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Director's Report |
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Dr. Larry McKinney |
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The Gulf of Mexico is a large marine ecosystem – even if our
neighbors on the east and west coast sometime seem to forget it. |
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As a biologist I have spent most of my professional career in and
around the Gulf of Mexico. We have often been referred to as the
“third coast” or even the “forgotten coast.” The latter can really
rub me the wrong way. I recall once when I was in Washington D.C.
trying to persuade a certain federal
agency to fund something or other, and I was pressing the issue more
forcefully than I probably should have done. As I caught my breath
the agency representative blurted out, “I don’t see why we should
fund something like this in the Gulf. It’s gone already, nothing but
oil and gas platforms and pipelines all over the place.” I was too
stunned to have a ready response and I do not recall much about the
rest of the meeting. It just kept going through my head, had he ever
been in the Gulf of Mexico? Certainly, not the parts I have seen.
Unfortunately, that is not an uncommon perception among those that
do not know better. Whether contrived to keep attention and funding
focused on the other coasts, as I often think is the case, even
without much factual foundation, or just the result of population
distributions disproportionately located on the East Coast and West
Coast,
the effect is the same. We get forgotten down here in the Gulf. That
is unfortunate because we have so much at stake here, both for the
ecological and the economic health of our nation.
The Gulf of Mexico is a large marine ecosystem. Its future
depends on our ability to act on a similar scale. Effective action
demands we understand ecosystem function and interactions on that
same scale. We are not today capable of doing so, nor do we have the
knowledge base to support a decision-making process that might do
so. The
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encouraging news is that this concern is broadly recognized
and, around the Gulf, efforts are underway to address this concern.
This is one area where the Gulf of Mexico is an acknowledged leader.
The Gulf
of Mexico Alliance, a collaboration of all the Gulf states, including
the United States and Mexico, are working towards the goal of
developing that governance process. Business interests,
nongovernmental organizations and interested citizens are part of
the Alliance as well. The Alliance is a vehicle that brings all
these interests together to address the many environmental
challenges we face here in the Gulf of Mexico.
The Alliance is not the only effort to bring us together. This
winter the second “Gulf Summit” will be held in Veracruz, Mexico, February 3-5. The first summit was initiated by HRI,
with the goal of establishing an ongoing assessment of the
ecological and economic health of the Gulf of Mexico.
Read more about the 2006 State of the
Gulf of Mexico biennial symposium. I want to thank Governor Fidel Herrera for
his commitment and support to make the second summit a reality. It
is especially significant that it will be held in Veracruz. As
Governor of the State of Veracruz, Fidel Herrera is clearly
committed to a healthy and productive Gulf of Mexico. We can only
hope that his counterparts in both Mexico and the United States
share his enthusiasm and commitment. The Harte Research Institute
will be doing all we can to make it a success. I hope to report back
to you on a successful summit in the next newsletter.
- Larry McKinney, Executive Director
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© 2008 Harte Research Institute
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