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Hark! Hark! The Shark
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Julie Adams (left) is all smiles with the blue-painted God and Godesses of the Sea that is part of a festival in the Netherlands to promote saving the world's oceans.



Not everyone can get in touch with their warm cuddly side when living in Shanghai, but Dutch environmental education campaigner Julie Adams is helping to save the environment with the help of her cuddly alter-ego Sammy the Shark.

Sammy, Adams' softer side, is a hammerhead shark who spreads the word to local school children about the perilous state of the world's oceans.

Adams slips into her cute Sammy costume and makes friends with the kids, explains to young students that sharks are a vital and endangered part of the marine eco-system and urges them not to eat shark's fin soup.

Sammy has also taken on the Shanghai marathon and Adams has dived into the shark tank to get up close and personal with the Shanghai Aquarium's tiger sharks.

These are just a couple of the many educational initiatives of Marinedream, a foundation Adams established in 2007.

The foundation provides educational programs in Chinese, English and Dutch as well as practical projects like beach cleanups to get people involved in looking after their local waterways.

"We take a soft approach, we want to get to the point where people know there are not enough fish in the ocean and not enough sharks," she says. "Then we can start to see a change of mindset," she says of her approach to environmental education.

Marinedream features four main education programs aimed at a wide range of target groups, including school children, the fishing industry and even restaurants and diners.

Its first program was Aqualife, an online platform teaching students about the ocean and rivers. Targeting youth between the ages of 10 and 15, it provides entertaining ways to learn about, and help tackle, the challenges facing the marine environment.

Marinedream also runs Free Trees, an online language game in which students can test their Chinese language skills and earn "leaves" that go toward planting trees in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

The trees are financed by Web advertising. Free Trees tries to improve language skills and help fight climate change.

Helping people make sustainable choices when eating fish is a high priority. Marinedream is working with restaurants to develop a labeling system that identifies which fish species on the menu are "sustainable to eat" and not over-fished.

Finally, the Foundation runs Aqualife Xplore that develops educational materials for fishermen and organizing beach cleanups, like the Nanhui beach litter collection in May. More than 400 volunteers from Shanghai International Studies University, Donghua and Tongji universities tied up a 2-kilometer stretch of sand.

Adams, a keen scuba diver, became interested in helping to save the world's oceans after seeing the damage to coral reefs first hand.

"When I was diving I saw so much coral reef destruction that I had to tell people about it," she says.

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