Whale Shark Rescue. In June, two whale sharks
destined for an ocean theme park in China were
rescued after an 18-month investigation by the
Wildlife Conservation Society, covered by investigative
photojournalist Paul Hilton. The operation,
supported by Indonesia's marine police, revealed
where the animals were being kept in sea pens at
Kasumba Island, Ambon, by a major supplier of
marine megafauna to the international wildlife
trade. The suspects had recommendation letters
from government authorities that allowed them to
collect and breed ornamental fish.
Fish Can Recognize Human Faces. Scientists at
Oxford University in the UK and the University of Queensland, Australia, in a recent study of archerfish,
found that fish can tell a familiar human
face from dozens of new faces. Why archerfish?
They can indicate a choice clearly (the spitting)
whereas other fish cannot. There is no ambiguity
in where they are shooting. Fish were trained by
being rewarded with a pellet of food when they got
it right. They presented the fish with the picture of
the face they wanted the fish to learn and a bunch
of new faces; up to 44 new ones. The fish were able
to pick the familiar face correctly 81 per cent of the
time.
Rebreather Reliability. The one thing that has
stopped closed-circuit rebreathers (CCR) from
being adopted by mainstream recreational divers
has been the fear of unreliability of their oxygenlevel
management. Electro-galvanic sensors are so
unreliable in the rough-and-tumble of life inside a rebreather that most units have three, each of which
need calibrating before each use and employ a computer's
voting logic to weed out the one that fails
before it results in disaster. Now Poseidon in Sweden
has come up with a solid-state sensor that uses a
completely different principle. It is factory calibrated
and will not expire, with unsurpassed shelf life,
operational time and stability -- sufficient to revolutionize
CCR design.
High Power Battery Warning. Subscriber Michael
J. Millet told us that both his strobes blew out after
he swapped to high-capacity 2450 mAh batteries.
Inon, the manufacturer of underwater photography
strobes, advises against the use of higher-power
rechargeable batteries because of the heat they
generate. Warranties can be invalidated. Eneloop
1.2v1900 mAh NiMH batteries are recommended.
We get other reports from those who use Sea & Sea
strobes that they, too, might fail in combination with
higher output rechargeables.
All Change at Malpelo. One of the most amazing
big fish destinations, part of the golden shark
triangle that makes up Malpelo, Cocos, Darwin and
Wolf in the Galapagos, might be losing its liveaboard
operators from 2018 onwards! The Colombian
government will oblige liveaboards for Malpelo to
operate out of Colombia instead of Panama, which
is certainly more complex to travel to, while safety
may be a prime issue! So only another 18 months to
discover the diving at this amazing island!
Bite Back at the Lionfish Invasion. Whole Foods
has 26 Florida stores now selling fresh lionfish in
its seafood departments. That might take a bite
out of the population of invasive species hurting
Florida's offshore reefs. It's an economically priced fish, which has 18 venomous spines, but is safe to eat
once the spines have been removed. Mild-tasting, it's
become a major restaurant item on many Caribbean
islands, the one fish that can be eaten without
worrying about reducing reef fish population...
and now it has been spotted invading the eastern
Mediterranean, expect it soon in Greek and Turkish
recipes!
Fish are Dying from Oxygen Depletion. Rising
sea temperatures driven by human-induced climate
change are causing the metabolism of marine species
to speed up, increasing their need for oxygen.
These rising temperatures cause layers of ocean
water to stratify so the more oxygen-rich surface
waters are less able to mix with oxygen-poorer
waters deeper in the ocean. With oxygen declining,
it's becoming harder for marine life to breathe.
Researchers reckon by 2030 to 2040, climate-driven
declines in oxygen levels will be detectable in all the
oceans; it's detectable today in the southern Indian
Ocean and the eastern tropical Pacific. Clearly,
all fish are in trouble. (Source: Scientific American/
Environment & Energy Publishing/Global Biogeochemical
Cycles)
Oldest Married Divers? Guinness World
Records has a category for oldest married scuba
dive, but doesn't appear to identify a current record
holder. Alabama born Lucy Bunkley-Williams, 67,
and Ernest H. "Bert" Williams, 69, both retired
marine biologists, intend to change that this summer,
off the coast of Puerto Rico. While we wish
them well, we'd comment that they don't appear to
be very old and would hazard the guess that there
might be a more elderly married couple among
Undercurrent subscribers. Let us know if you are older
and actively diving or know of a couple.