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Similan DivingMarch 23, 2010 at 1:35am
Subject: The toll of fish bombing :fishingman got badly bend after 52 meter panick ascent.
The Daily Express 3 Oct 07
Illegal Divers Forced To Bomb, Dive Deep Reefs As Shallows Wiped Out from underwatertimes Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia (2007-10-02 17:57:34 EST) The recent case of a Pulau Gaya fisherman getting the bends (bubbles in his veins) for descending to 52 metres (170ft) a fortnight ago is another sad statement on the state of Sabah’s marine resources, according to Datuk Wilfred Lingham, former Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Tourism and Environmental Development. Lingham, who is Sabah Anglers Association President, said the incident suggests illegal fishing methods are not just continuing unabated in Sabah waters but that the perpetrators are forced to go to deeper depths because the coral reefs nearer to the surface have already been bombed out. Lingham said 40 metres (150ft) is the maximum limit for recreational divers and it is sheer crazy for anyone to risk diving to such depths if not for a lucrative reason i.e. to collect the spoils from another fishbombing or cyanide fishing mission. “Reefs at between 50 to 70m are home to the famed tender and delicious ‘Sea trout’ (popularly called Seven-star groupa by the Chinese) worth RM100 to RM120 live per kg and about RM40 dead at local seafood restaurants,” Lingham said. He said the use of cyanide to knock out the fish before scooping and reviving them is why live marine fish are sometimes shunned at seafood restaurants. “In any case, 85 per cent of Sabah’s shallower reefs have already been bombed out by foreigners and the only option left is to continue to fishbomb and dive even deeper where the catch is also bigger in size,” Lingham said. “Now they have developed a bomb that can blast rocks at 60 metres. They manufacture this bomb and drop it to the bottom using iron rods,” he noted. “They are also importing a water-proof fuse 60m to 70m from the Philippines which can be lighted using a simple match in a floating boat to set off the blast. Then eventually they go down using primitive and probably second hand spray paint compressors bought from shops for about RM500 to RM700 each, attach a garden hose and bring it down for air,” Lingham explained the modus operandi. The latest “bends” incident crippled 27-old Mohamad Asri after a twisted hose prompted a panicky ascent from 52m while dive-fishing in Kudat. Daily Express Labuan correspondent Sohan Das who covered the case saw substantial bleeding even from the legs and eyes as Mohd Asri lay motionless and unable to speak in what is an acute case of bends. Even after being given five separate ‘recompression’ treatment at maximum 3 to 4 hours each, the response was poor and RMN specialist doctors decided against a sixth attempt. Asri was supposed to be flown to the RMN main base at Lumut for further treatment but his condition is so bad that doctors have advised against moving him from the Labuan Hospital’s Intensive Care Unit just yet. “Many have died unreported in similar activities that destroy Sabah’s environment and corals. “I hope the latest case (Mohd Asri) is not one of them (cyanide fishing or fishbombing). It’s hard to be sympathetic when the damage caused by these people to Sabah’s corals from Kota Kinabalu to Kudat, Lahad Datu, Semporna and Tawau has been serious. “The sad part is everything is so visible. You just have to go to look at the boats parked at certain seafronts in Kota Kinabalu and you see these air compressors at the back of the boats,” he said. “This has been going on for a long time and what Sabah needs is to ban them, create legislations that impose tough fines or jail terms before even deep sea reefs that house Sabah’s prime seafoods are also bombed out,” Lingham said |
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Killer Whales
Neuroscientist Lori Marino and a team of researchers explored the brain of a dead killer whale with an MRI and found an astounding potential for intelligence.
Killer whales, or orcas, have the second-biggest brains among ocean mammals, weighing as much as 15 pounds. It’s not clear whether orcas are as well-endowed with memory cells as humans, but scientists have found they are amazingly well-wired for sensing and analyzing their watery environment.
Scientists are trying to better understand how killer whales learn local dialects, teach one another specialized methods of hunting and pass on behaviors that can persist for generations — longer, possibly, than in any other species except humans.
