Bali WISE Basic Education Class | Intake 42 – Week 10 | Shark Conservation Workshop| Thu, 12th Dec 2019 – Ibu Lyn⠀
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Bali WISE students had Shark Conservation Workshop. This workshop aims to increase awareness of the importance of sharks and the threats they are facing. As an apex predator, sharks are crucial to marine ecosystems yet are experiencing a global decline. During the workshop, students learned how to identify local shark species and their characteristics, what is causing their rapid reduction in numbers and how they can help stop this catastrophic loss.⠀
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Sharks often get a bad reputation because people don’t understand a lot about them. They exist in every marine ecosystem. Sharks have presided over those ecosystems as apex predators for millions of years. Now, sharks are being eliminated by a relatively new apex predator from which sharks have no natural protection. Here the students learned how to conserve sharks and protect their population, by not supporting shark fin trade and unsustainable fishing, also keep the marine environment clean.
Shark Conservation Workshop – Intake 41
Bali WISE Basic Education Class | Intake 41 – Week 12 | Shark Conservation | Thu, 26th Sep 2019 – Ibu Lyn
Bali WISE students had Shark Conservation Workshop. This workshop aims to increase awareness of the importance of sharks and the threats they are facing. As an apex predator, sharks are crucial to marine ecosystems yet are experiencing a global decline. During the workshop, students learned how to identify local shark species and their characteristics, what is causing their rapid reduction in numbers and how they can help stop this catastrophic loss.
Sharks often get a bad reputation because people don’t understand a lot about them. They exist in every marine ecosystem. Sharks have presided over those ecosystems as apex predators for millions of years. Now, sharks are being eliminated by a relatively new apex predator from which sharks have no natural protection. Here the students learned how to conserve sharks and protect their population, by not supporting shark fin trade and unsustainable fishing, also keep the marine environment clean.
Shark Conservation Workshop – Intake 40
Bali WISE Basic Education Class | Intake 40 – Week 7 | Shark Conservation Workshop| Thurs, 23rd May 2019 – Teacher : Ibu Lyn.
As part of their curriculum, Bali WISE students had Shark Conservation Workshop. This workshop is to increase awareness of the importance of sharks and the threats they are facing. As an apex predator, sharks are crucial to marine ecosystems yet are experiencing a global decline. During the workshop, students learned how to identify local shark species and their characteristics, what is causing their rapid reduction in numbers and how they can help stop this catastrophic loss.
Sharks often get a bad reputation because people don’t understand a lot about them. They exist in every marine ecosystem. Sharks have presided over those ecosystems as apex predator for millions of years. Now, sharks are being eliminated by a relatively new apex predator from which sharks have no natural protection. Here the students learned how to conserve Shark and protect their population, by not supporting shark fin trade and unsustainable fishing, also keep clean the marine environment.
Shark Conservation with Ms. Lyn – Intake 39
Bali WISE Skills Education | Intake 39 – week 8 | Shark Conservation Workshop | Tuesday, 26th Feb 2019 – Speaker: Ms. Lyn
As part of their curriculum, intake 39 is having their first shark conservation workshop with Ms. Lyn .This workshop is to educate the students regarding the conservation of shark. As a conservation class they will learn what is marine ecosystem, how it works, and how to understand the management of the ocean habitat so it become sustainable
The shark is often seen as the ocean most feared predator, the students is very interested and enthusiastic to know more about this subject. Shark conservation is needed to stop all the butchering of shark, the number of sharks drastically reduce each yea, it is estimated around 100 million shark per year are killed around the world. Most sharks are killed for shark fin trade, long line fishing net and trophy hunting. Ms. Lyn encouraged the students to care about marine environment.