THE DAILY CATCH brings you the best ocean and water news from around the world right to your smartphone! Stories cover a wide range of categories including Adventure, Environment, Science and Technology, and Politics concerning Oceans, Rivers, and Lakes. Frequent topics include articles on the impacts and science of climate change, ocean acidification’s causes and its impacts on the marine environment, ocean warming and what it’s doing to marine species, marine conservation, overfishing, marine debris, new technological advances in the oceanographic or meteorological fields, adventures on the high seas and exotic travel destinations, political news concerning the oceans, and marine creatures. The TerraMar Project is a non-profit organization on a mission to create a global community to give a voice to the most ignored, least explored part of our planet - the high seas. Why do we care?The ocean covers 71% of the planet, and nearly 64% of that is considered the high seas, belonging not to a single country but to all of humanity. The ocean provides half the oxygen we breathe and absorbs half of the carbon dioxide emissions created by fossil fuels. The fishing industry employs 200 million people--97% of which call a developing nation home--and provides the primary source of protein for more than a billion people. But 87% of fisheries are considered exploited, overexploited or collapsed, the oceans have been acidifying at an alarming rate from the carbon they are absorbing which is threatening ecosystems worldwide, and marine debris in the form of plastics is killing millions of ocean creatures annually and is finding its way into our very diets as a result of its ingestion by fish throughout the food chain.The TerraMar Project is using the power of our community to be a catalyst for positive, meaningful change for the ocean. Through engagement, education, and advocacy, we are raising the profile of the ocean in peoples lives and THE DAILY CATCH is an important piece of this puzzle. Learn more about us at http://theterramarproject.org and stay informed on the most important things happening on our oceans, rivers, and lakes by subscribing today!