Thursday, February 12, 2009

The great ocean migration... thousands of majestic stingrays [manta rays] swim to new seas

Update Feb 2009:
cbs8.com San Diego CA news interview & video with Sandra Critelli:

Stunning Mass Migration of Golden Rays off Mexico
Photographing nature has long been a passion of Sandra Critelli as she has traveled the world. But what changed everything for this Italian clothing designer was a recent...

Click here: http://www.cbs8.com/global/category.asp?c=155799&clipId=&topVideoCatNo=149659&topVideoCatNoB=155712&topVideoCatNoC=155713&topVideoCatNoD=155710&topVideoCatNoE=155711&clipId=3428051&topVideoCatNo=149659&autoStart=true

... the last time there was a sighting of this many rays was back in the '60's. It is thought that the large increase in the rays is due to the continued decrease in shark populations.







The great ocean migration... thousands of majestic stingrays swim to new seas
dailymail.co.uk, by Marcus Dunk, last updated at 10:50 PM on 25th June 2008

Like autumn leaves floating in a sunlit pond, this vast expanse of magnificent stingrays animates the bright blue seas of the Gulf of Mexico.

Taken off the coast of Mexico's Holbox Island by amateur photographer Sandra Critelli, this breathtaking picture captures the migration of thousands of rays as they follow the clockwise current from Mexico's Yucatan peninsula to western Florida.

Measuring up to 6ft 6in across, poisonous golden cow-nose rays migrate in groups - or 'fevers' - of up to 10,000 as they glide their way silently towards their summer feeding grounds.
Enlarge Rays

Magical: Golden Rays migrating in the Gulf of Mexico

They migrate twice yearly: north in late spring (as pictured here) and south in late autumn.

There are around 70 species of stingray in the world's oceans, but these cow-nose rays (Rhinoptera bonasus) have distinctive, highdomed heads, giving them a curiously bovine appearance.

But despite their placid looks, they are still armed with a poisonous stinger, which can be deadly to humans (even though sharks, their main predators, are more likely to provoke them).

The stinger, a razor-sharp spine that grows from the creature's whip-like tail, can reach almost 15 inches in length and carries a heady dose of venom.

It was a similar stinger that killed the hugely popular Australian naturalist Steve Irwin in 2006.
Rays

Arc: The rays, swimming in a long line, was spotted by amateur photographer Sandra Critelli

But even equipped with this powerful punch, cow-nose stingrays are shy and non-threatening in large 'fevers'. Even when isolated, they will attack only when cornered or threatened.

Unlike other stingrays, they rarely rest on the seabed (where unsuspecting humans can step on them) and prefer to be on the move.

They migrate long distances, and can be found as far south as the Caribbean and as far north as New England.

They use their extended pectoral fins to swim, and often turn upside down, curling their fin tips above the surface of the water - leaving terrified swimmers convinced that they have seen a shark.
Enlarge Rays

Close up: The rays, properly known as Cow-nosed Stingrays, are known because of their bovine-like high-domed heads

Their flexible fins also come in handy when rustling up food. By flapping them rapidly over the seabed, they stir up sand and reveal crabs, shellfish and oysters, which they then feed on using their powerful, grinding teeth.

Their particular fondness for shellfish has made them public enemy number one with oyster fishermen.

But despite this, their numbers are exploding, thanks in part to rising sea temperatures. They mate every winter, and females produce a litter of five to ten young.

Stunning: Onlookers watch as thousands of Golden rays make their migration in the Gulf of Mexico

Stingrays (which are related to skates and sharks) have never been widely fished for food, mainly because of their rubbery flesh.

But barbecued stingray and dried fins are common in Singapore and Malaysia, while pickled stingray remains a traditional favourite in Iceland. 'It was an unforgettable image,' said photographer Critelli.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1029013/The-great-ocean-migration--thousands-majestic-stingrays-swim-new-seas.html#

Originally posted 11/08

Golden Ray Migration by Sandra Critelli, Holbox Island, Mexico


Use the links to see the most incredible photos of golden rays migrating, taken by Sandra Critelli, who wrote:

I'm glad you like my golden rays pictures ( cownosed rays ). I took them in Holbox Island, Mexico, last July 2007. Holbox Island is a little tiny fishermen island on the tip of the Jucatan Peninsula [near Cancun, Mexico]

Sandra Critelli
www.pbase.com/worldphotos



LINKS & Photos:

Story at telegraph.co.uk: "Golden Ray photos of amazing mass migration"
www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2008/06/24/earay124.xml&CMP=ILC


Golden Ray migration photos by Sandra Critelli
(scroll through the whale sharks) http://www.pbase.com/worldphotos/whale_sharks_2007

COWNOSE RAY, Rhinoptera bonasus: http://www.eol.org/taxa/17052817

"Holbox Island is a little tiny fishermen island on the tip of the Jucatan Peninsula in Mexico" http://www.holboxisland.com/

Tour guides/trip: http://www.sdsharkdiving.com/Trips/HOLBOX/holbox_09.html

Holbox detail photos: http://www.pbase.com/worldphotos/image/83285337

Holbox Island, near Cancun Mexico: http://www.holboxisland.com/

Welcome - Holbox Island

Located to the northwest of Cancun, Mexico, Holbox Island is just 26 miles / 42 km long. Holbox is separated from the mainland coast of Mexico by a shallow lagoon which gives sanctuary to thousands of flamingos, pelicans and other exotic birds and creatures. (more)

Originally posted 11/08

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Dolphin Stampede



Watch "Dolphin Stampede" posted September 22, 2008 on YouTube by rgraening. Incredible!




"This video was shot in the Sea of Cortez between Isla la Guardia and Bajia de los Angeles. While fishing we ran through a pod of several hundred dolphins. This is part of what we saw." ~ rgraening

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Right Wales - Witness to Recovery

Commentary: Witness to Recovery
The New England Aquarium has been counting its successes—from a witnessed whale birth to stricter shipping rules

By Brita Belli


Right whales are identified by the callosities—or rough patches of white skin—on their heads.
© New England Aquarium

It takes a long time to get to know a whale. Moira Brown, a senior scientist with the New England Aquarium’s right whale research team, has been spending more than two months a year studying right whales in the Bay of Fundy off the coast of Maine for the past 24 years. The boat the researchers take out each day from early August to September in the Bay is the same one they’ve used for the past 29 years. During those months, the Aquarium research team sets up shop at a field station in Lubec, Maine—members rise at 4:30 a.m. to follow the right whales, who travel there each year to mate and to eat.

“There’s a lot of current [in the Bay],” says Brown. “The tidal gyre serves to concentrate the plankton...and the right whales are grazers who would rather go to one big grocery store. It’s more efficient.” And whale mothers are often there with young calves in tow, where the sheltered Bay offers them protection.

