WA
213 posts
Just got it in the mail:
Ningaloo Reef and Exmouth Gulf urgently need your help.
Straits Resources are planning to build the biggest salt mine in the world on the eastern side of Exmouth Gulf. So big, it will be visible from space.....
Exmouth Gulf (one of the richest marine environments in Australia) and Ningaloo Reef (one of the world's largest and most pristine fringing coral reef systems) are under potential threat. Dugongs, whales, whale sharks and turtles - all threatened species - are under threat. Arid zone mangroves, with the highest level of conservation significance, are under threat.
The region's ecotourism industry, fishing industry, and prawning industry are all under threat from this proposal. The World Heritage values of this area have already been identified. It must be protected, for now and future generations.
PLEASE ACT NOW. IT WILL TAKE 60 SECONDS OF YOUR TIME. SUBMISSIONS CLOSE ON 12TH MARCH.
You can help by signing the submission at:
[s]broke://www.haltthesalt.org.au/hts_submission/hts_submission.php[/s]
PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL TO ALL OF YOUR EMAIL LIST AND NETWORKS.
Find out more at http://www.haltthesalt.org.
WA
8 posts
Alberto,
I love Exmouth as it is a beautiful place but not as much as salt on my chippies..
I'm sorry to say that maybe salt might be more inportant to Jo Public than a few mammals.
Dugong's are ugly anyway!
WA
291 posts
i agree with you southernx , not to mention that dugongs are far to chewy for any commercial viability .
you could use there whiskas for guitar strings i suppose , and boil up the blubber for some oil .
WA
949 posts
I disagree dugong if cooked right can be fine food, kind of a cross between platipus and dolphin, with plenty of salted of coarse.