Posts Tagged ‘Scientists’

Pictured: The amazing moment a diver swims alongside one of nature’s most lethal killing machines … an 11ft crocodile

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Just off the coast of Cuba, a diver displays nerves of steel as he swims alongside an 11ft, 1,000lb crocodile.

Risking his life for the potentially deadly experience, diver Israel Gonzalez, 31, got close enough to be tolerated for over two hours by one of nature’s most lethal killing machines.

Swimming in an area known as The Queen’s Gardens, the lone female crocodile was returning to her nest on one of the 50 or so tiny islands that make up the offshore paradise.

Israel Gonzalez swims with a crocodile

Nerves of steel: Diver Israel Gonzalez got close enough to be tolerated for over two hours by an American crocodile off the coast of Cuba

Around 60miles from the south coast of Cuba, Mr Gonzalez and underwater photographer David Doubilet matched the enormous crocodile for pace during their encounter.

‘This crocodile exhibited very benign behaviour for such a notorious predator,’ said Mr Doubilet.

‘As a wildlife photography opportunity this was extremely exciting to capture not only the rare and overlooked American crocodile, but also to run the gauntlet with the animal.

‘Honestly after the initial rush when we encountered the crocodile, our levels of fear dropped down quite considerably.’

David DoubilIsrael Gonzalez swims with a crocodile

Best friends: Mr Gonzalez had trawled the area searching for the rare reptile, who proved remarkably ‘benign’

Photographer: David Doubilet

Travelling to The Queen’s Gardens with a diving team, which also included local Cuban fishermen familiar with the area, the pair trawled the island chain for the elusive American crocodile.

‘Most people don’t know that there are crocodiles which live in the Americas,’ explained Mr Doubilet.

‘They assume that they live only in Egypt, in sub-Saharan Africa and Australia.

David Doubilet‘However, there are around 1,500 American crocodiles living in Florida and the same number across Central America and South America.

‘They are classed as a threatened species.’

Gliding alongside the croc, Mr Doubilet and Mr Gonzalez were aware that at any minute the situation could turn life threatening.

‘Unfortunately we had no protection on us. No sticks, no harpoons, nothing that would have saved our lives had the crocodiles turned nasty,’ said David.

‘But we were not unduly worried. We were careful to know our limits and not to stress the creature.

‘We were there to observe this rare occurrence.’

Maximum height of extreme waves up dramatically in Pacific Northwest

Friday, January 29th, 2010

ScienceDaily (Jan. 26, 2010) — A major increase in maximum ocean wave heights off the Pacific Northwest in recent decades has forced scientists to re-evaluate how high a “100-year event” might be, and the new findings raise special concerns for flooding, coastal erosion and structural damage.
Big Ol Wave
The new assessment concludes that the highest waves may be as much as 46 feet, up from estimates of only 33 feet that were made as recently as 1996, and a 40 percent increase. December and January are the months such waves are most likely to occur, although summer waves are also significantly higher.

In a study just published online in the journal Coastal Engineering, scientists from Oregon State University and the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries report that the cause of these dramatically higher waves is not completely certain, but “likely due to Earth’s changing climate.”

Using more sophisticated techniques that account for the “non-stationarity” in the wave height record, researchers say the 100-year wave height could actually exceed 55 feet, with impacts that would dwarf those expected from sea level rise in coming decades. Increased coastal erosion, flooding, damage to ocean or coastal structures and changing shorelines are all possible, scientists say.

“The rates of erosion and frequency of coastal flooding have increased over the last couple of decades and will almost certainly increase in the future,” said Peter Ruggiero, an assistant professor in the OSU Department of Geosciences. “The Pacific Northwest has one of the strongest wave climates in the world, and the data clearly show that it’s getting even bigger.

“Possible causes might be changes in storm tracks, higher winds, more intense winter storms, or other factors,” Ruggiero said. “These probably are related to global warming, but could also be involved with periodic climate fluctuations such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and our wave records are sufficiently short that we can’t be certain yet. But what is clear is the waves are getting larger.”

In the early 1990s, Ruggiero said, a fairly typical winter might have an offshore wave maximum of a little more than 25 feet. It was believed then — based primarily on data from two offshore buoys — that 10 meters, or 33 feet, would be about as large as waves would ever get, even in a massive “100-year” storm.