Where Whales are Born

With the start of December, the researchers have taken to the sky, to track the whale population as it migrates to Florida, where whales give birth in high-traffic shipping areas. Researchers sit in a small, two-seater plane and keep constant watch over the waters, tracking movements via a GPS and then circling in for pictures and closer observation. They are on the lookout for ship strikes in particular—major shipping channels converge with whale birthing areas off the Southeast U.S. coast—bringing everything from naval ships to nuclear submarines to casino boats in conflict with the endangered animals. There are less than 400 North Atlantic right whales alive today, and a new calf is a celebratory event. Just one calf was born in 2001, according to Brown, and 31 in 2002. Since 2002, she says, they’ve averaged over 20 calves a year. They don’t know why whale births are increasing, but she says the numbers are encouraging. “We now feel like we’re monitoring the recovery, and not the demise,” Brown says.

Most recently, New England Aquarium researchers were witness to an extraordinary event—a live whale birth, the first right whale birth ever witnessed, spotted as they were flying 1,000 feet overhead. Monica Zani, one of the researchers and witnesses, says in an online interview how she thought for some time, with the evident thrashing and blood, that the mother whale was hurt. “Then,” she says, “We saw the calf on her back.” (more)

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

chiajungchi, creator of dolphin video




http://www.youtube.com/user/chiajungchi
Views: 3,080,925
From: chiajungchi
Added: December 16, 2007

This video
is dedicated to the best employee at Sea World, Orlando.

The music is "No One is Alone from Into the Woods" (Instrumental) by John Williams; The Boston Pops Orchestra. From the Album Music of the Night: Pops on Broadway 1990 CD.
Category: Pets & Animals
Tags:
Dolphin play bubble ring Sea World Orlando 海豚 dolfijn dauphin Delphin δελφίνι delfino イルカ 돌고래 golfinho дельфин delfín

***** Something About The Dolphin Video *****

When I took this video, my feeling was mixed. On one hand I was totally amazed by the intelligence level displayed on these dolphins. On the other hand I was a little bit sad on where these intelligent beings are - the captive environment. This somewhat peaceful yet depressing music on the background seems fully express my mixed feelings. When I try to write the description for the video, it strikes me that we all like dolphin - live in somewhat constrained environment whether it is our choice or not. Suddenly it inspired me that we should learn from this dolphin to enjoy the live no matter where our circumstance is and to use our intelligence to the highest possible level it could be. To respect these dolphins, I decide to call them the employees at Sea World. And this video is especially dedicated to the best employee at Sea World.

Age: 36
Country: United States

---

11/24/08 Message from: chiajungchi

Re: Re: your comment on dolphin video

Let me share the story of how the video got here instead of declaring to you "I am the creator of the video". It all linked back to our son, he is 8 month old at that time (Dec. 2007). We live in Greensboro, NC and were originated from Taiwan. We plan to have a trip to Taiwan next year and were worrying about how the baby is going to cope with the trip. So we decided to take a trip to Orlando first so we could have a better planning for our long trip latter. I have a coworker his name is Chris Arries. His wife worked at Discovery Cove that belongs to the same enterprise as Sea World. She had some free admission vouchers for Sea World and kindly gave them to us. To be honest, we would not be at Sea World at that time if not because of the free admission vouchers. To cut the story short, we were at Sea World in dolphin pool area. The baby was mounted on my shoulder and we walked down to the observation site of the dolphin pool. I suddenly saw the amazing scene – dolphin playing bubble rings. I was not sure where the bubble rings coming from but knew this is an extraordinary scene. I passed the baby to the mom and got my Canon S3 digital camera to start the video recording. The dolphin must know people were watching them and was doing the show for us. I am not sure how many dolphins could do the trick. It could be only one that is really good at this. Anyway, he blowed the bubble ring in front of us and redirected the ring to keep it in front of us. At that moment, I know the whole trip is going to be different. My feeling at that moment is hard to describe. Probably awesome is the right word for it. Just when I thought they will continue doing this forever, it suddenly stopped. There were no more dolphins in front of us. We wait there for a while and eventually came out from the observation site. Once we saw the dolphin again on the dolphin pool then we understood why they all disappeared. They were busy on having their meal. It’s the feeding time!

After back to Greensboro, I could not wait to share what I saw to the world. I happened to have a youtube account that is used to share our baby’s video to relatives and friends. I have not edited any video before but feel I need put some music to cover the noise recorded with the video. Because of the baby, we went to library and check out some CDs every week to let him listen on different music. I started listening through CDs checked out from library and feel one seems match the feeling of the video best. Without paying too much attention on the title of the music, the video was edited and uploaded to youtube website. The CD was returned to library the next week. On January 2008, the video was featured on youtube. People start asking about what the title of the music is. I told them I do not know. Eventually, someone like you found it out and emailed the information to me. Since then, if someone sent me a personal message to asking about the music I would response back to them the information. Sorry for not be able to response back to you the information and let you spend some time to figuring it out.

Jack Chi

---

My reply, Nov. 4, 2008: What an incredible, wonderful story you have told, and an experience you have witnessed and recorded. This is absolutely amazing! I live in Oxford NC, 45 minutes East of Durham and Duke University. I live in Panajachel, Lake Atitlan, Guatemala half the time - and hopefully more this coming year.

PLEASE be sure to let me know if you are coming our way before I leave for Guatemala on Dec 14th. I'll be back in the Spring if you aren't coming this way before I go. Write me anytime at my real email ctodd1000@gmail.com. What a great story, especially about the music. Someone somehow recognized the piece and posted it on the internet where I found it. You have no idea (or maybe you do!) of the phenomena you have created with this tiny little beautiful video. It reminds me of my other email friend, Eggman913, who did the wonderful "Women in Art" video. Have you seen that one?

Write more anytime. I hope you can post this whole story you told me in the video notes or somewhere where others can enjoy it. It's just great. What an incredible experience. I've had a few magical mystical experiences myself with animals and nature, but I've never seen anything like this. Have you found out if any other dolphins at Discovery Cove are doing this? What do they say about the video and the dolphin activity?

Thanks so much for writing...

Your friend in magical wonder, Catherine Todd, Oxford NC, 919.693.0853, ctodd1000@gmail.com

Bottle-Nosed Dolphins' Aggressive Behavior


Bottle-Nosed Dolphins' Aggressive Behavior


Bottle-nosed dolphins have long had the image of being intelligent guardians of the sea who speak their own language, enjoy the company of humans, and have even saved shipwrecked sailors from certain doom by leading them to land. Although these frolicking mammals may look friendly with their toothy smiles and playful gestures, marine biologists in mid-1999 were learning that dolphins also have a dark side that may include the capacity to kill.



