DiscoverHow To Protect The OceanHow Deep Sea Mining Could Break the Ocean's Most Important Wildlife Highways
How Deep Sea Mining Could Break the Ocean's Most Important Wildlife Highways

How Deep Sea Mining Could Break the Ocean's Most Important Wildlife Highways

Update: 2025-11-27
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How Deep Sea Mining could permanently disrupt the ocean's most important animal routes, and most people have never thought about it. This episode asks the critical question: what happens when mining operations collide with species that rely on vast migratory pathways to survive? We break down the science in a way that makes the stakes impossible to ignore, from whale communication and sea turtle navigation to seabird feeding routes and shark migrations.

Whales: Our guest, Dr. Andrew Thaler, explains how mining doesn't just damage the seafloor. It sends noise, light, sediment, and pollution across the entire water column. The most surprising takeaway is that animals living near the surface could suffer major impacts from mining occurring thousands of meters below them, simply because their survival depends on calm, uninterrupted travel corridors. It turns the deep sea into a threat zone rather than a sanctuary.

Ocean conservation: This conversation exposes a major gap in global mining policy. The focus is always the seabed, but the species most at risk never go anywhere near it. That realization leads to a powerful conclusion: when we talk about protecting the ocean, we can't just talk about the bottom. We have to protect everything that connects it from top to bottom.

Listen now to understand the full story.

 

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How Deep Sea Mining Could Break the Ocean's Most Important Wildlife Highways

How Deep Sea Mining Could Break the Ocean's Most Important Wildlife Highways

Andrew Lewin - Marine Biologist & Science Communicator