedition, the scientific team aboard the “Golden Shadow” visits the Chagos Archipelago, a tropical paradise with some of the healthiest coral reefs on the planet. They come to study reefs seemingly untouched by man, but instead become witnesses to a bleaching incident that transforms the reefs right before their eyes. But before they leave, they also discover rays of hope in little sprigs of coral that fight on.
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Really Great job..
Please Safe Indian coralreef
It got nothing to do with India. It is just called Indian Ocean.
@@onthego22 there is any reason that's why it's called indian ocean isn't it....
@@onthego22 it sits right in front of India so it definitely makes sense the waste we produce is probably the highest contributer to its damage idk why are you so mad about someone trying to save the reef
My country island 🏝️
photography is just amazing thankyou
Chagos island is the proof that how beautiful the earth would look without humans!
To whom?
its amazing
my trypophobia is screaming and throwing up right now
Great job
Wow
Supa good!
Sir did u find any ancient proof...people are telling about kumarikandam...was this true or not....did u find any ancient construction or proofs
Great vedios sir...plz upload Atlantic and Pacific oceans documententry too
Thanks! Our Atlantic and Pacific Ocean documentary videos are split up by country, you can find them here: ruclips.net/p/PLlOe1Mr8Ybsq37kMyynl6jISJQ6ovGAzC
What’s worst, climate change or WW3
It demonstrates there is hope1
Can you go to benham rise in Philippines
does your channel have an instagram account?
Chagos island my grandparents native island were they were born unfortunately they were banished from their own island about 50 years ago
Who banned them?
According to ICJ,chagos is part of Mauritus,no more a british territory....the british have illigally occupied chagos for soo many years....they must give that back to mauritious
Does anyone know of a good site that’s tracking the impact of the space debris from China today on the ocean? I am wondering whose species are most at risk of injury or extinction should a migration path or reef get hit. There is going to be a black market coral interest already, and now this big space accident may be an excuse for damaging more and counting it as ‘damaged by impact’. The ocean experts need to be watching the space recovery people and vice versa.
ive looked all over no such video exists... because plastic is breaking down as fast as it acumulates by the sun...the nano particles are being eaten by fish and corals
kumari kamdam lemuria
Hindi me bhej do pleas
My Kkkk sr ya
scuba diving?
Voice over????
Name of voice over artist ???
Bray Poor is the guy.
@@ArunSingh-id6ey
Bohat shukriya
Sikh hum ko waisai hi bohat achai lagtai hai.
Respect from Pakistan
@@rajaali8963 You're welcome sir. Have a good day.
I am so tired of hearing how AGM is affecting reefs globally. Scare people, show some broken coral heads near a crowded resort, and get your next Grant. Such BS. Fortunately, I too have been able to SCUBA dive the most remote places in the world and have come to this very simple conclusion... when you dive in crowded places affected daily by humans, the reefs are damaged, but dive in a remote place like Palau or Raja Ampat, and the reefs are as pristine and beautiful as the mind can imagine. Yes we humans are changing, for the worse, our reefs in crowded places in close proximity to development. But to say AGM is one of the major causes of dying or bleached coral reefs in remote locations is total BS. If that were true, the remote places like I mentioned, including the outer Belize reef, would also be damaged, and they're not. I think these scientists that do this know that they need to produce misinformation to get their next funding.
EuEu sim stat irrita Rui ryryeteyrye a a ytetdhee
beautiful movie but putting a climate change bias causes me to dislike the video. like the guy said Climate Change has always been here and it moves in cycles often up to 30 or 50 years yet just 10 years of cold weather can undo 30 years of melting polar icecaps...