In Shark Bay, on the coast of Western Australia, researchers from the University of Massachusetts in Dartmouth have observed gangs of male dolphins harassing and intimidating sexually receptive mature female dolphins. The researchers, led by biologist Richard Connor, documented several cases in which male dolphins, working in groups of twos and threes, “kidnapped” females from other dolphin groups. The females were then held captive for as long as one month.

This behavior appeared to be rooted in something other than simply aggressive tendencies. Based on observations of male dolphins in Shark Bay he had made since the 1980's, Connor believes that these gangs of male dolphins may be one of the few examples in nature in which the males of a species form stable long-term bonds with one another. In some cases, those bonds last more than 10 years.

Shark Bay, part of the Indian Ocean, has the largest sea grass beds in the world. The beds contain an abundance of fish and, because of the food source, a large number of dolphins. Because of this high concentration of dolphins, Connor and his team of researchers were able to study the formation and interactions of male social groups from boats in the clear waters.

Studying A Large Gang of Dolphins

As part of one two-year study that began in 1995, Connor studied a “supergang” of 14 adult male bottle-nosed dolphins in Shark Bay. Although he had studied other groups of dolphins that teamed up in twos or threes, this appeared to be an alliance of several smaller gangs united to form the supergang.

Connor reported that this alliance was the first documented evidence that male dolphins would form not only primary but also secondary social bonds—‘bonds extending beyond an original group to encompass new individuals‘—to fight rival males and stalk potential mates. Connor reported that during the course of his two-year study, as he and his associates observed the supergang, the dolphins never lost a fight.

Many biologists considered Connor's findings interesting because in most mammals, such as elephants, whales, and many species of apes, the females usually establish closer social alliances than males do. Typically, the females of a species are more cooperative, less violent, and more likely to use complex vocalizations than males. With some animals, such as killer whales, the social bonds among females are so strong that female calves never leave their mothers.

Aggressive Behavior Toward Captive Females

Although Connor's research revealed that male dolphins form cooperative units, the purpose of these units is very different from those of the females of the species. For the male dolphins, the motivation is purely sexual. The roving groups of males observed by Connor would almost always mate with their female captives, either individually or several at a time, during the course of the females' captivity. In some cases, the teams of male dolphins would ram and bite the females to prevent them from escaping.

However, Connor said that his research found no evidence that male dolphins ever forced female dolphins to mate. In fact, some females did not seem to be bothered by being herded around by their male cohorts. But by outnumbering the females, Connor said, the male gangs do bully, and may injure, females with powerful blows from their beaks or sharp teeth.

Such aggression is not uncommon in mammals. But what amazed Connor and his colleagues was how organized the dolphins' aggressive behavior was. Connor said the herding of females by male gangs may be, in part, a reaction to female promiscuity. Biologists know that female dolphins are very sexually active and may want to mate with as many males as they can. Some researchers thus speculated that herding by male gangs is a strategy to prevent females from reproducing with rival dolphins. In this way, a male alliance may increase the chances that the group's members will breed the next generation of dolphins.

Contrary Views On Herding Behavior

However, not all biologists agreed that herding females is a successful reproductive tactic—‘or even that it is a common type of behavior. Other research has shown that dolphins seem to have highly complex social orders that vary widely from place to place. For example, captive bottle-nosed dolphins do not form roving gangs. In fact, herding and supergangs have not been documented in any dolphin populations except those in Shark Bay.

Moreover, some studies have revealed that female dolphins have many strategies to control with which male dolphin they will conceive with. Because females dolphins spend three to six years raising a single calf, they tend to be very selective about who sires their offspring. Marine biologists said it would take genetic testing to establish patterns of paternity among the Shark Bay dolphins and evaluate the success of male herding behavior and violence in dolphin reproduction.

Dolphin Attacks On Harbor Porpoises

Although herding may be confined to the coast of Australia, biologists have reported that other types of aggressive dolphin behavior are more widespread than many people believe. Only bottle-nosed dolphins, however, have been observed to show these mysteriously violent tendencies. In the late 1990's, researchers in Virginia and Scotland were surprised by the discovery of several instances of extreme violence by bottle-nosed dolphins.

Some of the first evidence of dolphin brutality began washing up on the shores of Moray Firth, a large bay on the northeast coast of Scotland, in 1990. Researchers found hundreds of harbor porpoise carcasses on the beach. The bodies did not look badly injured, but when scientists performed autopsies, they discovered that all the bodies had sustained serious injuries. Most of the dead porpoises had fractured bones, ripped tissue, and bruised organs.

Researchers originally theorized that boat propellers or fishing nets might have been responsible for the death of the porpoises. But in 1994, researchers discovered a dead porpoise with fresh bite marks. Scientists measured the marks and discovered that they exactly matched the spacing of the teeth on an adult bottle-nosed dolphin. Why the dolphins were killing porpoises was a mystery, since the two animals do not compete for the same fish for food.

Killing Their Young

The mystery deepened when the bodies of young dolphins bearing the same kinds of wounds also began washing up on Scottish beaches. By 1998, the researchers concluded that bottle-nosed dolphins were killing not only young porpoises but also their own babies.

Such incidents of infanticide (the killing of an infant) among dolphins were not confined to Scotland. In Virginia Beach, Virginia, in the late 1990's, biologists found other battered carcasses of baby bottle-nosed dolphins washed up with the tides. All of the bodies had wounds similar to those seen on the bodies of the porpoises and dolphins in Scotland.

The researchers reported that all of the dead baby dolphins discovered in the United States and Scotland were less than 1 year old, an age at which the infants are normally under the full-time care of their mothers. Instead, somehow, these baby dolphins had been bitten and bludgeoned to death by adults.

Because male and female dolphins look nearly identical, teams of researchers have been unable to determine whether it was males or females who were killing the young. But some biologists have speculated that adult males were doing the killing. They based their conclusion on the fact that infanticide among other animals is more commonly committed by males.

In addition, scientists know that a female dolphin, while caring for her calf, can remain sexually inactive for several years. But a female becomes fertile and ready to mate within one to two weeks of losing an infant. Therefore, researchers speculated that killing a mother's calf might be a male strategy designed not only to destroy the offspring of a rival but also to bring the female into a sexually receptive state.

By mid-2000, the deaths of the porpoises still remained a mystery, since these animals have no obvious connection to any reproductive advantages. Scientists in Scotland, however, theorized that if the male dolphins were responsible for the large number of reported deaths, they may have used the porpoises as “target practice” for later attacks on infant dolphins. Other experts, however, theorized that the attacks might instead have stemmed from simple aggression or from confusing the baby porpoises for baby dolphins in the murky waters.

Researchers agreed that reports of such aggressive behavior should serve as a warning to people who enjoy swimming with dolphins. Furthermore, many scientists said that such studies were just the first step in gaining a better understanding of the nature of bottle-nosed dolphins.

