Archive for July, 2007

July 31st 2007
Warming waters promoting tropical diseases in UK coral reefs

Posted under Conservation by Tim Yang

Eunicella verrucosaA mystery disease is destroying rare coral populations around the UK coastline, according to marine biologists. The disease, which has similarities with infections that have decimated tropical reefs, is the first ever identified in cold water corals and the first to be seen in British waters.

The researchers have established in laboratory experiments that it is caused by a bacterial infection which seems to be prompted by increases in water temperature. That has fuelled speculation that the recent spate of outbreaks is due to rises in the sea temperature around Britain due to climate change.

“Many people know about tropical coral reefs, but are completely unaware that British waters contain a huge diversity of life, including these corals,” said Jason Hall-Spencer at the University of Plymouth. “Diseases increasingly affect tropical corals and this is the first record of disease affecting cold-water corals.”

He first heard reports of the disease occurring around Lundy island, off north Devon, from divers in 2002. They were seeing pink sea fans (a coral species, Eunicella verrucosa, that forms colonies up to 80cm high and a metre across), that had lost their colour and were covered in other marine organisms such as barnacles and seaweed.

“When you look more carefully while you are diving you see the pink tissue on the outside has started to slough away, exposing the hard skeleton,” he said. Between 2003 and 2006 he and his team surveyed 13 sites known to biologists as strongholds for the species. His team found evidence of the disease at seven of the sites.

Damage to the pink sea fan is significant because it is already listed as “vulnerable” by the international conservation Red List. It is also one of the few marine species protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

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July 31st 2007
Florida coral thief sentenced to 10 months

Posted under Crime & Conservation by Tim Yang

Ricordea

A Miami man will forfeit his boat and spend 10 months in jail for illegally harvesting brilliantly colorful corallimorphs, prized for saltwater aquariums, from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.

Alexandre Alvarenga, 40, was sentenced Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Adalberto Jordan, who accepted his guilty plea for illegally taking 900 living specimens of Ricordea florida so that he could sell them.

The investigation began in November 2006 when two Germans were caught at Miami International Airport with 500 specimens. They told investigators they were planning to sell them in the Dusseldorf aquarium trade.

Chiseling the rocks in chunks, and disturbing the protected coral, is illegal. The bigger chunks enable them to be sold in clumps, which are more lucrative than individual ones.

A single Ricordea polyp of gold or orange sells on the Web for $12 or more.

The Germans told investigators they had helped Alvarenga harvest the protected marine creatures from his 1969 fiberglass-hulled Morgan boat in the waters east of Cudjoe Key.

Investigators planted a Global Positioning System on Alvarenga’s boat to track it during the next two months. On Jan. 25, he was arrested at Cudjoe Key Marina with a load of 400 specimens of the Ricordea florida from sanctuary waters.

The specimens seized from Alvarenga have been kept alive at the Mote Marine Laboratory on Summerland Key. The sanctuary plans to restore them to their natural habitat and repair the damage caused by chiseling them from the seabed. The cost will exceed $78,000.

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July 31st 2007
WIST: Napoleon wrasse

Posted under Wish I Shot That by Tim Yang

Napoleon Wrasse

What’s not to like about this shot? The wrasse is in motion with an eye-catching expression and the details on its head are well-illuminated and sharply in focus. Shot by lar3 in Palau with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel, at ISO 200, f5.6 and 1/60 exposure. Wish I shot it.

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July 31st 2007
Video: Ocean Rover LOB

Posted under Video & Malaysia News by Tim Yang

Ocean Rover

Ocean Rover is the most expensive live onboard diving boat in Malaysia. And when I say most expensive, I mean your name has to end in a number to get a seat on it.

Here are a couple of promotional videos featuring Ocean Rover.

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July 30th 2007
WIST: Shark on reef

Posted under Wish I Shot That by Tim Yang

Reef shark

This shot by gerb of a shark on a reef scape is in perfect proportion, with the sea occupying half the shot. Thanks to the godlight the shark is well illuminated. Shot with a 105mm fisheye lens using a Nikon D200. Wish I shot that!

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July 30th 2007
Indian gangsters harvesting sea cucumbers

Posted under Crime & Conservation by Tim Yang

Sea cucumberSo why is the sea mafia scraping the bottom of Gulf of Mannar — India’s only Marine National Park? Sea cucumbers or holothurians (kadal attai in Tamil), slugs found on the sea bed along coral reefs, are in great demand in countries like China, Japan and Malaysia where they are prized as aphrodisiacs and for their medicinal value. Despite the fact that India has banned commercial exploitation of the slug — Amendment (2002) of Wildlife (Protection) Act 1972 — illegal exports continue due to the high price ($110 for a kg) it commands in the international market.

