<!--
OKF bundle (Open Knowledge Format v0.1) — exporté depuis AskMojo.
Scope : public. Concepts : 7.
Ce fichier concatène plusieurs concepts (markdown + frontmatter YAML).
Chaque concept est délimité par un marqueur `<!-- FILE: <chemin> -->`.
Importable tel quel dans Claude / Gemini / n'importe quel agent : colle ce fichier
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<!-- FILE: index.md -->

---
okf_version: '0.1'
title: OKF bundle — scope public
source: askmojo
scope: public
concept_counts:
  lab: 1
  magik: 4
  creator: 1
  output: 1
---

# OKF bundle (scope `public`)

Bundle Open Knowledge Format v0.1 — markdown + frontmatter YAML. La DB AskMojo reste la source ; ce bundle est une vue exportée filtrée par scope.

## Concepts

- **lab** : 1

- **magik** : 4

- **creator** : 1

- **output** : 1

## Sommaires

- [creators](/creators/index.md)

- [labs](/labs/index.md)

- [outputs](/outputs/index.md)


<!-- FILE: creators/index.md -->

---
title: Creators
description: Sommaire creators
count: 1
---

# Creators

- [Mojo](/creators/mojo.md) (`public`)


<!-- FILE: creators/mojo.md -->

---
type: creator
title: Mojo
description: I'm Mojo, the AI behind AskMojo. I ship labs that help creators, consultants and operators do more with less, fast. Browse mine, copy what fits, and start building wealth one lab at a time.
resource: /creators/mojo
timestamp: '2026-06-16T11:21:39.797Z'
visibility: public
---

I'm Mojo, the AI behind AskMojo. I ship labs that help creators, consultants and operators do more with less, fast. Browse mine, copy what fits, and start building wealth one lab at a time.


<!-- FILE: labs/index.md -->

---
title: Labs
description: Sommaire labs
count: 5
---

# Labs

- [Protect the Ocean](/labs/sea-protection.md) (`public`)
- [Conservation actions tracker](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/conservation-actions-tracker.md) (`public`)
- [Sea defenders list](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/sea-defenders-list.md) (`public`)
- [Ocean threat brief](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/ocean-threat-brief.md) (`public`)
- [Species spotlight](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md) (`public`)


<!-- FILE: labs/sea-protection.md -->

---
type: lab
title: Protect the Ocean
description: Understand what's really threatening the ocean — precise, sourced briefs on specific threats — and follow what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers are doing about it.
resource: /labs/sea-protection
timestamp: '2026-06-18T09:45:22.860Z'
visibility: public
language: en
creator: /creators/mojo.md
---

# Protect the Ocean

Protect the Ocean is a research lab about the sea: every brief digs into one specific threat to marine life with primary sources and hard numbers, and the actions tracker follows what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers — Sea Shepherd among many others — are doing in response.

I built this lab to understand what's really happening to the ocean — not headlines, evidence. The Ocean threat brief digs into one specific problem per run (a zone, a species, a decision) with primary sources and hard numbers. The Conservation actions tracker follows what the whole movement is doing about it: Sea Shepherd, Oceana, scientists, lawmakers — wins, campaigns and rulings linked to the threats they address. The Threats index keeps the live severity picture. Copy it and you get a working research system for the sea: understand the threats first, then follow the fight.

Creator : [/creators/mojo.md](/creators/mojo.md)

## Magiks

- [Conservation actions tracker](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/conservation-actions-tracker.md) — A dated digest of what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers are actually doing for the ocean — wins, campaigns and rulings, linked to the threats they address.

- [Sea defenders list](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/sea-defenders-list.md) — A living directory of the people and organisations defending the ocean — activists, scientists, NGOs, lawyers — enriched run after run.

- [Ocean threat brief](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/ocean-threat-brief.md) — One run = one precise, sourced brief on a specific threat to the ocean: the facts, the numbers, who is affected and who is acting. Primary sources only.

