If you want to catch a fish, plant a Tree.
Phytoplankton, too small to be seen, are vital to all the life on the planet. They are abundant in the oceans and turn sunlight into food for sea dwelling creatures. Fulvic acid, produced from the break down of organic matter in the Humus of forests, chelates with the iron particles and washes down stream to the ocean to feed the phytoplankton to multiply.
Katsuhiko Matsunaga, a Japanese marine chemist studied the decline of the fishing industry off the coast of Japan after the massive amounts of deforestation had occurred. "When Forests Disappear the Sea Dies", is one of his papers.
"These are the understated and poorly researched roles that Trees and Forests play in maintaining and enhancing the biosphere that earns them the term "ecotechnology". Nothing that the human enterprise does can come anywhere near the elegance and efficiency of a robust global forest." Jim Robbins, 'The Man Who Plants Trees'.
Katsuhiko Matsunaga, a Japanese marine chemist studied the decline of the fishing industry off the coast of Japan after the massive amounts of deforestation had occurred. "When Forests Disappear the Sea Dies", is one of his papers.
"These are the understated and poorly researched roles that Trees and Forests play in maintaining and enhancing the biosphere that earns them the term "ecotechnology". Nothing that the human enterprise does can come anywhere near the elegance and efficiency of a robust global forest." Jim Robbins, 'The Man Who Plants Trees'.