But then a major El Nino — which tends to bring larger waves, higher water levels and increased erosion — happened in 1997-98 and led to a string of “100-year” wave events of around and above 33 feet. Researchers went back to the drawing board, continued to study data and storm events, and now believe that the maximum waves the region may face could approach or even exceed 50 feet.

Increasing wave heights, they said, have had double or triple the impact in terms of erosion, flooding and damage as sea level rise over the last few decades. If wave heights continue to increase, they may continue to dominate over the acceleration in sea level that’s anticipated over the next couple of decades. The prior concern about what sea level rise could do, in other words, is already a reality. If sea levels do increase significantly in future decades and centuries, that will only add to the damage already being done by higher waves.

Exactly what impacts this will have in terms of beach erosion and shifting shorelines is difficult to predict, scientists say, because currents and sand move in complex ways, creating both “winners and losers” in terms of beach stability. But some effects are already visible, Ruggiero said.

“Neskowin is already having problems with high water levels and coastal erosion,” Ruggiero said. “Some commercial structures there occasionally lose the use of their lower levels.

“Going to the future, communities are going to have to plan for heavier wave impacts and erosion, and decide what amounts of risk they are willing to take, how coastal growth should be managed and what criteria to use for structures,” he said.

Hampering the research effort is the fact that two of the major buoys used for these studies, which are some distance off the Pacific Northwest coast and measure waves in deep water, were only installed in the 1970s. Even at that they provide two of the longest high-quality wave height records in the world. OSU researchers are studying historical records through climate data, old newspaper records and other information to try to recreate what wave heights and storm events were like going further back in time.

The largest wave height increases, scientists say, have occurred off the Washington coast and northern Oregon, with less increase in southern Oregon and nothing of significance south of central California. The study also noted that similar increases in wave heights have occurred in the North Atlantic Ocean, as well as the seasonal total power generated by hurricanes.

These issues do not consider the potential drop in land level that is expected to occur in this region with a subduction zone earthquake at some point in the future. Ruggiero noted that he did some research in Sumatra following the huge 2004 earthquake there — an area with geology very similar to that of the Pacific Northwest — and some of the shoreline had dropped from 1.5 to five feet. If and when that occurs, the impacts on shorelines could be enormous.

This research was supported by the Sectoral Application Research Program, a part of the Climate Program Office at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Mercury Levels In Arctic Seals May Be Linked To Global Warming

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

ScienceDaily — Researchers in Canada are reporting for the first time that high mercury levels in certain Arctic seals appear to be linked to vanishing sea ice caused by global warming. Their study provides new insight into the impact of climate change on Arctic marine life.

Researchers are reporting that high mercury levels in Arctic seals appear to be linked to vanishing sea ice caused by global warming. (Credit: NOAA)

Gary Stern and colleagues note in the new study that Canadian Arctic ringed seals, like many Arctic marine animals, have relatively high levels of mercury. However, researchers have never determined how these levels are linked to sea ice extent and the resulting composition of arctic cod and other prey containing mercury available to ringed seals.

The scientists analyzed the mercury content in muscle samples collected from ringed seals between 1973 and 2007. They then compared the levels to the length of the so-called “summer ice-free season,” a warm period marked by vanishing sea ice in the seals’ habitat. They found that the seals accumulated more mercury during both short (2 months) and long (5 months) ice-free seasons and postulate that this is related to the seals’ food supplies.

Higher seal mercury concentrations may follow relatively short ice-free seasons due to consumption of older, more highly contaminated Arctic cod while relatively long ice-free seasons may promote higher pelagic productivity and thus increased survival and abundance of Arctic cod with the overall result of more fish consumption and greater exposure to mercury. Longer ice-free seasons resulting from a warming Arctic may therefore result in higher mercury levels in ringed seal populations as well as their predators (polar bears and humans).

Fin Whales, Once Rare, Crowd California Coast

Monday, January 4th, 2010
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 2, 2010

Population Explosion of Tiny Fish Might Explain Rising Numbers of Whale Sightings Off Southern Calif.