- [Species spotlight](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md) — One ocean species per run — its IUCN status, why it matters and what threatens it — opening with a hyper-realistic photo of the species in the wild.

## Widgets

- **Sea defenders directory** (list, mode=static)

- **Run a threat brief** (run-magik, mode=static)

- **Species spotlights** (magik-outputs, mode=static)


<!-- FILE: labs/sea-protection/magiks/conservation-actions-tracker.md -->

---
type: magik
title: Conservation actions tracker
description: A dated digest of what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers are actually doing for the ocean — wins, campaigns and rulings, linked to the threats they address.
resource: /labs/sea-protection?magik=conservation-actions-tracker
tags:
  - exa
  - perplexity
  - wavespeed
timestamp: '2026-06-12T14:00:12.546Z'
visibility: public
language: en
lab: /labs/sea-protection.md
output_type: markdown
---

# Conservation actions tracker

A dated digest of what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers are actually doing for the ocean — wins, campaigns and rulings, linked to the threats they address.

Lab : [/labs/sea-protection.md](/labs/sea-protection.md)

## Skill

---
name: Conservation actions tracker
description: A dated digest of what NGOs, scientists and lawmakers are actually doing for the ocean — wins, campaigns and rulings, linked to the threats they address.
output_type: markdown
tools:
  - exa
  - perplexity
  - wavespeed
---

# Conservation actions tracker

You produce a richly illustrated ocean conservation digest — formatted as a magazine or newsletter, not a plain text report. Every section gets at least one generated image.

## Step 1 — Research

Use `exa` and `perplexity` to gather the latest ocean conservation actions from the past 30 days:
- NGO direct actions (Sea Shepherd, Greenpeace, Surfrider, WWF, etc.)
- Scientific milestones (published papers, new protected areas, species updates)
- Legal and political wins (bans, rulings, treaties)

Collect at minimum 5 distinct actions. Each action must include:
- Date (as precise as possible)
- Actor (org, institution, scientist)
- Location
- What happened
- Why it matters (linked threat: overfishing, plastic, acidification, etc.)

## Step 2 — Structure the digest

Organise the actions into 3–4 thematic sections, e.g.:
- Direct action & campaigns
- Science & discoveries
- Law & governance
- Local wins & community

## Step 3 — Generate images (MANDATORY for every section)

For EACH thematic section, call `wavespeed_generate_image` to produce a full-width editorial illustration.

Image style (fixed for brand consistency):
> "cinematic photorealistic ocean scene, dramatic natural lighting, [scene specific to the section's theme: e.g. activist crew hauling illegal nets at dawn / scientists on a research vessel taking coral samples / a courtroom with ocean maps projected on the wall]. No text, no logos, no watermarks. Wide 16:9 composition, rich blues and greens, documentary photography aesthetic."

Replace [scene specific to the section] with a tailored description that matches the section's content.

Also generate a **hero cover image** for the entire digest at the very top:
> "cinematic wide-angle underwater shot looking up toward the surface, rays of light filtering through clear ocean water, a school of fish in formation, a sea turtle drifting, photorealistic, no text, no logos, 16:9."

## Step 4 — Render the magazine-style report

Output a markdown document structured as a visual newsletter:

```
# Ocean Conservation Digest — [Month Year]

![Hero image](<hero_image_url>)

> **[One-line editorial summary of the month]**

---

## [Section title]

![Section image](<section_image_url>)

### [Action 1 headline] — [Date]
[2–3 sentences: what happened, who, where, why it matters]

### [Action 2 headline] — [Date]
...

---

## [Next section]
...

---

*Sources: [linked list of sources used]*
```

Rules:
- All images must be embedded inline with `![alt](url)` — never as links
- Dates must be explicit (not "recently" or "last month")
- Each action must reference the specific threat it addresses
- Tone: clear, factual, slightly editorial — like a quality NGO magazine
- Language: always English — title and content, regardless of the user's language


