Contents of this Issue:
All publicly available
Anse Chastanet, St. Lucia, the Caribbean
Neal Watson and Bimini Big Game Club Get Sued
Book Review – Muck Diving by Nigel Marsh
Bora Bora and Tikehau, French Polynesia
Poisonous Air — It’s Very Serious When It Happens
Shark Movies: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Villa Markisa, Tulamben, and Bali, Indonesia
Tigers Get Around
A Hidden Killer in Our Midst
Worse Things Happen at Sea!
Is It One Up, All Up?
Undercurrent Aids Subscriber with Travel Problems
Suunto Recalls ALL Computer Transmitters and PODs
Online Dive Trip Booking Portals: Part II
Tropical Ice, in paperback – “Perhaps the best scuba thriller ever”
Underwater Wineries
Flotsam & Jetsam
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"Round, round, get around, I get around ..." Those Beach Boys lyrics might have been written for tiger sharks, because the tiger shark you might have glimpsed while diving in Hawaii could have come all the way from Australia.
Recent research by scientists at the University of Queensland, Australia, suggests that tiger sharks in the Indo-Pacific region do not form static populations, but roam over great distances, from the Indian Ocean off Western Australia to multiple locations in the Western Pacific, as far away as Hawaii.
The Pacific and Indian oceans account for around half the water on the Earth's surface, and the study contradicts previous claims that there is, for example, a distinct Hawaiian tiger shark population. Dr. Bonnie Holmes suggests that the tiger shark's long-haul migrations might help maintain its genetic diversity.
(Source: Royal Society Open Science/royalsociety.org)