Another example is an area we recently safeguarded in the Gulf of Mexico: Bajos del Norte National Park. Play the video and you can see that much like the tropical forests sitting atop the massive cliffs of Canaima National Park in Venezuela, these bountiful and diverse coral reefs are perched near the edge of the continental shelf as it drops into the vast abyssal plain of the Gulf of Mexico.
BAJOS DEL NORTE NATIONAL PARK
This Marine Protected Area (MPA) is more than 5,000 square miles—that’s more than the equivalent of 10 Grand Teton National Parks!
The protections include a no-take zone of nearly 2,000 square miles, and no mining, oil exploration, or other industrial activities are allowed throughout the remainder of the MPA.
Many ocean protections extend from the seafloor to the ocean's surface. So protections in no-take zones like the one in Bajos del Norte National Park, can actually be measured in cubic miles! This means every living thing in the water column is safe from human activity.
Many iconic and commercially important species depend on this area as a critical migratory route, as well as vital feeding and spawning grounds.
These protections have impacts far beyond the borders of the MPA. This area is where millions of fishes, octopus, and lobster spawn and grow. These are important species for 3,600 local fishers and their communities in the Yucatán region.