* Home
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More interesting stories about the illusion of Disney-world "cute and lovable" animals at: http://www.recoveryourlife.com/Forum/showthread.php?p=1121702

Monday, November 3, 2008

Whales Thorn Blows Bubble Rings


Hayden Panettiere Whales Thorn Blows Bubble Rings
javascript:void(0)
From: danthewhaleman
Added: December 03, 2007

Hayden is trying to stop whaling. Thorn was born in 1983. I hope she gets to see this clip as it is one of the rarest forms of individuality in the wild kingdom. Thorn is the only humpback whale that blows bubbles this dramatically.
Category: Nonprofits & Activism
Tags:
hayden panettiere heroes paul watson whale whaling whales humpback protection japan iceland norway caribbean names

Dolphins - Blowing Rings


Dolphin play bubble rings

Original YouTube video created and posted chiajungchi


***** Something About The Dolphin Video *****
When I took this video, my feeling was mixed. On one hand I was totally amazed by the intelligence level displayed on these dolphins. On the other hand I was a little bit sad on where these intelligent beings are - the captive environment. This somewhat peaceful yet depressing music on the background seems fully express my mixed feelings. When I try to write the description for the video, it strikes me that we all like dolphin - live in somewhat constrained environment whether it is our choice or not. Suddenly it inspired me that we should learn from this dolphin to enjoy the live no matter where our circumstance is and to use our intelligence to the highest possible level it could be. To respect these dolphins, I decide to call them the employees at Sea World. And this video is especially dedicated to the best employee at Sea World.
Age: 36
Country: United States

*****

This video is absolutely incredible! Wonderful; one of the best videos I've seen yet. The music brought tears to my eyes. Wish I knew the composer...

Question: Who did the beautiful music used in this video? Ah, google search successful, and purchased on Amazon.com:

"No One is Alone from Into the Woods" (Instrumental) by John Williams; The Boston Pops Orchestra. From the Album Music of the Night: Pops on Broadway 1990 CD.

*****

But all is not necessarily well for captive dolphins and Orcas: See youtube.com/watch?v=q5SbVxg24M8&feature=related

*****

Notes from torenheksje
Reposted on YouTube: January 25, 2008,
Dolphins Blow Bubble Air Rings

When you spend your life in the water, I guess you tend to develop a good intuition for its subtleties. Dolphins have been observed to create bubble rings by exhaling air carefully in the middle of the vortices caused by the motion of their fins through the water, among other techniques.

Besides being nice to look at (and a neat demonstration of fluid mechanics), this phenomenon also might throw some light on dolphin cognition, since the skill to create the rings is a bit subtle and tends to be taught from one dolphin to the next via careful observation and practice. I'm also intrigued by the report that they seem to be using sonar to locate the vortex in the water, since that would be a fairly amazing bit of audio analysis.

This was filmed and edited by chiajungchi, who also has a YouTube site. Thanks for allowing me to post it as well, chiajungchi!

*****

I found a lot of videos on this subject on YouTube, with dolphins and a Beluga Whale and a Black Manta Ray blowing bubble rings!



Dolphins - Blowing Rings http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJwDCU7tsCw

From: wijeturo
Added: October 04, 2008

The attached video is of dolphins playing with silver colored rings which they have the ability to make under water to play with. It isn't known how they learn this, or if it's an inbred ability.

As if by magic the dolphin does a quick flip of its head and a silver ring appears in front of its pointed beak. The ring is a solid, donut shaped bubble about 2-ft across, yet it doesn't rise to the surface of the water! It stands upright in the water like a magic doorway to an unseen dimension. The dolphin then pulls a small silver donut from the larger one. Looking at the twisting ring for one last time a bite is taken from it, causing the small ring to collapse into thousands of tiny bubbles which head upward towards the water's surface. After a few moments the dolphin creates another ring to play with. There also seems to be a separate mechanism for producing small rings, which a dolphin can accomplish by a quick flip of its head.

An explanation of how dolphins make these silver rings is that they are "air-core vortex rings". Invisible, spinning vortices in the water are generated from the tip of a dolphin's dorsal fin when it is moving rapidly and turning. When dolphins break the line, the ends are drawn together into a closed ring. The higher velocity fluid around the core of the vortex is at a lower pressure than the fluid circulating farther away. Air is injected into the rings via bubbles released from the dolphin's blowhole. The energy of the water vortex is enough to keep the bubbles from rising for a reasonably few seconds of play time.
Category: Pets & Animals
Tags:
Aquatic Dolphin Blowing Rings

"No One is Alone from Into the Woods" (Instrumental) by John Williams; The Boston Pops Orchestra. From the Album Music of the Night: Pops on Broadway 1990 CD. Purchased on Amazon.mp3

*****

Dolphins playing With Bubble Rings (new 2008 video from CBS), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krzTgnMIg3Q&feature=related

From: cyrex686
Added: February 06, 2008

Two young dolphins creating underwater bubbles with their blowholes. Then they manipulate and play with the bubbles using their nose: They're spinning them, making them smaller and larger, swimming through them and popping them.

This is a phenomenon that has intrigued scientists watching dolphins in the wild and now is fascinating millions of guests at SeaWorld Orlando.

Source: http://cbs4.com/local/SeaWorld.Orlando.Bubbles.2.647161.html
Category: Pets & Animals
Tags:
Dolphin dolphins play bubble ring silver Sea World Orlando seaworld wildlife aquatic

---

http://cbs4.com/local/SeaWorld.Orlando.Bubbles.2.647161.html

Feb 6, 2008 10:52 am US/Eastern
SeaWorld Dolphins Are Bubblicious
ORLANDO (CBS4) ― It's known that dolphins are highly intelligent mammals, now a group of young dolphins at SeaWorld Orlando are proving that fact once again.

They know that you don't need gum to create a bubble because the young dolphins have taken bubble-making to the extreme.

Two young juveniles have been observed creating underwater bubbles with their blowholes. Then they use their rostrum, also known as their snouts, to manipulate and play with the bubbles.

They're spinning them, making them smaller and larger, swimming through them and popping them.

This is a phenomenon that has intrigued scientists watching dolphins in the wild and now is fascinating millions of guests at SeaWorld Orlando, according to the marine life theme park.

(© MMVIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

Bubble Rings



See the video "Bubble Rings" here on YouTube and more at BubbleRings.com: "A bubble ring in an outdoor swimming pool. Bubble rings are like smoke rings, but underwater."

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Croc's plastic bags death surprises reef chief

ABC News


The crocodile was captured last Friday after menacing residents in waters around Magnetic Island. (ABC News: Sarah West)

The chairman of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA) says he is surprised to hear a crocodile swallowed enough plastic bags to kill it.

The crocodile had been relocated from Cape York in far north Queensland and was captured last week after menacing residents in waters around Magnetic Island, off Townsville.

GBRMPA chairman Russell Reicheldt says plastic is one of the biggest pollution problems facing the world's oceans.