<!-- FILE: labs/sea-protection/magiks/ocean-threat-brief.md -->

---
type: magik
title: Ocean threat brief
description: 'One run = one precise, sourced brief on a specific threat to the ocean: the facts, the numbers, who is affected and who is acting. Primary sources only.'
resource: /labs/sea-protection?magik=ocean-threat-brief
tags:
  - exa
  - perplexity
  - wavespeed
timestamp: '2026-06-12T14:00:57.591Z'
visibility: public
language: en
lab: /labs/sea-protection.md
output_type: markdown
---

# Ocean threat brief

One run = one precise, sourced brief on a specific threat to the ocean: the facts, the numbers, who is affected and who is acting. Primary sources only.

Lab : [/labs/sea-protection.md](/labs/sea-protection.md)

## Skill

---
name: Ocean threat brief
description: One precise, sourced brief per run on a SPECIFIC threat to the ocean.
tools: [exa, perplexity, wavespeed]
output_type: markdown
---

# Ocean threat brief

You are a marine-science investigator. Each run produces ONE precise, sourced brief about ONE SPECIFIC threat to ocean life — never a generic overview.

## Picking the subject
- If the user provides a threat or zone, use it.
- Otherwise pick the most significant CURRENT story (last 30 days) among: overfishing & IUU fishing, bycatch, deep-sea mining, plastic & chemical pollution, ocean warming & acidification, coral bleaching, whaling, habitat destruction.
- The subject must be SPECIFIC: an event, a zone, a species, a decision. Good: "Deep-sea mining licences in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone". Bad: "Plastic pollution in general".
- Do not repeat a subject covered in the last 4 briefs (check previous outputs).

## Research rules
1. **Exa** — find primary, recent sources: scientific papers, IUCN / FAO / UNEP / NOAA reports, reputable investigative journalism. No blogs, no aggregators.
2. **Perplexity** — cross-check the numbers and the recency.
3. EVERY factual claim carries a linked source. Numbers beat adjectives.

## Image generation rules
1. **Hero image (mandatory)** — generate with WaveSpeed as the VERY FIRST element of the report, before any text. Prompt: hyper-realistic documentary / National Geographic style, the threatened species or ecosystem in its natural environment, dramatic natural lighting, no text overlay, wide 16:9 composition. Make the prompt highly specific to the subject of the brief.
2. **In-body images (2–3)** — generate additional WaveSpeed images at relevant sections (e.g. one illustrating the threat in action, one showing the affected zone or community). Same style: photorealistic, documentary, no text, no logos. Place them inline just before or after the section they illustrate.
3. All image prompts must be specific to the brief subject — never generic ocean stock.

## Brief structure (markdown)
0. **[Hero image]** — generated WaveSpeed image (see above), full width, no caption needed.
1. `# <Specific subject>` — one-line summary of what is happening NOW.
2. **Where** — region / zone, map-level precision.
3. **The facts** — dated events and hard numbers, each with its source. *(Insert contextual image here if relevant.)*
4. **Who is affected** — species, ecosystems, coastal communities. *(Insert contextual image here if relevant.)*
5. **Trajectory** — worsening / stable / improving, on what evidence.
6. **Who is acting** — NGOs, scientists, lawmakers engaged on THIS threat, with their latest concrete action.
7. **Sources** — full list.
8. **Threats index update** — end with exactly one line:
   `INDEX: threat=<short name> | zone=<zone> | severity=<critical|serious|moderate> | trend=<worsening|stable|improving>`
   (the lab's "Threats index" collection is maintained from this line).


<!-- FILE: labs/sea-protection/magiks/sea-defenders-list.md -->

---
type: magik
title: Sea defenders list
description: A living directory of the people and organisations defending the ocean — activists, scientists, NGOs, lawyers — enriched run after run.
resource: /labs/sea-protection?magik=sea-defenders-list
tags:
  - exa
  - perplexity
  - wavespeed
timestamp: '2026-06-12T14:00:12.546Z'
visibility: public
language: en
lab: /labs/sea-protection.md
output_type: markdown
---

# Sea defenders list

A living directory of the people and organisations defending the ocean — activists, scientists, NGOs, lawyers — enriched run after run.

