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Facebook page too ( www.facebook.com/Undercurrent.org ). If you're a Facebook user, "Like" us.
We'll be posting dive-related news articles, alert
you when our latest blog posts and monthly issue is
available, and asking for your stories, suggestions,
tips and feedback. We promise not to clog your
Facebook news feed with multiple posts -- only the
best and most relevant stuff. We're just starting
the page so bear with us if there are technical difficulties
to start, but we hope our new page is another
good way to give you what you like to get from us.
$25,000 to Hire Jean-Michel Cousteau for a
Speech? Keppler Speakers is a booking agent for
high-profile people to get paid speaking to everyone
from college students to corporate executives.
They list fees for each of their celebrities on its website,
so we took a gander to see what celebrities in
the marine field are charging. Jean Michel Cousteau
gets between $20,000 and $30,000 for every speech,
while his son, Fabien, and daughter, Celine, both
charge under $10,000. Robert Ballard, known for
discovering the Titanic, also charges in the $25,000
range, while Joseph MacInnis, just a consultant
on the Titanic discovery team but the first to dive
under the North Pole, charges between $10,000 and
$20,000. It's nice to know that a diving career can
earn the big bucks.
Travel like an Ivy Leaguer on Your Next Dive
Trip. Meaning wear shoes but no socks. Researchers
at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine found that mosquitoes infected with the
malaria parasite are significantly more attracted to
human odors -- in this case smelly socks -- than are
uninfected mosquitoes. They collected human odor
on nylon socks -- by having someone wear them for 20 hours -- and put them, along with clean socks, into
an enclosure with mosquitoes. The bugs infected with
P. falciparum showed more landings and more probing of
the smelly socks. None of the mosquitoes, infected or not,
were especially drawn to the socks with no human odor.
Dolphin as Midwife? A pregnant woman and her
husband have traveled to Hawaii where they plan on
having a "dolphin-assisted birth." Heather Barrington,
27, and her husband Adam, 29, of South Carolina, are
preparing for the July arrival of their first child through
a series of prenatal and postnatal swims with a pod of
dolphins at the Sirius Institute in Pohoa, HI. The institute
recently set up the Dolphin Attended, Water, Natural
and Gentle Birth Center due to what they claim is an
increasing demand on its website for people looking
to give birth near dolphins. It claims that giving birth
with dolphins is part of an ancient Hawaiian practice.
Dolphin-assisted therapy has been used for more than
25 years in people with mental and physical disabilities
and autism, according to Medical Daily, although there's
little research showing that it's therapeutically effective.
Still, water births have shown benefits -- less pain for
the mom, more oxygen for the baby -- so we'll have to
see how it goes for Barrington when dolphins are added
to the mix.
Why Do We Call Them Jellyfish? After reading our
book There's a Cockroach in my Regulator, Robert Goodman
(Pittsburgh, PA) wrote in to say he enjoyed it, but he
also had this question. Why do you always use the term
'jellyfish'? They are not fish. Fish are chordates, and sea
jellies belong to the phylum cteophora and cnidaria. Do
you just dislike using the terms 'sea jellies' or 'jellies'?"
Robert, you are indeed right. "Jellyfish" is considered a
misnomer, and "jellies" and "sea jellies" are listed quite
often in public aquariums and scientific literature. We're
probably going along with jellyfish because it has been
the most "popular " name for the creatures since the late
18th century. Or maybe we can refer to them, like some
scientists do, as "gelatinous zooplankton."