Your Toothpaste May Be Killing Marine Life. The
minuscule plastic "microbeads" often found in soap
and toothpaste are harmful to sea life. That's because
each day, consumers wash these minuscule bits down
the drain by the ton, where they travel into the oceans
and end up in the gullets of fish, turtles, marine mammals
and sea birds. Microbeads are found in many
top brands, including Crest toothpaste, Axe shower
gels, Neutrogena skin care products, and face and
body scrubs made for The Body Shop, Rite Aid and
Estee Lauder. Now both countries and companies are
cracking down on microbeads. Unilever and Colgate-
Palmolive have stopped using microbeads; Procter &
Gamble and Johnson & Johnson say they will follow in
2017. And last month, both houses of Congress passed
the Microbead-Free Waters Act of 2015, which will
prohibit the manufacture of "rinse-off" cosmetics with
microbeads as of 2016, ban their use in cosmetics starting
in 2018, and prohibit their use in over-the-counter
drugs from 2019.
What's This Poisonous Tropical Snake Doing in
California? Venomous yellow-bellied sea snakes are
rarely spotted in California's cold waters, but a dead
one was found last month at Bolsa Chica State Beach
in Southern California during a beach cleanup. The
species, which can stay underwater up to three hours
and can reach lengths of 35 inches, has only been
seen in California two other times: once in October
and once in the 1970s. Because these sea snakes normally
inhabit tropical swaths of the Pacific and Indian
Oceans, this rare sighting "could obviously be weather-
related," Harvey Lillywhite, a sea snake expert
at the University of Florida, told National Geographic
News. They occasionally drift up to colder latitudes
on warm currents, particularly during strong El Niño
years, like this one. Still, California waters remain too
cold for the animals to breed there, so they can't become
established, says Lillywhite, and there's no reason to panic.
"When these animals are in their natural habitat, they
don't tend to be aggressive, they'll just swim away."
Shark Attack in UNESCO Dive Site. Fernando de
Noronha, a protected marine reserve off Brazil's northeastern
coast, saw its first shark attack. A shark ripped off the
forearm of a 33-year-old man while on a dive trip in the
UNESCO world heritage site on December 22. Luckily, he
was in stable condition and quickly underwent surgery on
the mainland. The news portal GL said a marine biologist
and a shark expert were authorized to carry out a dive to try
to establish which species of shark attacked the diver. The
Brazilian state of Pernambuco, where Fernando de Noronha
is, has seen 60 shark attacks since 1992, including 24 deadly
ones, according to Brazil's Shark Attack Monitoring Center.
Let's Hope Not. Captain Larry Salkin of the Tampa Bay
Water Taxi Co. has been offering dolphin tours for nearly
eight years, and he has discovered that dolphins in Tampa
Bay are most excited by the album Yanni from the Acropolis and swing music. "For some reason, they seem to be attracted
to it," he says. "When I play other music, they don't pay
attention." A writer who went with Salkin on a dolphin tour
confirmed it, stating, "Sure enough, more than a dozen dolphins
began circling the boat when Yanni began playing on
the stereo." Salkin says, "First time it happened, I said, 'no
big deal.' Second time, it caught my curiosity. The third time
kind of confirmed it." We're embarrassed for the dolphins.
Congratulations, Maurine Shimlock. The veteran
underwater photographer -- and frequent Undercurrent contributor
-- now has a fish named after her. Marine biologists
Gerald Allen and Mark Erdmann, authors of the prolific Reef
Fish of the East Indies, have named a lovely yellow and blue
damselfish recently discovered in Indonesia's West Papua
region Chrysiptera maurinae in Shimlock's honor because
she has "zealously promoted marine conservation of
Cenderwasih Bay and the surrounding Bird's Head region
by means of her excellent journalism and photography."