Enric Sala, Date of Birth, Place of Birth

    

Enric Sala

Spanish marine biologist

Date of Birth: 26-Nov-1968

Place of Birth: Girona, Catalonia, Spain

Profession: marine biologist

Nationality: Spain

Zodiac Sign: Sagittarius

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About Enric Sala

  • Enric Sala is a National Geographic explorer-in-residence actively engaged in exploration, research, and communications to advance ocean conservation.
  • He created the Pristine Seas Project to identify, study, and protect the last wild places in the ocean.
  • His over 120 scientific publications are widely recognized and used for conservation efforts such as the creation of marine reserves. Salaโ€™s present goals are to help protect the last pristine marine ecosystems worldwide, and to develop new business models for marine conservation.
  • He conducts expeditions to some of the most remote places in the ocean, to carry out the first comprehensive scientific surveys of these pristine areas to obtain a baseline of what the ocean used to be like.
  • He also produces documentary films and other media to raise awareness about the importance of a healthy ocean, and to inspire country leaders to create large marine reserves.
  • Sala also wrote the book, Pristine Seas: Journeys to the Ocean's Last Wild Places, published in 2015.Working with key conservation organizations, Sala helped to inspire the creation of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, USA; the Nazca-Desventuradas Marine Park, Chile; the Palau National Marine Sanctuary, Palau; the Motu Motiro Hiva Marine Park, Chile; the Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve, UK; the Southern Line Islands Marine Reserve, Kiribati; Gabon's system of marine parks; the Seamounts Marine Managed Area, Costa Rica; the Darwin and Wolf Marine Sanctuary, Galapagos; the expansion of the Russian Arctic National Park around Franz Josef Land and the expansion of the Malpelo Reserve, Colombia.
  • In all, the Pristine Seas project has helped protect more than 3 million square kilometers of ocean territory.Formerly, Sala was a professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California (2000โ€“2007) and at Spain's National Council for Scientific Research (CSIC) (2007โ€“2008). During expeditions to the Northern Line Islands, Sala and his team of scientists discovered that natural predators accounted for roughly 85 percent of the local biomass.
  • He also studied the Franz Josef Land, a nature reserve.In 2018, Sala received the 23rd Annual Heinz Award in Public Policy.

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