Golfers to Displace Divers: A
developer plans to build a gated community
and golf course on Guana
Cay, Bahamas. Dive Guana operator
Troy Albury, who heads the Save
Guana Cay Reef Association, has sued
the Bahamian prime minister for
leasing more than 100 acres of public
land to help the Discovery Land
Company. The association argues that
golf course fertilizers will get washed
into the water and destroy the reef
and there are no plans to protect the nesting grounds of green and loggerhead
turtles. Marine biologist James
Risk says the development would be
the death of the reef within three
years. Help them out. Go to www.saveguanacayreef.com.
Cut Your Engines; You’re
Freaking out the Fish. Engine noise
stresses fish, says Lidia Wysocki at
the University of Vienna. She played
recorded Danube underwater ship
noise at the underwater volume, 153 decibels, to Danube lab fish, then
measured the amount of cortisol, a
stress marker, released through the
fishes’ gills. They also tested no noise
and white noise at 156 decibels. Fish
exposed to ship noise secreted significantly
more cortisol than those
exposed to either no noise or white
noise. Fish exposed to white noise
had normal cortisol levels. Wysocki
suggests that fish can probably adapt
to constant white noise. But unexpected
and unpredictable ship noise may trigger stress and affect growth, sexual
maturation, and survival. Hey, Cayman
Cowboy: maybe this is why there are fewer
fish. (Biological Conservation, vol 128, p 501
and New Scientist, January 21, 2006)
Or Offer the Fish Zinfandel: There’s
evidence that red wine contributes to a
longer life for humans — and even fish.
Italian scientist Alessandro Cellerino fed
lab fish a component of red wine — resveratrol
— known to prolong the life of
flies and nematode worms. The lowest
dose had no effect, fish on the medium
dose lived a third longer; those on the
highest dose lived 60 per cent longer. At
12 weeks, when all abstaining fish were
dead, those on the highest dose had the
physical and mental agility of a young
fish. “It wouldn’t
hurt to drink one
or two glasses of
wine a day,” says
Cellerino. Divers,
bring a decent
Zin, not Cheez
Whiz. (Current
Biology, vol 16,
p 296 and New
Scientist, February 11, 2006)
You Can’t Always Believe the
Chapbook: I try to weed out love or hate
missives from the Chapbook. One phony
comment did make it into print: Dive Komodo, page 410. I’ve since learned
that a Mr. Heighes, who wrote the report,
is an employee of Dive Komodo. Consider
his report to be an advertisement —
unpaid for, unsolicited, and unwanted.
Bananarama Shapes Up: Last
October, we gave a thumbs down to
Bananarama Resort & Diving Center,
Roatan, Honduras, for enforcing an arbitrary
45-minute bottom time for divers,
claiming it was island policy and everyone
else did it. Perhaps our item did a bit of
good, since Bananarama’s owner/manager
Ron Smith informs us that divers are
no longer restricted to 45-minute bottom
times, and our readers have reported
recently that they’re getting long dives.
Thumbs up!
Driving a Boxfish: While divers
spend hours marveling
at cute boxfishes,
Mercedes
designers marveled
at how they
swim — and why
they have evolved
such a seemingly inefficient shape. Once
they figured it out, they crafted their
Bionic concept car in the shape of a boxfish,
which, it turns out, sets a new automotive
standard for slippery, when dry.