Guam Dive Safety Concerns. The
island’s Visitors Bureau and members of its
dive community say small dive shops may be
putting tourists underwater without proper
training or certified instructors. In October,
a dive instructor and two divers he’d taken
to Fish Eye Marine Park had to be rushed to
the hospital after running out of air on the
dive. Micronesian Divers Association instructor
coordinator Chris Bangs told the Pacific
Daily News he has seen dive companies giving
novices a dangerously abridged lesson before
their first dives. “Some just stuff them in a
van, drive them to the [dive sites] and tell
them, ‘Here, stick this in your mouth.’ They
don’t get a formal certifying agency course.”
The Guam Divers Industry Association wants
to be given authority to inspect and license
the dive operators.
Fish with Heart Disease. If there needs
to be another reason why divers should stop
feeding fish junk like Cheez Whiz, this is it.
To understand how heart disease develops,
scientists at the UC San Diego School of
Medicine gave zebrafish a high-cholesterol
diet (young ones are transparent, so it’s
easy to see what happens to their blood vessels).
Just like in humans, the fishes’ artery
walls thickened and hardened as a result of fat deposits, and they grew “little fat fish
stomachs.” To reduce the effects, researchers
added the cholesterol-lowering drug Zetia to
the fish tank water, and they could literally
see that the medication greatly reduced thickening
of the zebrafishes’ arteries.
Thai Dive Boat Capsizes, Killing Six. Search teams have recovered the bodies of
four European divers, one Japanese diver
and the Thai cook on the Choke Somboon 19,
which sank on March 8, 12 miles off the coast
of Phuket. The boat, operated by Dive Asia,
was returning to the resort town from a dive
trip near the Similan Islands when it capsized
during a storm. The five divers were trapped
in their cabins when the boat capsized; the
other 23 divers onboard were rescued shortly
after the boat sank. The cook’s body was
found floating on the surface four days later
and 12 miles away.
Judge Favors Reefs Over Beach. Judge
Robert E. Meale ruled to deny the town of
Palm Beach a permit for a beach-erosion project,
saying officials failed to assure that the
project wouldn’t cause coastal damage. Palm
Beach wants to dredge 700,000 cubic yards
of sand from offshore to rebuild beaches, but
Meale agreed with petitioners that the project
would cover reefs and harm marine life, and
that reef protection is a “matter of exceptional
regulatory concern.”