Authors: Marianne Synnes
Publish Date: 2006/08/16
Volume: 9, Issue: 1, Pages: 53-59
Abstract
Accelerating technological development has made it possible for humans to reach to one of the most remote parts of the Earth the deepest areas of the sea also called the Earth’s last frontier Rare previously hidden ecosystems with vast biological diversity can be found here These communities and their inhabitants are starting to feel the pressure of human impact being regarded as having an enormous potential in the development of new products such as pharmaceuticals molecular probes enzymes cosmetics nutritional supplements and agrichemicals However compared to the bioprospecting activity of these areas an increasing pressure on deepsea fisheries is probably an even more serious threat for the deepsea communities and a recent publication reports that deepsea fishes qualify as endangered Sustainable use of the deep sea and the organisms that inhabit it should thus be aimed for
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