Happy world oceans day! Love the oceans and take care of them as they're the only ones we have.
Link: HERE
"World Oceans Day, held every June 8th, is the United 
Nations-recognized day of ocean celebration and action. People all over 
our blue planet organize celebrations – which can be a huge event in 
your community, a special announcement, or anything in between – to 
support action to protect the ocean. This year, the theme is Healthy oceans, healthy planet, and we’re making a special effort to stop plastic pollution."
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Monday, 8 June 2015
Tuesday, 2 June 2015
Wash away those years
 A Dutch man barely out of his teens is leading one of the most ambitious ocean cleanup efforts ever: to halve the amount of plastic debris floating in the Pacific within a decade.
The man’s 
name is Boyan Slat, and he’s come up with a pretty ingenious way of 
doing it. Instead of clamoring around the globe on a never-ending junk 
hunt, he wants the ocean to “clean itself.”
Link: HERE 
Every year, 8 million tons of plastic are dumped into the oceans. Slat’s plan is
 to place enormous floating barriers in rotating tidal locations around 
the globe (called gyres), and let the plastic waste naturally flow into 
capture. These barriers aren’t nets—sea life gets tangled in those. 
They’re big, V-shaped buffers anchored by floating booms.
Slat’s nonprofit, the Ocean Cleanup, says the current will flow underneath those booms, where animals will be carried through safely. The buoyant 
plastic is funneled above and concentrates at the water’s surface along 
the barriers for easy gathering and disposal.
Last month, it was announced
 that this ocean-cleaning system—which the company says is the world’s 
first—will be deployed in 2016. 
They’re planning to station it near the 
Japanese island of Tsushima, situated in between Japan’s Nagasaki 
prefecture and South Korea. The detritus-catching apparatus will be 
6,500 feet wide and is being called the longest floating structure ever 
placed in the ocean.
Eventually,
 more of these storm-resistant, plastic-gathering structures will be 
placed around the world, if all goes according to plan.
This August, meanwhile, the Ocean Cleanup is sending 50 vessels to scour the area between Hawaii and California to make the first hi-res map of plastic floating in the Pacific.
Sunday, 31 May 2015
Anthem to the unseen
Think you've been there, done it and seen it all? Think again as a a plethora of fascinating creatures have been discovered in the deep ocean off the coast of Puerto Rico. Oceans cover two thirds of our planet’s surface, and yet we’ve only 
explored five percent of them.
It’s mind boggling to imagine that scientists might discover life on another world before we fully come to appreciate what lives beneath the waters of this one
For the 
first time ever, a collection of strange, beautiful, and totally-alien 
looking creatures that live some 10,000 feet below the ocean’s surface 
are saying hello to humanity. The video footage shown below was caught 
by a remotely operated vehicle on a unique, crowd-sourced exploration 
supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
 Researchers were able to watch the footage in real time and offer their
 expertise through an Internet chatroom.
Link: HERE
It’s mind boggling to imagine that scientists might discover life on another world before we fully come to appreciate what lives beneath the waters of this one
Link: HERE
Sunday, 17 May 2015
Reasons to Be Cheerful (Part 3)
Feel good story time, in this instance it involves an unfortunate turtle and some 3D printing but it ends happily ever after.
Turkish animal rescuers found an almost lifeless turtle at sea, after a boat propeller shaved off a huge part of its snout. It escaped the clutches of death thanks to those kind folks, but a turtle that has to be hand-fed can never survive back in the wild. That's why the organization contacted 3D printing service provider BTech Innovation, which took the turtle's CT scans to create a beak that would fit it perfectly.
Link: HERE
 
Turkish animal rescuers found an almost lifeless turtle at sea, after a boat propeller shaved off a huge part of its snout. It escaped the clutches of death thanks to those kind folks, but a turtle that has to be hand-fed can never survive back in the wild. That's why the organization contacted 3D printing service provider BTech Innovation, which took the turtle's CT scans to create a beak that would fit it perfectly.
Link: HERE
The company recreated the reptile's upper and lower jaws through 
software, and it printed out the resulting design using medical-grade 
titanium. That beak has been surgically attached recently so the turtles still in recovery, but it's doing fine, as you can see in
 the video below. Once it's done recovering, the rescuers plan to 
release back to the ocean to live a normal turtley life.
Saturday, 16 May 2015
What a wonderful world
Ok, so I know I've slowed down slightly with the blog posts (all work and no diving) but this should be recitifed within the next two weeks with any luck if anyone is still out there.....
In the meantime, heres a great story on the opah fish (also commonly known as moonfish, sunfish and kingfish) which they have just recently discovered to be warm blooded. Mother nature strikes again, turning common conceptions on their heads.