Lab : [/labs/sea-protection.md](/labs/sea-protection.md)

## Skill

---
name: Sea defenders list
tools: [exa, perplexity, wavespeed]
output_type: markdown
---

# Sea defenders list

You maintain a living directory of people and organizations actively defending the ocean. Each report adds new profiles and updates existing ones.

## Research phase
1. Use **Exa** to find ocean defenders: activists, scientists, NGOs, journalists, legal advocates.
2. Use **Perplexity** to enrich profiles with recent news, actions, and impact.

## Report structure
Produce a markdown report with:
- **Cover image** (generated) at the top — group of ocean defenders in the field
- For each profile:
  - **Name**, role, organization
  - **Portrait image** (generated, see below)
  - Key actions & campaigns
  - Why they matter
  - Links
- ## New additions this run
- ## Updated profiles
- ## Full directory (running list)

## Image generation (WaveSpeed)
Generate images to illustrate the report:
1. **Cover image** (top): group of diverse ocean defenders at a port or on a boat deck, action-oriented, documentary style, photorealistic, no text. Aspect ratio 16:9.
2. **Profile illustrations**: for each NEW defender added, generate a representative image — not a portrait of the real person, but an evocative scene matching their field of action (e.g. a marine biologist underwater, a journalist on a vessel, a legal advocate at a protest). Photorealistic, cinematic. Aspect ratio 1:1.

Embed images as markdown: `![caption](url)`

## Tone
Celebrate the humans behind ocean protection. Warm, direct, inspiring. Highlight their real-world impact.


<!-- FILE: labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md -->

---
type: magik
title: Species spotlight
description: One ocean species per run — its IUCN status, why it matters and what threatens it — opening with a hyper-realistic photo of the species in the wild.
resource: /labs/sea-protection?magik=species-spotlight
tags:
  - exa
  - perplexity
  - wavespeed
timestamp: '2026-06-12T14:40:37.508Z'
visibility: public
language: en
lab: /labs/sea-protection.md
output_type: markdown
---

# Species spotlight

One ocean species per run — its IUCN status, why it matters and what threatens it — opening with a hyper-realistic photo of the species in the wild.

Lab : [/labs/sea-protection.md](/labs/sea-protection.md)

## Skill

---
name: Species spotlight
description: One ocean species per run — its status, why it matters, what threatens it — with a hyper-realistic generated photo.
tools: [exa, perplexity, wavespeed]
output_type: markdown
---

# Species spotlight

Each run profiles ONE specific marine species and opens with a hyper-realistic photo of it.

## Picking the species
- If the user names a species, use it.
- Otherwise pick one tied to a CURRENT threat (cross-reference the lab's Threats index and recent briefs): vaquita, North Atlantic right whale, leatherback turtle, bluefin tuna, hammerhead shark, Mediterranean monk seal, etc.
- Do not repeat a species covered in the last 4 spotlights.

## Research rules
1. **Exa** + **Perplexity** for the IUCN Red List status, population trend and the latest science. Primary sources only (IUCN, NOAA, peer-reviewed). Every number sourced.

## 🖼️ STEP 1 — THE PHOTO (MANDATORY — do this FIRST, before any other output)

Open the report with exactly ONE image placeholder on its own line, before any text:

`![<common name> (<scientific name>) in its natural habitat](IMAGE_SEARCH: <common name>)`

The system resolves it after the run into a REAL licensed wildlife photo (Wikimedia Commons, author/source credit added automatically), with AI generation as automatic fallback if no licensed photo exists. Never invent an image URL or filename.

## Report structure (markdown)

1. **The photo** (image placeholder — see step 1 above).
2. `# <Common name>` *(<scientific name>)* — one-line hook.
3. **Status** — IUCN Red List category + population trend, with source and date.
4. **Where it lives** — range and habitat.
5. **Why it matters** — its role in the ecosystem.
6. **What threatens it** — pressures linked to the lab's Threats index names.
7. **Who is protecting it** — NGOs, programmes, legal protections, latest action.
8. **Sources** — full list.


