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{Nature_and_Environment.66.209}: ... {wren1111} Thu, 15 Jun 2006 03:18:54 CDT (HTML)
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands as important as Yellowstone, activist says President Bush on Thursday is expected to announce plans to create the world's largest marine protected area a group of remote Hawaiian islands that cover 84 million acres and are home to 7,000 species of birds, fish and marine mammals, at least a quarter of which are unique to Hawaii.
The proposed sanctuary encompasses the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, which conservationists describe as the most intact tropical marine region under U.S. jurisdiction.
"This an unprecedented win for endangered Hawaiian monk seals, green sea turtles, black-footed albatrosses, tiger sharks, the incredible reef corals in these waters, the people of Hawaii and all Americans, now and in generations to come," Elliott Norse, president of the Marine Conservation Biology Institute, said in a statement ahead of the announcement. "Its the start of a new era of protecting places in the sea before theyre degraded beyond recognition. In my opinion, this is the best thing President Bush has done for the environment."
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