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Updated April 16, 2025

Belize Diver Killed by a Speeding Boat
Tourists Killed by Egyptian Idiocy
Not Lost to a Down Current
Reinstated Manatee Guardians?
Some Fish Use Tools
Another Liveaboard Burns
Five Million Dollar Snorkel Death Lawsuit
Sharks Break Their Silence
Cozumel Gets to Grips with Weed
Don’t Touch the Turtles
Tell Us About Where You Have Been Diving

Belize Diver Killed by a Speeding Boat.   April 16, 2025

Police have charged a 28-year-old American, Spenser Eisenberg, a Caye Caulker resident, with the death of 70-year-old U.S. tourist Jeffery Le Beau. While diving off Turneffe Atoll on March 6, Le Beau was struck by Eisenberg’s speeding boat in a marked designated diving zone. Eisenberg’s boat reportedly came by at high speed, striking Le Beau and killing him in front of several witnesses, including Le Beau’s daughter and son. Eisenberg was taken into custody and charged with manslaughter by negligence. Le Beau was a Long Beach, California, defense lawyer known for his work in manslaughter cases. (Belize News)

Egyptian submarine

Tourists Killed by Egyptian Idiocy  April 16, 2025

In the Red Sea, it seems no boat is safe. On March 27, six passengers were killed and 39 rescued when a tourist submarine sank about a mile from its home port of Hurghada. Among the passengers were Swedes, Norwegians, and Indians, but the six who died were Russian. A survivor said that after they took their reserved seats, water started pouring in. Two hatches were still open as it began its descent. Passengers scrambled to get out, but some didn’t make it. Authorities are investigating. Sinbad, the company operating the vessel, has canceled all upcoming trips. (BBC)

Not Lost to a Down Current   April 16, 2025

Although Cozumel diving is known for its down currents, the dive area San Juan, where 74-year-old Greg Romes went missing (as we reported in our mid-March email), is not close to the wall. It’s a long series of rolling hills between 60 and 80 feet deep, and an Undercurrent member who dives frequently there says it is known for its fast to ripping horizontal currents. Romes used a side-mount system and was reported to have had some issues with it the day before he disappeared.

Reinstated Manatee Guardians?   April 16, 2025

The fired rangers in DOGE’s misguided effort to shave government environmental programs at Florida’s Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge (reported in Undercurrent in March) got their jobs back. Still, manatee fans and local leaders worry that may only be temporary.

Some Fish Use Tools   April 16, 2025

When Jane Goodall observed chimpanzees using tools, she put to rest the widely accepted theory that only humans were smart enough to use tools. Now, scuba divers have supplied scientists with videos of wrasses using stones to break open shellfish, demonstrating that fish are tool users, just like us. Professor Calum Brown of Macquarie University reviewed a video of a black spot tusk fish breaking a cockleshell open against a rock, adding further evidence to this thesis that we have underestimated fish intelligence. You can see an example here.

DiveRACE Liveaboard

Another Liveaboard Burns  April 16, 2025

In what is now becoming a regularly reported disaster for liveaboards, the Thai-operated DiveRACE caught fire in the early hours of April 12. The 113-foot steel-hulled luxury vessel that accommodated up to 20 guests was positioned over the Boonsung wreck dive site near Khao Lak in the Andaman Sea when the fire broke out. The cause has not been reported, but it is believed to have started in the engine room. Nobody was reported hurt, but the Thai coastguard took four hours to reach the stricken vessel. The day before, a small diving day boat, the Aor Subpiti, had burned when its engine caught fire. The 16-year-old helmsman, Manawat Bialy, sustained significant burns to his arms and face.

Five Million Dollar Snorkel Death Lawsuit   April 16, 2025

A South Korean family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Pacific Islands Club resort in Tumon Bay, Guam, alleging its dive center’s negligence caused the death of 70-year-old Young Jae Chung during a snorkeling lesson in 2023. There was allegedly no attempt to train students to use their snorkels properly before they were quickly guided from the beach into deeper water. They allege Chung’s instructor had failed to notice that he had remained face-down for a prolonged period. The family is seeking $2 million for wrongful death, $1 million for loss of support for Chung’s wife, $300,000 each for loss of support for his two sons, and $300,000 each as compensation for emotional distress for the four relatives present at the scene.

