Watch Out for Speedboats. Divers
being struck and killed by powerboats is
an ever present issue. The latest victims
were Polish divers Jona Kosic, 45, and Wizo
Kosic, 43, who were run over by a fast-moving
powerboat near the Red Sea resort town
of Sharm el-Sheikh on April 11 and died
instantly. Besides the Red Sea, Cozumel
and the Florida Keys are other high-traffic
areas for speedboats. The most high-profile
death was that of British pop singer Kirsty
MacColl in 2000. She was diving in Cozumel
waters where watercraft were prohibited but
was struck and killed instantly by a speeding
powerboat.
Ripoff for Fiji’s Coral Harvesters. Some
Fiji villagers make a living harvesting coral
used in home aquariums, but they’re being
shortchanged by middlemen who reap the
profits. According to the Fiji Times, exporters
pay villagers $150 to $200 for coral, but
they’re recording up to $2 million in annual
profits. Some export companies are only
operated by four or five people, and all they
have to pay the Fiji government is $30 for a permit. Coral is shipped to the U.S. and Japan
and sold for around $2.50 per kilogram.
A New Fish Encyclopedia. Undercurrent reader Ken Paff (Detroit, MI) alerted us to the
Encyclopedia of Life (www.eol.org), in which
fish are the first species to be categorized. The
Web site, which launched in March, is the
brainchild of Pulitzer Prize-winning biologist
E.O. Wilson. “The long-term goal is to centralize
all available info and research – from taxonomy
to ecology to DNA sequencing – for
each of the 1.8 million species of life,” says
Paff. “That may take decades, but the good
news is that fish have jumped the line and are
the first class of animals – all 30,000 species
of them -- headed for inclusion.”
Banning Plastic Bags to Protect Reefs. American Samoa’s government is debating
a bill to ban plastic shopping bags from the
territory. Its Marine and Wildlife Resources
Department says 60 percent of corals in the
territory have been damaged or destroyed
due to runoff and plastic bags, and fish
ingesting plastic litter die from starvation
because their digestive tracts are blocked.
The bill has widespread support from
Samoan government officials and residents.