Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Female fish turned on when boyfriends win a fight

In this composite image, two male cichlids face off while a female watches.
Credit: Todd Anderson, Stanford University News Service

From LiveScience

If you're a male African cichlid, it pays to be a brawler.
A new study finds that female fish get a reproduction-related charge when their preferred mate wins a fight against another male.
When her beau loses a slugfest, the female becomes more anxious.

"It is the same as if a woman were dating a boxer and saw her potential mate get the crap beat out of him really badly," study co-author Julie Desjardins said in a statement.
"She may not consciously say to herself, 'Oh, I'm not attracted to this guy anymore because he's a loser,' but her feelings might change anyhow."

Desjardins, a postdoctoral researcher in biology at Stanford University, and her fellow researchers reported their results online Nov. 24 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Fish fistfights

To find out how female fish react to male fights, the researchers studied 15 female fish, dissecting their brains immediately after each fight.

The researchers used a fish tank split into three compartments by transparent barriers.
In each case, two males of comparable size and weight were put into the sections at either end, and the female went into the middle section.

For two days, the fish were given 20 minutes to bond.
Typically, this involved the female interacting with whichever male she preferred.

"We know that she prefers a particular male, because she will display some mating behavior and he will try to do the same on his side," Desjardins said.

The female's preference didn't change on the second day, the researchers found.

On the third day, the female remained in the middle section of the tank, but both male fish were put into a section together.
Because African cichlids are territorial, it never took long for a fight to erupt.

Female reaction

The researchers separated the fish after 20 minutes of fighting.
They then dissected the female's brain, measuring levels of RNA (a molecule similar to DNA) to judge activation in various areas of the brain.
The scientists focused on RNA for two genes associated with reproduction.
They found that in the females who'd seen their preferred male lose, areas associated with anxiety were extra-active.
In females whose potential mates had emerged victorious, activity increased in areas of the brain associated with pleasure and reproduction.

"In this case, she is turning on her body to get ready to physically mate with this male that she previously chose," Desjardins said.

The researchers don't know whether females would still have chosen to mate with a loser male, because the females were dissected immediately after the fight.
Examining the effect of fish fights on actual mate choice is the next step, Desjardins said.

The researchers suspect the brawl effect will reach beyond fish, said study co-author Russ Fernald, a Stanford biology professor.

"Our intuition is that this response is likely to occur under similar conditions in humans," Fernald said in a statement, " because the brain areas involved are present in all vertebrates and perform comparable functions."

Links :
  • Wired : the enemy within, male fish dislike their refections more than competitors
  • Russell Fernald Lab at Stanford University : other articles

Monday, November 29, 2010

Zoom In on Top Ultra High-Resolution marine panaramas

Credit: GigaPan/Stephanie Jenouvier

Adélie Penguin Colony

Stephanie Jenouvier, a researcher at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, shot this 1.39-gigapixel panorama of an Antarctic Adélie penguin colony.
Tucked away in the image are surveying researchers, hungry birds and countless waddling penguins.
The colony spreads across Cape Crozier, one of the easternmost tips of Ross Island in Antarctica, a location many scientists call home for months at a time.
Jenouvier "has really gone in and captured how we do research in Antarctic with her images,” Nourbaksh said. “They’re always great portraits of science and culture.”


Credit: GigaPan/Jason Buccheim

Bait Ball
When this school of Salema fish, also called “dream fish” for their hallucinogenic toxins, swam toward photographer Jason Buccheim, he quickly snapped 10 photos to create this wrap-around panorama (in addition to one from
inside the school).
Such schools of fish are often called “bait balls,” because dolphins, tuna and other fast ocean predators will simultaneously attack the fish from many directions, keeping them from escaping.
“Underwater gigapanography is one direction we’re really interested in pursuing,” Nourbaksh said. “Just imagine doing them on a coral reef over and over. It would be a dream to be able to show a detailed time-lapse of reef bleaching.”

From Wired

The ability to capture extremely detailed panoramic views made up of hundreds of perfectly stitched individual photos is tremendously useful for scientists studying everything from rock outcrops to birds to microscopic organisms.

The creators of the GigaPan robot, which can automatically create zoomable gigapixel-scale images, announced eight winners of a science photography contest Nov. 11 at the
Fine International Conference on Gigapixel Imaging for Science.

“Having access to such high-resolution images changes scientists’ relationships to images and the information they contain,” said Carnegie Mellon University robotics scientist
Illah Nourbaksh, one of GigaPan’s inventors and an organizer of conference.

Created in 2006 by Carnegie Mellon and NASA, the
GigaPan robotic camera mount can shoot hundreds of perfectly aligned images using almost any digital camera. After the photographer uploads the photos to a computer, photo-stitching software seamlessly merges them into a single, highly zoomable image.

Since 2007, Nourbaksh and others have trained 120 scientists to use the system. “There are 8,000
GigaPans out there just by scientists, and that’s growing every day as more of them use it,” Nourbaksh said.
From microbes on a barnacle to a landscape coated with penguins, explore the winning scientist-photographer entries, plus a sneak preview of zoomable, gigapixel-size, time-lapse videos.

Links :
  • Stephane Scotto : Bassin d'Arcachon (aerial oblique photo hosted in the GeoGarage)
  • Gigapan : surgeon fish, Galapagos

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Settling on the Coast

Taken in 2007 by Expedition 16 astronauts aboard the International Space Station,
this digital image shows Cape Cod, where the Pilgrims first set foot

(position in the Marine GeoGarage)

From NASA Earth Observation

Cape Cod is a haven for waves of migrants who have washed up on American shores.
The most famous arrived in the early 1600s, and hundreds of thousands now visit every summer. But most of the migrants washed up between
18,000 and 23,000 years ago.