"I didn't know it was a problem for crocodiles specifically, you tend to hear it more as a problem for turtles," he said.

"But it ... reinforces our general view that the amount of marine debris in the ocean is too much and it's damaging wildlife."

Tags: conservation, oceans-and-reefs, water-pollution, animals, cairns-4870 , magnetic-island-4819, townsville-4810

Leap-Frogging Bubble Rings


YouTube video Leap-Frogging Bubble Rings
posted by: DrGoulu
Added: January 09, 2008
Bubble Rings created by Paul Nylander www.bugman123.com/Physics/Physics.html
Category: Science & Technology
Tags: 3D graphics, physics

More info on Paul Nylander's website: www.bugman123.com/Physics/Physics.html

“Take a good look at God’s wonders - they’ll take your breath away.” Psalm 66:5

Here are some physics simulations and artwork along with some Mathematica code. See also my Engineering page.


Magnetic Field of a Solenoid - new version: POV-Ray 3.6.1, 5/17/06


Leap-Frogging Vortex Rings - Mathematica 4.2 version: 12/31/05; C++ version: 10/22/07


Leap-Frogging Bubble Rings - Mathematica 4.2, POV-Ray 3.6.1, 12/31/05
Here is a pair of leap-frogging bubble rings. You can also see this image here on Andrew Burbanks' Dynamical Systems’ Picture Gallery.

Links
My Educational Project - some basic potential flows using Matlab and Mathematica
Vortex Movies - by Tee Tai Lim, I especially like the movies of leap-frogging and vortex ring collisions
Bubble Ring Videos - blown by human, whale, dolphins. This is fun... try it some time!
Leap-Frogging Bubble Rings - blown by scuba diver
Bubble Rings - by David Whiteis
Vortex rings blown out by Mt. Etna - same as a smoker puffing out an “O” ring
Nuclear Bombs - mushroom clouds are giant vortex rings
Birth of the Jellyfish - nice animation by Kerry Mitchell
Smoke Ring - giant vortex ring at the Miramar Air Show
Zero Blaster - fun toys that create fog vortex rings
Ideal Flow Machine - Java applet by William Devenport
Inviscid Flows - paper on incompressible, irrotational flows by Paul Hammerton
(more, much more, on website)

More about Paul Nylander: http://virtualmathmuseum.org/mathart/ArtGalleryNylander/Nylanderindex.html

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Manta Ray Migration ~ David Fleetham


By David Fleetham

Portfolio and Tear Sheets -- David Fleetham Photography
David Fleetham is a world-reknowned photographer based in Hawaii specializing in maine images, including sharks, whales and dolphins.
www.davidfleetham.com/Portfolio.html

Check this one out (below): http://db.davidfleetham.com


This image was taken inside the “walk through tunnel” at the Maui Ocean Center. Besides the Brown stingray [Dasyatis latus] a sandbar shark [Carcharhinus plumbeus] and spotted eagle ray [Aetobatus narinari] are pictured. Hawaii. Photos by David Fleetham.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Saving Lolita Special ~ Captive Orcas


Help work towards Marine Captivity Ban! Stop the Miami Seaquarium.
HELP BRING LOLITA HOME!
Shelby Proie on CNN Headline News with Lolita's story. (more)

Saving Lolita Special, six part special on YouTube:


Saving Lolita Special -part 1
From: PSam1776
Added: April 29, 2008
youtube.com/watch?v=gLM-BJzHDnU&feature=related
posted by PSam1776 on YouTube. Part 1 of 6.
daring and controversial documentary that may just change the way we view wild animals in entertainment.

On Mother's Day 2002, Valerie Silidker and Tim Gorski set out to uncover the real life story of the world's oldest performing whale. Their journey delivered them from Miami Florida to San Juan Island. The intimate, heart-rending tale unfolded before them as they unearthed many heavily guarded secrets of the multi-billion dollar Marine Theme Park industry.

Viewers travel with Gorski and Silidker as they visit Lolita's immediate family in the wild and interview the renowned orca biologist Ken Balcomb who wants her back.

A whale hunter hired to capture Lolita and hide crucial evidence finally comes clean after 33 years.

Former Flipper trainer turned activist/writer Ric O'Barry exposes the lies as he speaks out against the industry, which made him a star.

And self-proclaimed "abusement park" slayer Russ Rector takes no prisoners in his relentless campaign against marine mammal exploitation. Together, armed with little more than a camera and a voice, they confront a very powerful industry.

Experience the sad life of Lolita the killer whale who has been caught in a net of lies for over 3 decades. Littered with Haunting Images and painful sound bites, Lolita: Slave to Entertainment offers audiences an engaging peek behind closed doors, exposing an entire industry of injustices, greed, and lies. Make no mistakes, this is no "Free Willy"; there is no Hollywood ending here.

This Provocative and Revealing must-see documentary uniquely addresses man's relationship with wildlife. It speaks not only to animal lovers and activists, but to anyone at all who may have been duped by marine theme park propaganda. In fact, this is the film that an entire industry would rather you not see. And whether you like it or not, Lolita is assured to ignite conversation -- if not heated debate.
Category: Education
Tags: whales dolphins Documentary orca lolita

---



www.orcanetwork.org/captivity/captivity.html

Update: January 23, 2008 (Newsweek magazine) For more than a decade, Howard Garrett has worked tirelessly out of his home on Whidbey Island, Wash., to return an orca whale named Lolita to her native waters. In 1995--inspired by the campaign to release Keiko, the "Free Willy" whale--he teamed with local politicians, offering the Florida aquarium where Lolita works a million dollars to reunite her with the pod of whales she grew up with, off the coast of Washington state. In 1997, he spent two years in Miami--unpaid--working to garner public attention for Lolita's cause; after nearly four decades in captivity, she's served her time, Garrett believes. Every year since then, his organization, the nonprofit advocacy group Orca Network, has held a beachside commemoration of the day Lolita was plucked from her family in the icy waters of Puget Sound.
But 12 years is a long time for anyone to stay committed--even in the Pacific Northwest, where the orca is treated as an icon. "There have been times I've wanted to give up," Garrett says. "Everyone keeps telling us it's hopeless, and even when there's a surge of enthusiasm, eventually it dwindles."
In late November, however, Garrett got a call that, in spite of his usual doubts, stirred the fight inside him. Raul Julia-Levy, the Hollywood producer and son of actor Raul Julia, wanted to sign on to help free Lolita, and with him, promised to bring every last Hollywood contact he could persuade. He immediately put Garrett on the phone with the wife of Jean Claude Van Damme, and within days, had a list that included Johnny Depp, Harrison Ford and even 50 Cent. Now Levy says he's got a benefit concert in the works that will include R&B singer Truth Hurts, Snoop Dogg and 50 (who did not return NEWSWEEK requests for comment, though Levy says "the man loves animals like you have no idea"). Nearly a dozen local politicians have signed on, as well. "We have some of the most powerful Hollywood producers behind this campaign, and I have spoken with some of the most prominent scientists in this field," Levy says. "This beautiful animal does not deserve to die in a stinky little tank, and we are not going to take less than a full victory." (more)

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Brian Skerry, underwater photographer



http://www.brianskerry.com/commercial.html

Commercial Assignment

In addition to his editorial work, Brian Skerry is also available for commercial assignments. If your campaign involves anything underwater from a swimming pool to sharks in the sea, Brian will deliver the results you want.