Link: HERE
"The large and colourful opah has become the first known "warm-blooded" fish, as scientists discovered it can regulate the temperature of its whole body. The opah traps warmth from its flapping fins, which are well insulated by fat."
"It uses that heat to keep its heart, brain and other organs warm while it swims to depths of hundreds of metres. Other fish like tuna can warm specific body parts, boosting performance at key times, but whole-body "endothermy" has not been observed in a fish before."
"Other fish like tuna can warm specific body parts, boosting performance at key times, but whole-body "endothermy" has not been observed in a fish before."
In the meantime, heres a great story on the opah fish (also commonly known as moonfish, sunfish and kingfish) which they have just recently discovered to be warm blooded. Mother nature strikes again, turning common conceptions on their heads.
Link: HERE
"The large and colourful opah has become the first known "warm-blooded" fish, as scientists discovered it can regulate the temperature of its whole body. The opah traps warmth from its flapping fins, which are well insulated by fat."
"It uses that heat to keep its heart, brain and other organs warm while it swims to depths of hundreds of metres. Other fish like tuna can warm specific body parts, boosting performance at key times, but whole-body "endothermy" has not been observed in a fish before."
"Other fish like tuna can warm specific body parts, boosting performance at key times, but whole-body "endothermy" has not been observed in a fish before."
Friday, 8 May 2015
La Mer
Now this is worth watching. A new three-part series from the BBC will look at the amazing underwater world of the shark. It's called "Shark" by the way.
Narrated by Paul McGann, the behaviour of the ocean predators goes under the microscope with fascinating results. The first film reveals their many hunting methods from blacktip sharks gathering in huge packs to tasselled wobbegongs, which ambush their prey.
There's also a look at the speedy mako shark that can swim at 46mph and the Greenland shark which can apparently live for 200 years.
Then there are whitetip reef sharks - masters of night-time hunting - and, of course, the infamous great white, shown here stalking seals off the coast of South Africa.
The show is followed by a short behind-the-scenes film reveling how the episode was made.
You can watch it on BBC iPlayer via the link below or download it direct from you favourite *cough* other websites *cough*. This series is must see!
Link: HERE
Narrated by Paul McGann, the behaviour of the ocean predators goes under the microscope with fascinating results. The first film reveals their many hunting methods from blacktip sharks gathering in huge packs to tasselled wobbegongs, which ambush their prey.
There's also a look at the speedy mako shark that can swim at 46mph and the Greenland shark which can apparently live for 200 years.
Then there are whitetip reef sharks - masters of night-time hunting - and, of course, the infamous great white, shown here stalking seals off the coast of South Africa.
The show is followed by a short behind-the-scenes film reveling how the episode was made.
You can watch it on BBC iPlayer via the link below or download it direct from you favourite *cough* other websites *cough*. This series is must see!
Link: HERE
Saturday, 2 May 2015
I heard it through the grapevine
Well the island paper got wind of the sharks hunting for lionfish and wanted to use my photo and talk to me about it. So an article appeared in yesterdays paper and online.
Link: HERE
So they did use my photo but they didn't speak to me but they did appear to speak to a few other people in the article and when you read it seems (to me) to put a negative and pessimistic spin on things, which is a little disappointing.
This has a potential to be a very good for keeping lionfish numbers down and may (or may not be) be the start of something very positive in the marine world. Unless of course you read this article which to me sounds all doom and gloom judging by some of the comments.......
“Something is eating the lionfish, but I don’t agree that it is the sharks,”
"likely that the shark had been conditioned by human culling on that site."
Let's try and have a little optimism guys, good things do actually happen in the world occasionally and maybe this is the start of the scales finally tipping back in favour of mother nature. Time will tell. Other reporting establishments at least were hopeful that things could turn around after hearing about this.
Call me naivie if you want, but at least I for one am seeing this in a positive light.
Link: HERE
So they did use my photo but they didn't speak to me but they did appear to speak to a few other people in the article and when you read it seems (to me) to put a negative and pessimistic spin on things, which is a little disappointing.
This has a potential to be a very good for keeping lionfish numbers down and may (or may not be) be the start of something very positive in the marine world. Unless of course you read this article which to me sounds all doom and gloom judging by some of the comments.......
“Something is eating the lionfish, but I don’t agree that it is the sharks,”
"likely that the shark had been conditioned by human culling on that site."
Let's try and have a little optimism guys, good things do actually happen in the world occasionally and maybe this is the start of the scales finally tipping back in favour of mother nature. Time will tell. Other reporting establishments at least were hopeful that things could turn around after hearing about this.
Call me naivie if you want, but at least I for one am seeing this in a positive light.
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