Science
Studies, research findings, and interesting tidbits from the ever-expanding scientific world.
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While I completely agree that this is needed, I can't see any realistic way of enforcing it.
There is no one owning international waters, so no one to enforce the rules, and you can't jail a country or government that keeps letting their citizens abuse international waters, any fine posted for a company or nation will simply not be paid or considered the cost of doing business and budgeted for.
The same treaties that define what are international waters also define universal jurisdiction for some crimes - every country is allowed to exercise their sovereignty against pirates for example. The list "just" needs to be expanded.
“Humpback whales live in complex societies, are acoustically diverse, use bubble tools and assist other species being harassed by predators,” says co-lead author Dr Fred Sharpe. “Now, akin to a candidate signal, we show they are blowing bubble rings in our direction in an apparent attempt to playfully interact, observe our response, and/or engage in some form of communication.”