In September 1620, English Separatists, also called the
Pilgrims, left Europe to set up a colony near the mouth of the Hudson River.
On November 20, they sighted land and confirmed it to be Cape Cod.
This arm-shaped peninsula of Massachusetts is shown here in 2007 in a digital photograph from astronauts aboard the
International Space Station.

The Pilgrims initially decided to sail farther south, but quickly became wary of the shallow waters and shoals east and south of Cape Cod and Nantucket—waters full of the sandy, rocky outwash from ancient glaciers.
They sailed around the northeastern tip of the Cape and on November 21, 1620, dropped anchor just off the shores of modern-day Provincetown.
While resting in that harbor, they composed and signed the
Mayflower Compact, an agreement to establish self-government.

In the weeks that followed, the Pilgrims explored the Cape and made their first encounter with the
Wampanoag Indians, native people whose ancestors may have explored and inhabited Cape Cod as early as 11,000 years ago.
Eventually, the Pilgrims made their way to the western shores of Cape Cod Bay, landing near an abandoned Wampanoag settlement known as
Patuxet.

Plymouth Rock—which is likely a creation of oral history and legend, since there is no mention of it in the writings of the original Mayflower voyagers—is a glacial erratic, a large boulder that dropped out of a glacier.

The Cape’s sandy peninsula and a fair bit of southeastern Massachusetts is, in a way, also a migrant.
The area was both built up and scoured by the
Laurentide Ice Sheet, which stretched down past Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket during Earth’s last major Ice Age.
In their advance and retreat, the glaciers composing the ice sheet scraped rock off of Earth’s surface, eventually depositing it on Cape Cod.
The
U.S. Geological Survey estimates that the deposits are 200 to 600 feet thick across the region.

Though this photo cannot show all the rocks left behind, it does show the dozens of kettle hole ponds.
As the ice sheet retreated, sediments washing out of the glaciers occasionally covered chunks of ice.
Those ice blocks would eventually melt and collapse the sediments, creating the space for the fresh groundwater-fed ponds we see today.

Editor’s Note: On the original Mayflower Compact, the date is listed as November 11.
When Western societies switched from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, 10 days were added, turning November 11 into November 21.

Links :

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Dark side of the lens : the mystical art of surfing



from Astray Films


Dark Side of the Lens presents the art and inner voice of Irish surf photographer Mickey Smith.
The six minute film lets you experience Smith’s aesthetics translated into beautiful practice.
“I wanna see waveriding documented the way I see it in my head, and the way I feel it in the sea.”

Links :

Friday, November 26, 2010

Canada CHS update in the Marine GeoGarage

1316 : PORT DE QUEBEC

42 charts have been updated for Canada (CHS update published November 12, 2010) :

1230 : PLANS PENINSULE DE LA GASPESIE
1316 : PORT DE QUEBEC
1510A : LAC DES DEUX MONTAGNES
1510B : LAC DES DEUX MONTAGNES
2006 : UPPER GAP TO TELEGRAPH NARROWS
2028A : LAKE SIMCOE
2028B : LAKE COUCHICHING - LAKE SIMCOE TO COUCHICHING LOCK
2028C : COOK'S BAY AND HOLLAND RIVER
2064 : KINGSTON TO FALSE DUCKS ISLANDS
2069 : PICTON TO PRESQU'ILE BAY
2123 : PELEE PASSAGE TO LA DETROIT RIVER
3459 : APPROACHES TO NANOOSE HARBOUR
3535 : PLANS MALASPINA STRAIT - PENDER HARBOUR
3538 : DESOLATION SOUND AND SUTIL CHANNEL
3679 : QUATSINO SOUND
3681 : PLANS - QUATSINO SOUND
3891 : SKIDEGATE CHANNEL
3957 : APPROACHES TO PRINCE RUPERT HARBOUR
4141A : SAINT JOHN TO EVANDALE
4141B : SAINT JOHN TO EVANDALE
4170 : GLACE BAY HARBOUR
4244 : WEDGEPORT AND VICINITY
4266 : SYDNEY HARBOUR
4277 : GREAT BRAS D'OR / ST. ANDREWS AND ST. ANNS BAY
4278 : GREAT BRAS D'OR AND ST PATRICKS CHANNEL
4367 : FLINT ISLAND TO CAPE SMOKEY
4381 : MAHONE BAY
4429 : HAVRE SAINT-PIERRE AND APPROACHES
4432 : ARCHIPEL DE MINGAN
4468 : ILE DU PETIT MECATINA TO ILES SAINTE-MARIE
4486 : CHALEUR BAY
4640 : ISLE AUX MORTS AND APPROACHES
4728 : EPINETTE POINT TO TERRINGTON BASIN
4831 : FORTUNE BAY NORTHERN PORTION
4832 : FORTUNE BAY - SOUTHERN PORTION
4851 : TRINITY BAY - SOUTHERN PORTION
4852 : SMITH SOUND AND RANDOM SOUND
4853 : TRINITY BAY - NORTHERN PORTION
4905 : CAPE TORMENTINE TO WEST POINT
4921 : HAVRE DE BEAUBASSIN
4957 : HAVRE-AUBERT
5143 : LAKE MELVILLE
7663 : KUGMALLIT BAY
7750 : APPROACHES TO CAMBRIDGE BAY
7777 : CORONATION GULF WESTERN PORTION
7779 : DEASE STRAIT

So 691 charts (778 including sub-charts) are available in the Canada CHS layer. (see coverage)

Note : don't forget to visit 'Notices to Mariners' published monthly and available from the Canadian Coast Guard both online or through a free hardcopy subscription service.
This essential publication provides the latest information on changes to the aids to navigation system, as well as updates from CHS regarding CHS charts and publications.