Another danger of dynamite
fishing: Two German divers, a
gynecologist and his 25-year- old
son, were exploring a cave last
year in Vrula Bay in the Adriatic
Sea. A Croatian man was fishing
nearby, not with line, but with
leftover land mines. One of his
exploding mines killed both
divers, The fisherman, Dragutin
Jakovinovic pleaded guilty to causing
the deaths. He told a court,
“ Yes, I feel guilty. I was illegally fishing
with explosives close to the
bridge that connects the island of
Pag with the coast, but I did not
realize the divers were so close.
Now, I feel horrible, like I would
rather be dead instead of the
German divers.”
Got a winning photo?: If you
have a prized image taken in a
coral park, a place with good,
local protection, then your shot
may be featured in the Coral Reef
Alliance ’s 2003 calendar, the most widely distributed undersea calendar
anywhere. For details on submitting
your photo call 510 848-0110 or visit
http://www.coralreefalliance.org/photogallery/photocontest.html.
Deadline is April 1.
Swedish Meatball: After a 6 foot
groper (what the Aussies call a
grouper) wrapped his mouth around
a diver’s head, injuring him, the
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority considered relocating the
fish from his home on the wreck of
the Yongala. The Queensland groper,
estimated to be 80 years old and
nicknamed VW, attacked the
Swedish tourist on New Year’s Eve.
The groper later menaced another
diver, lunging at him. Gropers are
usually territorial but nonaggressive to
humans but the park authority
thought he may be sick or injured.
While the enormous fish could be
dangerous to diver, diver’s complaints
led to the Commission to let VW stay,
at least until further notice. Two years
ago, a fish-processing company in
Cairns found the head of a commercial
fisherman in a giant cod. The
man fell from a trawler 95km northeast
of Townsville, and his crewmates
later caught the fish that had swallowed
his remains.
Midway shuts down: The unique
deep diving operation and all tourist
operations on Midway Island in the
Pacific have closed. A federal-private
pact to maintain Midway Atoll
National Wildlife Refuge, has broken
down, revealing that the booming
notion of financing environmental
protection with tourism proceeds is
no simple solution. In a 1996 agreement,
the Navy traded “guns for
gooney birds,” turning the Navy base
over to Fish and Wildlife’s Pacific
Region, based in Portland. But the
agency had no money to run the
airstrip and buildings, let alone host
visitors. So it signed up Midway
Phoenix Corp. of Cartersville, GA., to
do so, at no cost to the government.
By attracting up to a hundred travelers
a week who would pay to dive,
birdwatch, visit historic sites, fish,
snorkel and help biologists, Midway
Phoenix figured it could pay for the
upkeep. However, few people wanted
to shell out $600 for the three- hour
flight from Honolulu, plus $100 per
day to stay in a barracks-turned-hotel.
Occupancy ran at less than half of
capacity. REEF has a diving trip
planned in August and has been told
by the government that it hopes diving
will be operable by then, but it
seems like a long shot.