Divers, Leave Your Spearguns at Home. Or place them
in your checked luggage, but for God's sake, don't try to
bring them on a plane. A passenger flying to Antigua from
Newark airport learned that lesson the hard way when a
TSA screener discovered a 21-inch speargun and utility
knife in his carry-on. The authorities were called in to question
the guy, who claimed to be unaware that spearguns
were prohibited. It's unknown whether he and his speargun
made the flight.
Speaking of Guns. An underwater gun is on the
Department of Defense's wish list of weapons. Its Non-
Lethal Weapons Reference Book was leaked online last month by
PublicIntelligence.org, and it describes dozens of weapons
-- some already in use, others in development or still fantasy.
Currently in development is the "Impulse Swimmer
Gun," which uses pulsed sound waves to cause "auditory
impairment and/or nausea" among divers engaged in
"unauthorized underwater activities."
Another Knock Against Shark Fin Soup. It's a deadly
threat to the human brain. A study in the journal Marine
Drugs reports high concentrations of the neurotoxin BMAA,
linked to Alzheimer's and Lou Gehrig's disease, in shark fins. University of Miami researchers tested seven species
of shark, including blacktip, bull and hammerhead
(they clipped tiny fin samples off their living subjects so
not to harm them). Says co-author Deborah Mash, "The
BMAA concentrations in the samples are a cause of
concern, not only in shark fin soup but also in dietary
supplements and other forms ingested by humans."
A Gadget Liveaboards Should Carry. We think
they should consider adding night-vision goggles to
their search and rescue gear. They worked for the
Coast Guard last month while searching for a 46-yearold
diver in Hawaii. He went diving with friends in a
private boat off Kaena Point around noon on February
19, but got swept away by the current. Thirteen hours
later, a Coast Guard helicopter crew using night-vision
goggles found him in the dark ocean, in good condition
thanks to his drysuit.
U.S. Sets Catch Limits on Caribbean Fish. The federal
government is now imposing limits on the number
of fish that can be caught in the Caribbean waters it
controls, saying previous restrictions haven't protected
dwindling populations of multiple species. The new
limits cover waters off Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin
Islands, and the Coast Guard is expected to enforce
annual catch limits with help from local authorities.