Over his thirty-year career, Brian has worked with art directors and coordinators to produce specific looks to images and campaigns. We use a wide variety of lighting equipment and techniques from surface and underwater HMI lighting (movie lights), banks of underwater strobes, slaves, tungsten lights and more to create the perfect image.

We also have underwater communication equipment, so the art director doesn’t ever have to get wet! Surface communications equipment allows directors to talk to Brian underwater and make adjustments until the shot is in the can. The combination of underwater communication gear and digital cameras and feeds to surface monitors make underwater shoots easy for the surface team to direct.

Swimming pools can be turned into studios where fashion models or athletes are photographed in stunning detail. Or if the campaign requires ponds, lakes, coral reefs or the deep sea, we’ve got you covered.

For commercial assignments, Brian is represented by National Geographic Assignments. For more information please contact Alice Keating at akeating@ngs.org and visit www.nationalgeographicassignment.com

---


Brian speaking at the Boston Sea Rovers clinic, 2003.

Upcoming Events

For nearly two decades Brian has presented programs to tens of thousands of people in numerous locations worldwide. His adventurous programs combine stunning imagery with science, environmental issues, unique historical perspectives and an entertaining sense of humor. Using a fresh speaking style, Brian will take the audience around the world and deep beneath the sea. He will guide you inside and around historic shipwrecks and bring you eye to eye with mythical sea monsters.

Programs can be tailored to specific audiences ranging from corporate executives to first grade children. For corporate audiences, themes such as risk management, perseverance and teamwork can be highlighted through Brian’s experiences in planning and executing complex expeditions.

Brian’s lectures also offer a rare behind-the-scenes look at how his photographs are made. While on assignment Brian has been lost at sea, nipped by a shark, chased by a sperm whale, "stabbed" by a German U-Boat and once surfaced in a blizzard from a dive in 28-degree water to witness his dive boat sinking. These personal anecdotes of “surviving the assignment” are often more compelling than the story itself!

Brian is also available for book signings either in conjunction with speaking engagements or separately. Signings can be accompanied by an arrangement of Brian's Fine Art Prints on lighted easels, grouped behind the signing table, creating the perfect backdrop.

Periodically Brian offers underwater photography workshops in locations throughout the Unites States and around the world. The dates and locations of workshops will be posted on this page.

To schedule a presentation or workshop with Brian Skerry, or for more information, please contact us.
Lectures

February 29, 2008 – NANPA (North American Nature Photographers of America) Annual Summit – Keynote Speaker, Outreach Event – Destin, Florida

April 23, 2008 – Tri-Beta National Biological Honor Society,
Worcester State College, Annual Induction Ceremony –
Worcester, Massachusetts

July 24, 2008 – Massachusetts Audubon Society, Visual Arts Center
Canton, Massachusetts

October 31, 2008 – WildPhotos 08, Royal Geographical Society
London, England

November 6, 2008 National Geographic Society,
Masters of Photography Series, Grosvenor Auditorium -
Washington, DC

February 13-15, 2009 – Whale Quest Conference
Kapalua Resort, Maui, Hawaii
Exhibits

Ocean Wild – Audubon Visual Arts Center,
May 18 – September 21, 2008
Canton, Massachusetts

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Right Whale ~ photos by Brian Skerry

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1062892/Pictured-A-photographers-close-encounter-majestic-right-whale.html

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 5:14 PM on 26th September 2008

This is the amazing moment when a 50-ton right whale decided it needed to take a closer look at a wildlife photographer and his assistant. Pictured: A photographer's very close encounter with a majestic right whale

Brian Skerry, underwater photographer, was shooting pictures off the coast of Aukland Islands, New Zealand, when the giant mammal came within a few feet of his colleague Maurricio Handler.

He said: 'It look at me with great curiosity. But no aggression.'

Right whales are baleen whales belonging to the genus Eubalaena. Four right whale species are recognised in this genus. Photos by Brian Skerry of right whale.



Hello there: the right whales takes a closer look at photographer's assistant Maurricio Handler. Whale and Man Meet

Sometimes the family Balaenidae is considered to be the family of right whales. Bowhead Whale, which has its own genus, Balaena also belongs to the Balaenidae family, and so is sometimes considered a right whale. However, this article focuses on the Eubalaena species.

Right whales can grow up to 60 feet long and weigh up to 100 tons. Their rotund bodies are mostly black, with distinctive callosities (roughened patches of skin) on their heads.

They are called 'right whales' because whalers thought the whales were the 'right' ones to hunt, as they float when killed and often swim within sight of the shore.

Populations were vastly reduced by intensive harvesting during the active years of the whaling industry. Today, instead of hunting them, people often watch these acrobatic whales for pleasure.



Graceful: The giant mammal seemed to perform a beautiful dance for the photographer. Whale dance by Brian Skerry




Up and away: Two right whales swim towards the surface

The four Balaenidae species live in distinct locations. Approximate population figures: 300 North Atlantic Right Whales live in the North Atlantic; 200 North Pacific Right Whales live in the North Pacific; 7,500 Southern Right Whales are spread throughout the southern part of the Southern Hemisphere; 8,000–9,200 Bowhead Whales are distributed entirely in the Arctic Ocean.

The right whale's diet consists primarily of zooplankton and tiny crustaceans such as copepods, as well as krill, and pteropods, although they are occasionally opportunistic feeders.

They feed by "skimming" along with their mouth open. Water and prey enters the mouth but only the water can pass through the baleen and out again into the open sea.

Thus, for a right whale to feed, the prey must occur in sufficient numbers to trigger the whale's interest; be large enough that the baleen plates can filter it; and be small enough that it does not have the speed to escape.

The "skimming" may take place on the surface, underwater, or even close to the ocean's bottom, indicated by mud occasionally observed on right whales' bodies.

The full story of the right whale is in the October 2008 issue of National Geographic.

Map of New Zealand:

Right Whale


RIGHT WHALE by Jeffrey C. Domm


Southern Right Whale or Eubalaena australis is on average 16 - 18 metres long. It is rotund, with a large girth relative to its length, and an enormous head - approximatley 1/3 the length of its body. Southern right whales do not have dorsal fins; their flippers are broad and relatively short. Southern right whales weigh between 36,000 - 73,000 kg. For more information, visit http://www.rightwhale.ca/




North Atlantic right whale raising its
smooth-edged, all-black tail high out of the water.

