38 results
 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  Wildlife Conservation Society,  WWF

A strategy for the conservation of biodiversity on mid-ocean ridges

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  Wildlife Conservation Society,  WWF

SHARKS and RAYS of PAPUA NEW GUINEA

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

PNG National Fisheries Authority

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  SPREP,  SPC,  WCPFC

Ocean resources and impact of climate change

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  SPREP Environmental Monitoring and Governance (EMG)

Cleaner Pacific

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Dolphins and whales of Bismarch sea

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Shipping traffic on marine mammals

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Lae Port Development

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

COMMERCIALLY IMPORTANT SEA CUCUMBERS OF THE WORLD

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  PNG Department of National Planning & Monitoring,  PNG Department of Agriculture and Livestock

Papua New Guinea (PNG) has long been a site of analysis for exploring the links between natural resources and conflict, having been cited as an example in prominent studies of the ‘natural resource curse’ and used as a source of learning in international debates on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Over the past decade, this scholarship has expanded to encompass conflict analysis and peace building. This paper considers four themes identified in the contemporary literature, each with reference to examples drawn from PNG: 1) the costs

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Rapid Marine Biodiversity Assessment of Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea—Survey II (2000)

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Fisheries

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Coral Triangle documents

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  PNG Forestry Authority,  PNG Department of Agriculture and Livestock,  Climate Change and Development Authority in PNG

Biodiversity Conservation of terrestrial and amrine ecosystems

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 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea ,  PNG Forestry Authority,  PNG Department of National Planning & Monitoring,  PNG Department of Works & Implementation,  PNG Department of Agriculture and Livestock,  Climate Change and Development Authority in PNG

Climate change and migration

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Bismarck Sea rapid assessment

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

National Ocean Policy 2020

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority,   National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea (PNG) has a total land area of 462,000 square kilometers (km2), making
it the largest Pacific island country. Its exclusive economic zone at 3.12 million km2 is the
world’s second largest. The country’s sparsely distributed population of only 7 million
makes PNG’s population density of approximately 9 people per km2 the lowest in the South
Pacific.
PNG’s principal marine and coastal ecosystems include 13,840 km2 of coral reefs, 4,200 km2
of mangrove swamp forests, and extensive seagrass beds. The country is home to at least 500