Sharks Break Their Silence   April 16, 2025

A team of researchers recently recorded sharks of one species making short, high-frequency clicks when handled underwater. The study’s results, published this week in Royal Society Open Science, represent the first known observations of sharks actively producing sound. It raises the possibility that sound production is an ancient trait widespread among sharks and their cartilaginous kin. (Scientific American)

Cozumel Gets to Grips with Weed   April 16, 2025

So far this year, 51 people cleaning Cozumel’s beaches have removed 114 tons of sargassum weed, with the eastern side of Cozumel, specifically Punta Chiqueros Bay, the most affected. It is collected manually to avoid using heavy machinery and to protect the island’s coastal environment. The collected sargassum is transported to a collection site on the island's south side. (Riviera Maya News)

Don’t Touch the Turtles   April 16, 2025

Five scuba divers and a Malaysian dive operator have been fined after a video of them harassing a turtle off Manuken Island in the Tunku Abdul Rahman Park went viral on social media. The Sabah Wildlife Enforcement Act permits only wardens to handle adult turtles, their eggs, or hatchlings. A related clip shows one of the divers holding onto a moving whale shark. The Tropical Research & Conservation Centre in Semporna had issued an appeal to trace the identities of the divers. The fine has not been disclosed, but it can be as much as US$10,000 equivalent.

Tell Us About Where You Have Been Diving   April 16, 2025

Your independent Readers' Reports are the lifeblood of Undercurrent. They are essential reading for anyone booking a dive trip and are an opportunity to tell everyone about the trip you experienced. You can tell both the good and the bad and everything in between. Unedited and unmoderated, your reports will brief other subscribers about dive resorts you've visited and liveaboards you have taken. Don't hold back. Over 11,000 entries have now become essential reading for traveling divers. You can post photos too. It's easy to post a report of your last dive trip. And your fellow divers will be thankful. File your report at www.undercurrent.org/SubRR, and we will also include it in the year's Chapbook, which will be sent to readers next December.

Ben Davison, editor/publisher
BenDDavison@undercurrent.org

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Note: Undercurrent is a registered 501(c) (3) not-for-profit organization donating funds to help preserve coral reefs. Our travel writers never announce their purpose, are unknown to the destination, and receive no complimentary services or compensation from the dive operators or resort.

Highlights of Previous Online Updates*

Here are past Online Update emails sent out . You can sign-up for free to receive these in the future here.

16 April, 2025

26 March, 2025

18 February, 2025

17 January, 2025

18 December, 2024

21 November, 2024

22 October, 2024

20 September, 2024

17 August, 2024

17 July, 2024

23 June, 2024

4 May, 2024

20 May, 2024

23 April, 2024

16 March, 2024

16 February, 2024

15 January, 2024

16 December, 2023

28 November, 2023

25 October, 2023

26 September, 2023

18 August, 2023

20 July, 2023

12 June, 2023

27 May, 2023

22 April, 2023

21 March, 2023

21 February, 2023

22 January, 2023

17 December, 2022

26 November, 2022

19 October, 2022

23 September, 2022

15 August, 2022

21 July, 2022

21 June, 2022

16 May, 2022

29 April, 2022

30 March, 2022

25 February, 2022

24 January, 2022

 

3 December, 2021

27 October, 2021

21 September, 2021

August 18, 2021

28 July, 2021

12 June, 2021

21 May, 2021

26 April, 2021

11 April, 2021

27 March, 2021

12 March, 2021

28 February, 2021

9 February, 2021

31 January, 2021

20 January, 2021

5 January, 2021

20 December, 2020

1 December, 2020

15 November, 2020

1 November, 2020

13 October, 2020

1 October, 2020

21 September, 2020

9 September, 2020

21 August, 2020

8 August, 2020

18 July, 2020

8 July, 2020

25 June, 2020

9 June, 2020

May, 2020

April, 2020

March, 2020

February, 2020

January, 2020

Online Updates* Archive, 2000-2019

* Sometimes referred to as Upwellings


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