North Atlantic right whales have been roaming the ocean for thousands of years. Over 800 years of extensive hunting for their valuable baleen and oil resulted in a significant decline in their population. Despite being protected internationally since 1935, the species is still hovering on the brink of extinction - only about 400 remain. (more)


Rightwhale.ca was created to highlight and publicize ongoing conservation and stewardship efforts for right whales in Canadian waters.

Man and whale sharks in Mozambique




whale shark man swimming
A man swims with a feeding whale shark in Indian Ocean off Mozambique.
http://dsc.discovery.com/sharks/shark-pictures/whale-shark-pictures.html

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Turtle Graveyard

(Neil Osborne contributed photo)
Santa Cruz researchers identify largest turtle graveyard in world
Genevieve Bookwalter - Sentinel staff writer, 10/22/2008

SANTA CRUZ -- Two Santa Cruz scientists have pinpointed a Baja California beach as the sandy graveyard of more dead sea turtles than anywhere else in the world, and they blame poor fishing practices for the deaths.

Next week one of the researchers plans to visit Mexico City and ask the Mexican government to create an ocean preserve to limit fishing off Baja California Sur to help stop the turtle deaths.

"Our goal is to convert that knowledge into some kind of action that makes that part of the ocean safer for animals," said Davenport researcher Wallace J. Nichols with the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco.

"We weren't counting them just for the heck of it," Nichols said. "There was an agenda, and that was to make sure these animals don't go extinct."

Nichols and UC Santa Cruz graduate student Hoyt Peckham have spent the past five years counting dead loggerhead sea turtles along the 43-kilometer Playa San Lazaro, near Lopez Mateos in Baja California Sur, Mexico.

During that half-decade, researchers counted nearly 3,000 loggerhead carcasses on the beach. Peckham and Nichols estimated that the two fishing fleets in nearby waters killed 1,500 to nearly 3,000 loggerhead turtles each year. Those deaths were caused by long lines and gill nets on the sea floor, Nichols said, which hook or trap the turtles and stop them from surfacing to breathe.

"We saw what are apparently the highest documented stranding and fisheries bycatch rates in the world," said Peckham, lead author of a research paper published last week in a special issue of Endangered Species Research.

Visiting the pristine Playa San Lazaro is not easy: Scientists must take a boat across the bay from Lopez Mateos, then four-wheel drive on a "cardboard highway" over barrier-island sand dunes to the breakers. The cardboard was put down years ago to help trucks gain traction as they navigate the sand.

Nichols spotted the magnitude of the turtle deaths when he first visited Playa San Lazaro 10 years ago. He and Peckham are now working with local fishermen to build tourism based on seeing the turtles, making them more valuable alive than dead, Nichols said.

Nichols plans to petition the Mexican government to create an ocean preserve limiting fishing in the waters off Playa San Lazaro, similar to the reserves in place off of the California coast.

The new research draws attention to the devastating effect small fisheries can have in biological "hot spots," Nichols said. Until now, he said, conservation efforts focused more on the effects of larger fisheries than small ones.

Peckham saw the findings as an opportunity. "By working with just a handful of fishermen to diminish their bycatch, we can save hundreds of turtles," Peckham said.
Contact Genevieve Bookwalter at 706-3286 or gbookwalter@santacruzsentinel.com.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Save Our Seas Foundation



Save Our Seas Foundation
Awareness, protection, preservation and conservation of the global marine environment are the heart of the Save Our Seas Foundation's mission.
www.saveourseas.com

Save Our Seas Foundation - Manta Rays, Mozambique
PUBLICATIONS · PRIVACY POLICY · TERMS OF USE · INTRANET. © 2000 - 2008 Save Our Seas Foundation.
www.saveourseas.com/manta-rays-mozambique

Project Leader: Andrea Marshall
Manta Rays, Mozambique

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) currently lists manta rays (Manta birostris) as ‘near threatened’. It’s known that several populations around the world are severely depleted, but not enough scientific work has been carried out to properly assess the species as a whole. Almost nothing is known about their population ecology, use of critical habitat, movements or reproduction, all of which are vital in order to accurately assess the state of the species.

As part of project leader Andrea Marshall’s PhD thesis for the University of Queensland, SOSF is currently funding a five-year project in Mozambique to enable her to carry out a unique in-depth study of the biology and behaviour of manta rays.

Andrea Marshall ~ Women Divers Hall of Fame


Manta Mania in Yap May 24-30, 2007 Famous Biologist Andrea Marshall and Photo Pro Tim Rock


Women Divers Hall of Fame

http://www.wdhof.org/scholarships/2004scholarships.shtml

Hillary Viders, Ph.D. 2004 Scholarship

A scholarship awarded to a qualified woman of any age, diver or non-diver, who is enrolled in an accredited academic or research program in the field of marine science and conservation.

Awarded To: Andrea Marshall

Andrea Marshall is an avid underwater photographer and marine biologist whose documented scientific expeditions have appeared in various books and magazines worldwide. She holds Marine Biology degrees from the University of California and the University of Queensland, Australia. Andrea specializes in the study of sharks and rays. Currently she is researching a population of many rays off the coast of Eastern Africa in rural Mozambique. She plans to use her scholarship to pay for expenses related to her field work.

***
http://www.shootunderwater.com/

2008/9 Yap Manta Seminar and Indo Trips



(Dr. Andrea Marshall pictured above) This will be a week of combined science, underwater photography and fun with Dr. Andrea Marshall and Tim Rock. (more)
www.shootunderwater.com

***

Trip: http://shootunderwater.com/_wsn/page2.html

Manta Mania in May - Yap, Micronesia Manta Ray Bay Hotel & Yap Divers are proud to host Manta Mania 24th - 31st May 2008. This will be a week of combined science, underwater photography and fun with Dr. Andrea Marshall and Tim Rock. Andrea is the founder of the Mozambique Manta Research Project and is doing some ground-breaking work in the area of manta study and marine science. Tim is a Lonely Planet author and Micronesia-based photojournalist as well as expert Manta shooter. They will be on the dive boats daily along with Manta Man Bill Acker. The week will include a number of manta dives as well as reefs and walls. Evenings will feature captivating film shows and seminars by Dr. Marshall and Rock about mantas and diving in Yap and throughout the world. Manta Mania participants will do more than dive. They will learn about identifying manta rays and kick-start the Yap Manta Ray ID program. Their photographs and observations will be used as part of a global comparative study on Manta Rays. Ask for Code TR01 and get the 7 night / 10 Dive Packages starting from $1229.00 per person. For more details, visit contact: "Manta Ray General Manager" gm@mantaray.com.

