The "Wolf of Wall Street" star is at it again. He has announced another ocean of funds to help protect the Pacific Islands and the Arctic, even as he wants to improve fisheries in Europe, the U.S. and Central America. Leonardo DiCaprio's foundation will donate $2 million to Oceans 5 to fight against illegal fishing and set up marine reserves in the world's five oceans.

It follows a $3 million grant announced this year to Oceana's attempts to protect sharks, marine mammals and key ocean habitats in the Eastern Pacific. In June, DiCaprio had said that he would contribute $7 million to a marine conservation initiative in two years. "The sad truth is that less than two percent of our oceans are fully protected," DiCaprio said on Thursday. "We need to change that now," he added, according to justjared.

His Oceans 5 grant will support beneficiaries including four conservation groups . The actor called Oceans 5 an "exciting new platform" that fights to conserve marine wealth. It was started in 2011, and is a "collaborative philanthropy" that has eight foundations sharing a common inspiration for important grantmaking. Its members include: the Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, the Oak Foundation, Planet Heritage Foundation, Marisla Foundation, Waitt Foundation, Moore Charitable Foundation, Angell Family Foundation and now, DiCaprio's foundation. Oceans 5 will bring about transformation, said Ted Waitt, founder and chairman of the California-based Waitt Foundation. They can help coastal communities to fight for biodiversity.

In September, DiCaprio was named a United Nations Messenger of Peace to help promote global action on climate change. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a news conference Tuesday that the American actor "is not just one of the world's leading actors" but he has "a longstanding commitment to environmental causes," according to pagesix.com.

DiCaprio had given a long speech about global warming and the crisis that stares at us at the United Nations Climate Summit last month, telling the audience that if nothing is done about climate change "we will surely perish." Read the speech here.

He said that being an actor, he "pretended for a living." By role-playing fictitious characters, he solved a lot of problems, he said. He believed that everyone considers Climate Change as a kind of fiction on someone else's planet, as if pretending that Climate Change wasn't real so it would somehow make it go away, he said, according to designtrend.com.