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Top 6: October 5th 2022
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Sea Shepherd: Extinct Ink

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Top 6: October 5th 2022
For World Animal Day (October 4th) Sea Shepherd the marine conservation nonprofit organization fighting to defend, conserve, and protect our oceans is using human skin as a media space to remind us of extinct sea animals. As the world’s most passionate and powerful protector of ocean life, Sea Shepherd brings independent entities in over 20 countries together for direct-action campaigns around the world. Our oceans are dying and we are responsible: dozens of marine animals have gone extinct due to pollution, poaching, and other human activity. It seems only fair that we give a bit of ourselves to raise awareness about this dramatic issue. To visualize this extinction, Sea Shepherd and the creative boutique FRED & FARID New York are using an original call to action based on the simple idea that a tattoo is a conversation starter. Sea Shepherd invites people who care about marine life to use their own skin as a medium to deliver a tribute to extinct species. One of the most asked questions when you discover a tattoo is what does it mean? Thus a tattoo becomes an educational tool to raise awareness. The non-profit organization has a duty of memory, not only on world animal day but also on the other 365 other days of the year, asking us to never forget that human activity, the way we behave, and how we consume has been, and is still being, a huge part of the problem. To remember this consequence, Sea Shepherd collaborated with renowned tattoo artist Stephen Carballo out of Los Angeles to bring extinct marine animals back as a collection of tattoos—called Extinct Ink. The viewer discovers forgotten and extinct species such as the below: The Mexican Dace was a ray-finned fish native to Mexico. Increased agriculture and water resource demands caused the Mexican Dace’s habitat to dry up, leading to its extinction in 1983. The Baiji, or Yangtze River Dolphin, was a white-finned dolphin species in Eastern China. It was driven to extinction by hunting, pollution, and habitat loss caused by construction and industrialization. The last known Baiji died in 2002. The Javan Lapwing was a long-legged bird native to Java, Indonesia. Its population was severely affected by human disturbance and destruction of its habitat and worsened by hunting pressure. The Javan Lapwing was last seen in 1940. The Silver Trout was a species of trout native to the Northeastern United States. It was driven to extinction in 1939 by overfishing and other human-introduced fish species that competed for its food sources.

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