Contents of this Issue:
All publicly available
Kosrae and Yap, Micronesia
Rest in Peace, Gladys Howard
Shark Explorers, Cape Town, South Africa
Mozambique, Mexico, Philippines . . .
Divers, Your Very Presence Affects Reef Fish Behavior
No Diver Left Behind?
Just Think, He Might Have Been in Your Dive Class
Shark Bytes
Barracuda Slaughter at McCauley Memorial
Letters about our Latest Articles
Is Your Camera Hurting Marine Life?
Flotsam & Jetsam
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Paving Paradise in Grand Cayman. The Caymanian
government has confirmed plans to build a massive
cruise ship dock in Grand Cayman's Georgetown
harbor, which environmentalists claim will have a
devastating impact on the island's reefs. The reason
for the dock, besides getting more ships, is so passengers
don't have to deal with the five-minute tender
transfer across the harbor. But per a environmental
impact report released in June, the dredging process
will destroy 15 acres of coral reef and likely harm
another 20 acres, home to two critically endangered
coral species and four threatened ones. "It is a sad
day for the country," Keith Sahm, a leader of the Save
Cayman anti-port campaign told Yahoo News. "Once
they do this, there is no turning back." To see how
you can help their efforts, go to www.facebook.com/SaveCayman?fref=ts
The "Shocking" Way to Cure Seasickness.
Scientists at Imperial College in London believe that being given a mild electric shock to the scalp before you get
on a boat will prevent nausea. They're developing a gadget
that will plug into a smartphone and deliver a short shock
to the head via electrodes. The mild electrical current dampens
activity in the part of the brain that processes motion
signals, reducing the impact of confusing inputs received,
and preventing symptoms of motion sickness. Study leader
Qadeer Arshad told the Daily Mail, "We are confident that
within five to 10 years, people will be able to walk into a
drugstore and buy an anti-seasickness device."
The Crown of Thorns-Killing Robot. The crown-ofthorns
starfish (COTS) is the scourge of Australia's Great
Barrier Reef, so Queensland University of Technology
researchers have created a hunter-killer robot, dubbed the
COTSbot, to search out and destroy these coral-eating pests.
It's fitted with stereoscopic cameras for depth perception,
stability thrusters, GPS navigation, pitch-and-roll sensors,
and a pneumatic injection arm that gives a COTS a fatal
dose of bile salts. The COTSbot will scour the reef for up
to eight hours at a time, with the capability of killing more
than 200 COTS along the way, and it's slated to be autonomously
working on the Great Barrier Reef by December.