The Most Whales Ever Recorded. Undercurrent was the
first dive publication to report the summer whale shark circus
happening in Mexico, between Holbox and Cancun. Scientists at
the Smithsonian recently made an accurate count of the group
north of Cancun: 420 individuals, all in search of their favorite
food, zooplankton, which is the world's smallest organism. A less
dense gathering, known as the Cabo Catoche aggregation, off
the northern tip of theYucatan, prey mostly on shrimp and small
crustaceans called copepods. Apparently, the same animals are
involved in both aggregations. Last year, Undercurrent subscribers
contributed more than $30,000 to provide buoys that keep
tankers and other ocean vessels away from these gatherings.
Diver on a Mission to Find the Dead Bin Laden. A California salavage diver is preparing a two-week trip this
month to the north Arabian Sea to make sure Osama bin
Laden is really dead. Bill Warren, 59, vows to scour the sea
bed to find the al Qaeda's leader corpse and take photographic
evidence. Warren, who has discovered more than 200 wrecks,
said he wanted to expose the truth. "I'm doing it because I am
a patriotic American who wants to know the truth. I do it for
the world." He expects to spend $400,000 for the trip, renting a
ship in India for $10,000 a day, and another $1,000 per day for a
remote-operated submarine.
More Shark Protection in Latin America. Honduras is
declaring its waters, both Pacific and Caribbean, to be a permanent
shark sanctuary. President Porfirio Lobo Sosa signed the
bill banning commerical shark fishing into law during a visit to
Roatan last month. Legislatures in Chile unanimously backed a
bill to ban shark finning in its waters; it now awaits action by the
Senate before President Piñera can sign it.
Diver's Death by Propeller. Hitomi Shibata, 22, died
instantly after her head struck a boat propellor while she
was diving near Phuket, Thailand, on May 4. She was taking
an openwater course with Kontiki Divers. Apparently,
Shibata pushed the inflator button on her BCD too hard,
causing it to inflate rapidly, carrying her headfirst into
the propeller of the dive boat, which was maneuvering to
pick up another group who had just finished their dive.
While this was diver error, when will boat captains learn to
keep their engines in neutral when there are divers down?
Moreover, what crew members failed to keep a lookout?
Terrorizing Bear Gets Away Scot Free. Brian Horch
was diving in Puget Sound last month when he saw what he
believes is the suspect in terrorizing events that forced the
lockdown of three schools in Port Orchard, WA. Officials
were trying to track down a black bear roaming the town
streets, hence the school shutdowns. They baited a trap
with doughnuts and marshmallows drenched in syrup, but
the bear ignored it. They got close enough to hit it with a
tranquilizer dart, but the bear ran off unharmed. Perhaps
he sensed his luck was running out - - Horch saw the bear
swimming from Port Orchard to Bainbridge Island, which
hopefully has more unpopulated space for him to roam.
We're Appreciated - - and We Appreciate It. Undercurrent just received a $1,000 grant from the Singing
Field Foundation, a family foundation in New Hampshire
that gives grants in the areas of environment, animal welfare
and health, and other causes close to family members'
hearts. Jonathan Scott, Singing Field's president, wrote us
that the grant is for "continuing support for your coverage
of environmental issues, advocacy and fundraising for
marine conservation causes." And that's what we'll be using
this money for.
Flotsam & Jetsam