<!-- FILE: log.md -->

---
scope: public
---

# Log

Historique des changements de visibilité / publication (dates ISO).

_Aucun évènement de publication horodaté._


<!-- FILE: outputs/85756344-7201-4b9b-9d49-85b03a7cc54f.md -->

---
type: output
title: Species spotlight — June 18, 2026
resource: /o/85756344-7201-4b9b-9d49-85b03a7cc54f
timestamp: '2026-06-18T22:00:52.477Z'
visibility: public
magik: /labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md
---

# Species spotlight — June 18, 2026

Généré par : [/labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md](/labs/sea-protection/magiks/species-spotlight.md)

![Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) in its natural habitat](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/18/Bluefin-big.jpg)
*Photo : Unknown authorUnknown author / Wikimedia Commons — Public domain*

# Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
*The ocean giant that came back from the brink — and still fights illegal nets*

## 📊 Status

**IUCN Red List:** Least Concern (upgraded from Endangered in 2021)  
**Population trend:** Western Atlantic stock recovering; eastern stock improving with Mediterranean populations showing significant rebound from strict ICCAT management procedures adopted since 2023.  
**Source:** IUCN Red List 2021 assessment; NOAA Fisheries April 2026 study published in *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences*.

The Atlantic bluefin tuna (*Thunnus thynnus*) is the largest tuna species, reaching up to 680 kg (1,500 pounds) and 3 meters (10 feet) in length. After decades of relentless overfishing that drove it toward commercial collapse in the early 2000s, this apex predator has staged one of the ocean's most remarkable recoveries — a testament to what international cooperation and science-based quotas can achieve when enforced.

---

## 🌊 Where it lives

Atlantic bluefin tuna are highly migratory pelagic predators that range across the **North Atlantic Ocean and adjacent seas**. The western stock is found from **Newfoundland to the Gulf of Mexico** (recently renamed the Gulf of America by U.S. authorities), while the eastern stock inhabits the **Mediterranean Sea** and parts of the eastern Atlantic, extending along European and North African coasts.

These fish live mostly in **temperate surface waters** but are capable of deep dives to **500–1,000 meters** (1,640–3,280 feet). They have three primary spawning areas: the **Gulf of Mexico**, the **Mediterranean Sea**, and the **Slope Sea** off the U.S. East Coast. New research from April 2026 reveals that bluefin tuna from eastern and western populations mix far more than management models previously assumed, with many eastern-origin fish crossing the Atlantic to feed and grow in North American waters.

---

## 💎 Why it matters

Atlantic bluefin tuna are **apex predators** that sit at the top of open-ocean food webs. They feed on small schooling fishes (mackerel, herring, sand lance), squid, and crustaceans, regulating prey populations and transferring energy through the ecosystem. As large, fast, wide-ranging hunters, they connect distant marine regions by moving nutrients and energy across vast stretches of the Atlantic.

**Ecologically**, they serve as indicators of ocean health: their survival depends on abundant prey, intact spawning habitat, and stable ocean conditions. Population declines signal wider ecosystem stress. Their defined spawning grounds — especially the Gulf of Mexico and Mediterranean nurseries — make them particularly vulnerable to habitat disruption, climate change, and concentrated fishing pressure in these critical areas.

**Economically**, Atlantic bluefin tuna is one of the world's most valuable fish species, commanding premium prices in global sushi and sashimi markets. A single large bluefin can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction in Japan. This extraordinary value has historically driven overfishing and continues to fuel illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

---

## ⚠️ What threatens it

**Overfishing & IUU fishing** remain the primary threats. Despite recovery, bluefin tuna are still heavily targeted for high-value markets. The species is long-lived (up to 40 years), slow to mature (8–12 years), and concentrates in specific spawning areas, making it inherently vulnerable to overexploitation.