Researchers have yet to find evidence that an orca in the wild has killed a person. But they aren’t surprised that the world’s biggest, most powerful and possibly smartest predator, captured and kept for years in a tank and cut off from the influences of an extended family, could have an encounter fatal for a human.
Human interaction with captive killer whales has come under increased scrutiny since Feb. 24, when a large male orca with a checkered past killed a trainer at SeaWorld Orlando by dragging her into a tank.
“I’m not trying to second-guess what was in this particular whale’s mind,” said Marino, part of the Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology Program at Emory University in Atlanta. “But, certainly, if we are talking about whether killer whales have the wherewithal and the cognitive capacity to intentionally strike out at someone, or to be angry, or to really know what they are doing, I would have to say the answer is yes.”
At least three distinct orca populations swim the world’s oceans, and they are more widely distributed than any whale, dolphin or porpoise. Fish-eating orcas stay in one area, flesh-eaters wander more widely along coasts, and a third group roams the deep-blue waters.
The three groups have starkly different diets, languages, hunting techniques and manners of behaving around other marine life, and they don’t seem to interact much with one another.
“If they didn’t have the same paint jobs, you’d call them different species,” said Brad Hanson, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration wildlife biologist in Seattle.
Yet the orcas’ DNA tells a different story. Instead of the varied populations having genetics that spread outward like a tree with several main branches, theirs is a single, nearly straight trunk, except for a mismatched pair of genes here and there.
If genetic variety isn’t what makes these killer whale groups so different, scientists suspect, their enormous brains might be the telltale factor.
Bigger animals typically have bigger masses of brain cells. But scientists use brain-weight-to-body-weight ratios as a rough measure of intelligence. By that measure, human brains, by comparison, are seven times the average. Orcas’ brains are 2 1/2 times the average, similar to those of chimpanzees.
But scientists think that looking at only the brain-body ratio seriously underestimates the thinking power of larger marine mammals. Orcas might be much smarter than the size of their brains already suggests.
Also remarkable to researchers is the orca’s ability to communicate with whistles and pulsed calls, and to “see” by making a clicking sound that works like sonar.
Many cetaceans — whales, dolphins and porpoises included — have these abilities to some degree. But orcas learn local and complex languages that are retained for many generations.
Their bio-sonar, or echolocation, abilities also amaze researchers.
A recent study by Whitlow Au of the University of Hawaii’s Marine Mammal Research Program added to evidence that orcas can use their bio-sonar not just to find fish in murky water but to identify their favorite meal: chinook salmon.
kspear@orlandosentinel.com
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times
Diveheart
Well today is the day the journey begins, I am off to Napa Valley to meet with Jim Elliott and his team to become Certified to teach Handicapable non divers to dive, I will post a day by day account of all the training, for everyone to get a feel for what it is all about. I hope all of you divers will attend a training session when it comes to your area, There will be much more about this as the days go by with the help of Jim Elliott and Jackie Danielsson, Scuba Diver Girls, and of course, Al’s Diving and some others we will be offering the course Down here in San Diego and get things rolling.
Wish me luck and I will be talking to you soon
The Journey Begins Part 2
Well the ride up was Long but very nice the weather was clear no traffic,and the senery was excellent The area is great, and it will be a very nice place to take the training a little about Dive heart
The Diveheart Foundation was founded in Early 2001 and is a non-profit tax exempt 501 (C) (3) national organization chartered in the state of Illinois. The purpose of Diveheart is to provide and support educational SCUBA diving and snorkeling experience programs that are open to any child, adult, or veteran with a disability with the hope of providing both physical and psychological therapeutic value to that person.
It is the “CAN DO” spirit that Diveheart hopes to instill in all its participants by giving them the confidence and independence that allows them to face their own life challenges and overcome barriers that before might have seemed insurmountable.
Through SCUBA diving, the Diveheart Foundation supports and facilitates programs that teach children and adults with disabilities to fly. Thanks to the wonder of the water column, the oceans and lakes of the world become the forgiving weightless environment of outer space, giving perfect buoyancy to a child or adult who would otherwise struggle on land.
You can read more about Diveheart Foundation at www.diveheart.com