The costliest available sea cucumbers in the Gulf of Mannar and Palk Bay are Holothuria scabra (sand fish or vella (white) attai in Tamil). There are also the Holothuria atra (lolly fish or karuppu (black) attai) and the Stichopus hermanni (warty sea cucumber or pavaikya (bitter gourd) attai). The fishermen sell each cucumber for Rs 10 to Rs 100, depending on the species and size, to processing agents who number around 500. After processing, Beche-de-Mer is sold to traders. A 20 count per kg of scabra fetches an agent Rs 3,000-3,500, 40 counts per kg Rs 1,000-1,500 and for anything above 40 counts, price is negotiable. Traders, of course, get a much higher rate in the international market.

So lucrative is the trade that the Tatas recently purchased a hatchery in Lakshadweep’s Agathi Island, with government sanction, to culture and export sea cucumber.

But it is the clandestine trade — with alleged LTTE links — that’s reaching alarming proportions. Labelled ‘dried fish’, sea cucumbers are packed in containers and sent through returning Lankan refugee boats from Rameswaram or smuggled via Tuticorin coast. Though India was the first to ban sea cucumber fishing in the region, neighbouring Sri Lanka and Mauritius have no such ban. “Boats bringing refugees from Sri Lanka return with the ‘attai’. Single motor boats carry about two tons while double engine boats can carry as much as five-six tons. From Lanka, the haul is taken to Singapore which is the wholesale market. The peak season is December to March,” said a fisherman in Mandapam, one of the processing centres.

On July 10, there was a seizure in Rameswaram and about 100 kg sea cucumbers were seized. Three persons were caught but the group leader got away.

Beche-de-Mer is a cottage industry comprising fishermen, processors (middlemen/agents) and traders (mafia). There have even been instances of officials being assaulted while trying to prevent fishing and export of sea cucumber.

“When it comes to their trade, they will stop at nothing,” says V Naganathan, eco-development officer of the Gulf of Mannar Biosphere Reserve Trust (GOMBRT) whose efforts to check smuggling resulted in the conviction of kingpin Villayutham (known as Villa) last October. But Villa managed to get bail and today, his territory reportedly extends from Rameswaram to Periyapattinam.

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July 27th 2007
Divelog sheet design

Posted under Diving Gear by Tim Yang

DaytonaDave posted to Scubaboard a dive log sheet design he made using Photoshop for a three-ring binder in 5.5 inch by 8.5 inch size.

He uploaded them in PDF format.

They’re quite a good study in all the things that can go into a divelog sheet. But it’s too detailed for practical use by most recreational divers.

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July 27th 2007
Dive centres can be held liable for gross negligence despite waivers

Posted under Crime by Tim Yang

GavelRecreation providers in California may be held liable for gross negligence regardless of the wording on liability waivers signed by participants or their parents, the California Supreme Court ruled 6-1 Monday.

The state high court decision permits the parents of a developmentally disabled girl who drowned at a summer camp run by the city of Santa Barbara to sue even though her mother had signed an agreement assuming “full responsibility for risk of bodily injury, death or property damage.”

California’s recreation and sports industry had strongly urged the court to reject liability, warning that it could be the death knell for camps, fitness centers, hiking clubs and other providers of physical activity.

But Chief Justice Ronald M. George, who wrote the majority opinion, said there was no evidence that states with even more liberal rights to sue have lost recreational opportunities.

Ordinary negligence is the failure to provide care that any reasonable person would know was required. Gross negligence is defined as “want of even scant care” or “an extreme departure from the ordinary standard of conduct.”

Even though people now can sue only for gross negligence, juries tend to assume that any accident that results in a serious injury or death must have involved gross negligence, said Andrea J. Saltzman, who represented Santa Barbara in the case.

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July 27th 2007
Waterproof playing cards

Posted under Diving Gear by Tim Yang

Umbra cardsThe perfect gift for the diver and his dive buddy who always go deco: something to do at their safety stops.

These waterproof playing cards by Umbra come in four colours along with a protective waterproof case and retail for USD$7.

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July 27th 2007
Winners of Scuba Diving mag’s photo contest announced

Posted under Underwater Photography by Tim Yang

The winners of Scuba Diving magazine’s third annual photo contest have recently been posted. The categories were wide angle, marine life, macro and topside.

Grand prizeThis image by the multi-award winning photographer Todd Mintz won the grand prize of $1,000 cash and a dive trip for two to Manta Ray Hotel in Yap, Micronesia.

What I want to know is this:

How do these UNnatural looking shots always seem to always win top prizes at NATURE photography competitions?

As bizarre as it looks, it’s a Spinecheek anemonefish in bulb-tentacle anemone shot in Raja Ampat, Indonesia using a Canon 20D, Aquatica A20 housing and Inon Z220S strobes.

The other winners and honourable mentions were all fantastic. I know it’s a cop-out, but I have to say that it would have been impossible for if I were a judge to pick out a clear winner.

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