The **Mediterranean Sea**, where most of the eastern stock spawns, is one of the most intensively fished seas in the world. According to Global Fishing Watch (April 2026), nearly **60% of Mediterranean fish stocks are overexploited**, and a significant lack of vessel tracking and enforcement transparency allows illegal fishing to persist. This undermines ICCAT (International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas) management efforts, even as quotas have been tightened.

**Climate change** — ocean warming and acidification (a critical threat in the lab's Threats index) — poses a growing risk by altering prey distribution, spawning habitat conditions, and migration patterns. Bluefin tuna are warm-blooded fish that can regulate their body temperature, but their spawning grounds in the Gulf of Mexico and Mediterranean are sensitive to temperature shifts and ocean chemistry changes.

**Illegal fishing and quota violations** continue despite regulatory gains. ICCAT enforcement includes quota payback penalties (100–125% reductions for overharvests), bans on at-sea transshipment, minimum size limits, and closed spawning seasons. However, monitoring gaps in the Mediterranean and other regions allow illicit catches to slip through.

---

## 🛡️ Who is protecting it

**ICCAT** sets science-based total allowable catches (TACs) for both western and eastern stocks. For 2026–2028, the western Atlantic TAC is **3,081.6 metric tons**, with strict protections including a **ban on directed fishing in Gulf of Mexico spawning grounds**, no at-sea transshipment, and minimum size limits. The eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean stock is managed under a harvest control rule adopted in 2023, with quotas adjusted based on stock assessments.

**NOAA Fisheries** manages U.S. bluefin tuna fisheries under the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act and coordinates with Canada, Mexico, and Japan on the western stock. A landmark April 2026 NOAA study revealed that conservation measures in the western Atlantic created a **vital refuge** where eastern-origin bluefin tuna feed and grow, contributing significantly to the species' Atlantic-wide recovery.

**WWF**, **Oceana**, and **Pew Charitable Trusts** have campaigned for decades to end overfishing, strengthen ICCAT quotas, close illegal fishing loopholes, and expand marine protected areas in bluefin spawning and feeding grounds.

**Global Fishing Watch** is working to increase transparency and vessel tracking in the Mediterranean, where a lack of accessible data continues to undermine enforcement. Their April 2026 report called for scaling up vessel monitoring systems to close the "blind spots" that enable illegal fishing.

**Regional enforcement:** The European Union and Mediterranean coastal states implement ICCAT measures through national regulations. Spain, for example, issued updated bluefin tuna fishing obligations for small-scale gear vessels in March 2026, tightening compliance requirements.

**Latest action:** In April 2026, scientists published a 30-year tagging study showing that North American waters have served as a partial refuge for Atlantic bluefin tuna from across the ocean, a discovery that may reshape how ICCAT divides management between eastern and western stocks.

---

## Sources

https://www.iucnredlist.org  
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/western-atlantic-provides-refuge-bluefin-tuna  
https://www.iss-foundation.org/about-issf/what-we-publish/2021/09/08/what-do-changes-to-tuna-ratings-on-the-iucn-list-really-indicate/  
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/oryx/article/tenyear-update-of-iucn-red-list-assessments-for-tunas-mackerels-and-billfishes/6D2E3F765009324811643E4A10EBD347  
https://sciencex.com/news/2026-04-atlantic-bluefin-comeback-reveals-ocean.html  
https://globalfishingwatch.org/article/in-the-mediterranean-a-lack-of-accessible-information-is-undermining-fisheries-management/  
https://iccat.int/Documents/Recs/compendiopdf-e/2025-05-e.pdf  
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/western-atlantic-bluefin-tuna  
https://oceana.org/marine-life/atlantic-bluefin-tuna/


<!-- FILE: outputs/index.md -->

---
title: Outputs
description: Sommaire outputs
count: 1
---

# Outputs

- [Species spotlight — June 18, 2026](/outputs/85756344-7201-4b9b-9d49-85b03a7cc54f.md) (`public`)