Manta Ray Research, Mozambique



Manta Ray & Whale Shark Research Centre, Mozambique

http://mozmarinescience.googlepages.com/mantarayresearch



Excerpt: Over 600 individuals have been identified at Manta Reef, making the Mozambican Manta Photo Database the largest scientific manta database in the world. [FMP data base]

News : Research : Conservation : Education : Get involved : Adopt a fish! : About us : Sponsors

Andrea Marshall is the founder of the Mozambique Manta Research Project and is doing some ground-breaking work in the area of manta study and marine science.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

New Manta Ray Species Discovered


National Geographic News

New Manta Ray Species Discovered, Expert Says
Brian Handwerk
for National Geographic News
July 31, 2008

What scientists call the manta ray is actually at least two distinct species with unique behaviors and lifestyles, a scientist announced recently.

The more commonly known manta ray is smaller and more easily seen, usually staying near coasts.

Little is known about a second, larger species that avoids contact with humans and seems to have wider migration patterns. It also has evolutionary remnants of a spine and a harmless, nonstinging barb on its tail.

The two types—which are not yet named—also appear visually distinct, exhibiting unique colors and textures.

Andrea Marshall, a Ph.D candidate at Australia's University of Queensland, presented the findings last week in Montreal at a first-ever symposium of ray experts.

Graceful Giants

Manta rays are graceful giants in the ray family that can weigh over 4,400 pounds (2,000 kilograms).

Mantas may have wingspans of almost 25 feet (8 meters). The fish are also harmless and do not possess the poisonous barb found in some of their cousins, including some stingray species.

Australian environmentalist Steve Irwin was killed by such a barb.

While both manta species roam all the oceans, they appear to have a different lifestyle.

The smaller rays—familiar to divers in Hawaii, the Maldives, Mozambique, Australia, and Japan—are year-round residents of certain marine spots, such as coral reefs.

Scientists suspect the larger, more mysterious, rays are highly migratory animals that wander the world's seas.

(Read about another mysterious ray, Asia's giant river stingray.)

Lucky Site

The species discovery was the unexpected result of five years of hard work and a bit of good fortune, Marshall said.

"As luck would have it, it looks like here in Mozambique is the only [known] location where we see both species interacting on the same reef," said Marshall, whose effort was funded by the Switzerland-based Save Our Seas Foundation.

Though much of Marshall's time was spent underwater, she also logged long hours collecting data around the world in a search for proof that the species were distinct.

To build her case she pursued evidence from DNA labs and Indonesian fishing villages, where the migrating species is still commonly caught.

Rachel Graham of the Wildlife Conservation Society in Punta Gorda, Belize, was impressed by Marshall's work, one of the longest-running manta studies ever conducted.

"We were just incredibly excited about this," she said. "The work was very in-depth and I think [for the most part] the group was convinced."

Conservation Challenges

The new species discovery will add to challenges for those seeking to protect the vulnerable, slow-to-reproduce rays.

(Related: "Photo: First Giant Manta Ray Born in Captivity Dies" [June 18, 2007].)

The smaller manta species is at risk because of their limited range.

"If someone comes into a coastline or island group and starts up a fishery, you could wipe out that population in a year or two," University of Queensland's Marshall said.

"That would [threaten] regional extinction like what may [be happening] in the Gulf of California."

The migratory mantas provide their own challenges, she added. They respect no borders, so protection efforts must involve a complicated cooperation between many nations and groups.

"Both species face independent issues in terms of conservation management," Marshall said. "We have to understand the threats to each."

© 1996-2008 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Monster manta ray species discovered


The larger species of manta ray. (Photo © Andrea Marshall)

Monster manta ray species discovered
mongabay.com
July 25, 2008

Researchers have discovered a previously unknown species of manta ray. Previously there was believed to be only a single species of ray but genetic analysis now shows there are at least two, and possibly three, species.


Dr. Andrea Marshall

The research, carried out by Andrea Marshall, a marine biologist sponsored by the Save Our Seas Foundation, distinguishes a larger and rarer type of manta as a new species. The species can reach a weight of 4500 pounds (2 metric tons) with a pectoral fins "windspan" of 26 feet (8 m). It appears to be more migratory and elusive, than its smaller, more common cousin.

Manta rays are the largest of over 500 different species of rays and skates. Unlike stingrays, manta rays are harmless and do not possess a stinging barb. They feed on plankton.

Rays are commonly harvested for foot markets, especially in Asia, but also suffer as bycatch. As a result, populations are declining in some regions.

More information is available at SaveOurSeas.com

comment:

I dived with Andrea in Tofo while staying at Casa Barry Lodge, This woman is truly amazing in what she is doing for Manta Rays in Mozambique. If you ever go to Mozambique you need to try and meet this woman, maybe you might get lucky enough to get a dive in with her and the Mantas.

Mike Warren

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Giant River Stingrays Found Near Thai City


Photo: Giant River Stingrays Found Near Thai City

Stefan Lovgren in Chachoengsao, Thailand
for National Geographic News
April 29, 2008

This is the seventh story in a continuing series on the Megafishes Project. Join National Geographic News on the trail with project leader Zeb Hogan as he tracks down the world's largest freshwater fishes.

When anglers called that March afternoon to say they had caught a giant freshwater stingray near this bustling Thai city, biologist Zeb Hogan couldn't believe it.

He had just spent a week in the remote Mekong River in northern Cambodia, searching for the ray—which might be the world's largest freshwater fish species—to no avail.

Hogan, of the University of Nevada in Reno, is documenting the rays as part of the Megafishes Project, an effort to document Earth's 20 or so freshwater giants.

Hogan is also a National Geographic Society Emerging Explorer. (National Geographic News is part of the National Geographic Society.)

Many of these behemoths, including the giant stingray, have declined in recent years. The ray, listed as "vulnerable" on the 2007 World Conservation Union Red List of species, has been overfished in its Mekong River habitat, Hogan said.

But when Hogan arrived at the river that afternoon, he found that not only had the anglers reeled in a 14-foot-long (4.3-meter-long) ray, but that the creature had also just given birth to a dinner plate-size baby. (See photos of the new mother and baby.)

The newborn clung to the rough skin on the back of its mother, which was being held at the riverbank by nine handlers.

"Amazing," Hogan said. "A stingray this size giving birth before our eyes."


Recreational fisher Rick Humphreys holds a giant freshwater stingray baby less than an hour old in Thailand on March 31, 2008.

The anglers who reeled in the baby's mother were taken by surprise when the giant creature suddenly gave birth as it was being held near the banks of the Bang Pakong River.

The baby measured 48 inches (122 centimeters) from its snout to the tip of its tail.

The event may be the first time that anyone has witnessed a live birth of a giant freshwater stingray in the wild, Humphreys said.

Biologist Zeb Hogan studied the stingray as part of a research effort to document the world's remaining freshwater giants.




Additional photos from NGS gallery.