By Sandra Hughes
California’s Santa Monica Bay is getting crowded since the whales have returned in force. Scientists are still trying to figure out why these whales are in such great numbers. Sandra Hughes reports.

  • Tracking a mystery, Alisa Schulman-Janiger and other marine biologists follow an ocean footprint looking for the second largest mammal in the world, the fin whale.Tracking a mystery, Alisa Schulman-Janiger and other marine biologists follow an ocean footprint looking for the second largest mammal in the world, the fin whale.

Tracking a mystery, Alisa Schulman-Janiger and other marine biologists follow an ocean footprint looking for the second largest mammal in the world, the fin whale.

Sightings of the fin whale – part of the family that includes the humpback and big blue whales – used to be a rarity in the Santa Monica Bay but not anymore. They’re everywhere, reports CBS News Correspondent Sandra Hughes.

“The people who have done this, watching for 20, 25 years, have never seen anything like it,” Schulman-Janiger, a marine biologist at the American Cetacean Society, told Hughes. “It’s described as a forest of blows. Everywhere you look there are these columns of blows going into the air.”

Marine biologists started tracking the fin whale for a census beginning Dec. 1, 2009.

“We’ve seen them 31 out of 31 days, so it’s amazing,” Schulman-Janiger told Hughes. “I don’t know how long this is going to continue, but it’s absolutely fabulous.”

In 2005-06 season, fin whales were seen on four days, according to the American Cetacean Society. By the 2007-08 season, they were sighted on 41 days. In the 2008-09 season, fin whales were seen on 91 days.

“Not just this concentration of the fin whales and blue whales and the humpbacks, there has been a smorgasbord out there,” boat Capt. John Glackin told Hughes.

In 2007, marine biologists noticed a large number of giant blue whales had taken up residence off Southern California shores instead of migrating past as they usually did. They stayed to feed off a still unexplained population explosion of krill, small shrimp-like fish.

“It’s possible that this is in response to some greater thing that’s happening because of global climate change,” David Bader of the Aquarium of the Pacific told Hughes then. “It could just be a variation in a natural cycle.”

Marine biologists tracking the fin whale say it’s again the krill population that has kept these whales here.

“We’ve have so many whales feeding and so much preponderance of the krill and the small fishes they like,” Schulman-Janiger told Hughes. “I think there’s a lot of good stuff going on with the ecosystem here.”

Once a highly polluted coastal area, the Southern California coast has gone through a number of clean-up efforts scientists believe have worked. Sea life is re-populating, creating new patterns of migration that are both mystifying and magnificent.

Scientists: Humpback Whales Can Protect Seals From Predators Out Of Maternal Instinct

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Humpback whales can protect seals out of maternal instinct

Two scientists have discovered that humpback whales can out of maternal instinct to save seals running away from predators like killer whales.

According to a report in Natural History Magazine, scientists Robert L. Pitman and John W. Durban made the finding when they were sailing the tip of South America to the Antarctic Peninsula on the sixty-five-foot yacht Golden Fleece, in search of killer whales last January.

Early one morning, the scientists witnessed a group of killer whales attacking a Weddell seal on an ice floe, and a pair of large humpbacks had inserted themselves into the fray.

At one point, the predators succeeded in washing the seal off the floe.

Exposed to lethal attack in the open water, the seal swam frantically toward the humpbacks, seeming to seek shelter, perhaps not even aware that they were living animals.

Just as the seal got to the closest humpback, the huge animal rolled over on its back, and the 400-pound seal was swept up onto the humpback’s chest between its massive flippers.

Then, as the killer whales moved in closer, the humpback arched its chest, lifting the seal out of the water.

The water rushing off that safe platform started to wash the seal back into the sea, but then the humpback gave the seal a gentle nudge with its flipper, back to the middle of its chest.

Moments later, the seal scrambled off and swam to the safety of a nearby ice floe.

According to Pitman and Durban, in this encounter, the menacing behavior of the killer whales may have triggered a protective maternal response in the humpback whales.

Even though the humpbacks did not have calves that were at risk, they acted immediately and instinctively to counter the threat posed to a smaller animal.

This phenomenon, when an animal provides maternal care to another that is not its own offspring, is termed allomaternal care. (ANI)