Monday, November 12, 2012

Marine 'treasure trove' could bring revolution in medicine and industry

A water bear (Paramacrobiotus craterlaki).
Scientists believe micro-organisms could be used to create everything from new medicine to industrial solvents.


Scientists have pinpointed a new treasure trove in our oceans: micro-organisms that contain millions of previously unknown genes and thousands of new families of proteins.

These tiny marine wonders offer a chance to exploit a vast pool of material that could be used to create innovative medicines, industrial solvents, chemical treatments and other processes, scientists say.
Researchers have already created new enzymes for treating sewage and chemicals for making soaps from material they have found in ocean organisms.

"The potential for marine biotechnology is almost infinite," said Curtis Suttle, professor of earth, ocean and atmospheric sciences at the University of British Columbia.
"It has become clear that most of the biological and genetic diversity on Earth is – by far – tied up in marine ecosystems, and in particular in their microbial components. By weight, more than 95% of all living organisms found in the oceans are microbial. This is an incredible resource."

However, the discovery of the ocean's biological riches, including hundreds of thousands of new sponges, bacteria and viruses, also raises worries about the damage that could ensue from the new science of marine biotechnology.

In particular, scientists worry that precious sources, including hydrothermal vents where bacteria and simple plants thrive in water above boiling point, could be damaged or destroyed in a free-for-all rush to exploit these wonders.

In addition, major worries focus on developing nations whose waters contain rich sources of marine life that could be targeted and exploited by western chemical companies.
On land, patents can provide protection for products derived from local animals or plants.
In the sea, where currents carry fish, sponges and microbes from place to place, such protection could be far trickier to enforce.

The issues are set to top the agenda at a biotechnology forum, The Evolving Promise of the Life Sciences, that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) genomics forum are holding in Paris on Monday.

"We have controls for regulating the exploitation of animals, plants and microbes on land, but regulating them at sea is going to be much more difficult," said Professor Steve Yearley, head of the ESRC genomics forum and organiser of tomorrow's meeting.
"We cannot stop pirates off Somalia, so how is someone supposed to protect rare sponges that they find in their coastal waters?"

Tectitethya crypta
(Location: Sweetings Cay, Bahamas    Photographer: Sven Zea)

Sponges turn out to be a particularly promising marine resource.
The sponge Tethya crypta, found in Belize and other parts of the Caribbean, has been found to contain chemicals that have anti-cancer and anti-viral properties.
Similarly, the cancer drug Halaven was derived from sponges of the Halichondria family.

To date, only a handful of drugs derived from marine biotechnology sources have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.
However, more than 1,000 new ones are undergoing pre-clinical tests.
These include products derived from molluscs, snails, marine microbes and fish.

The science of marine biotechnology was kickstarted five years ago by the entrepreneur Craig Venter. One of the scientists involved in the sequencing of the human genome, Venter set off in his yacht in a round-the-world cruise intent on demonstrating the potential of the biological material that is found in sea water.
In the end, he made two journeys, one from 2006-8 and the other from 2009-11.
On both expeditions, scientists took 200-400 litre samples of sea water every 200 miles, put these through progressively smaller filters to capture the organisms in the samples, then froze the captured micro-organisms for shipment back to his laboratory
There scientists sequenced their DNA using techniques developed by Venter on sequencing the human genome.

The results were staggering.
According to Venter, his team discovered around 20m new genes and thousands of new families of proteins in the samples they scooped up on their journeys through the world's oceans.
As yet, no one knows what these genes and proteins do, although most researchers believe many of them must have potential as sources of new drugs.

"We are struggling to develop the right techniques to isolate and understand the marvels we are finding in the waters around the planet," said Yearley."
"Once we have done that, then we will have a much better idea just what we are looking at and just how careful we need to be when it comes to ensuring this resource is protected for the future."

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Vendée Globe 2012-2013 : still the utimate



 From SailMagazine

Why does the Vendée Globe remain, in the eyes of many, the gold standard of global ocean races? 

Simply put, because of the purity of its challenge: one skipper, one boat, one world, nonstop, set out from Les Sables d’Olonne, France, and then sail around the planet leaving Antarctica to starboard. The first one back to France wins. 

The race continues to attract the world’s most experienced sailors. 
This year there will be two skippers sailing their ninth global race, and a past winner and two past runners-up among the 14 returning veterans. 
Five rookies will also be on the starting line November 10. 
Among these will be Italian Alessandro Di Benedetto, who recently sailed a 21-foot Mini along the same route as the Vendée, broke his mast at Cape Horn, jury-rigged its two pieces back together, and continued on to finish the route nonstop in 268 days. 

We applaud 90-foot Rambler’s breaking of the Bermuda record with 20 crew aboard averaging 16 knots for 650 miles in under 2 days. 
But how about Vendée Globe 2008-9 winner Michel Desjoyeaux? 
He not only recorded a speed of 30.44 knots under autopilot, but set his 5,000-square-foot spinnaker alone in 27 knots of wind, and averaged 14 knots for 28,300 nautical miles over 84 days. 

Competing in the Vendée means being on high alert round-the-clock. 
The stress never ends. 
The Open 60s in the race are huge, the rigs are gigantic, it’s stifling hot in the tropics, and it’s freezing cold in the Southern Ocean gales. 
Will you be able to make the inevitable repairs? 
Will you have to go aloft? 
Will you be injured thousands of miles from help? 
And perhaps, most important, will you live up to standards of the competitiors who went before you, the storied legacy that is the Vendée Globe?

For the 2008-09 edition of the race, 300,000 people came to the start, and three-quarters of a million people over three weeks walked the docks to see the boats and talk with the skippers and shore crews. Why?
Because at its heart, the Vendée Globe is both an incredible dream and a daring adventure, one that transcends national boundaries and appeals to people from all walks of life.
I’ll be glued to it.
For more on this year's race, visit vendeeglobe.org/en

Friday, November 9, 2012

NZ Linz update in the Marine GeoGarage

9 charts have been updated in the Marine GeoGarage
(Linz July published 7 November 2012 updates) 

  • NZ52 Cape Brett to Cuvier Island
  • NZ53 Bream Head to Slipper Island including Hauraki Gulf
  • NZ268 Chatham Islands
  • NZ532 Approaches to Auckland
  • NZ533 Firth of Thames
  • NZ5111 Plans Between Parengarenga and Whangaruru
  • NZ5124 Plans in the Bay of Islands
  • NZ5125 Bay of Islands
  • NZ5327 Waiheke Island to Coromandel Peninsula

    Today NZ Linz charts (178 charts / 340 including sub-charts) are displayed in the Marine GeoGarage.

    Note :  LINZ produces official nautical charts to aid safe navigation in New    Zealand waters and certain areas of Antarctica and the South-West    Pacific.


    Using charts safely involves keeping them up-to-date using Notices to Mariners

    More than a holiday: Pegaso, the luxury superyacht that doubles as a science lab

    A view of Pegaso's laboratory area on the main deck -- fitted with a range of technology that allows the on board team of scientists to do everything from tracking endangered marine life to studying water pollution levels.
    Pegaso was born as an idea on a chart table aboard the owner's first yacht whilst cruising in Fiji.

    From CNN

    A recently built superyacht suggests that at least some wealthy holiday makers are demanding more from their sailing trips than just exotic islands and sun-drenched sea decks.

    The RV Pegaso is a 73.6 meter superyacht boasting a fully-equipped, cutting edge marine laboratory big enough to house a team of 12 scientists.

    The 74-meter RV Pegaso comes with the usual roster of flat-screen TVs, designer furniture and en-suite bathrooms, but a closer inspection reveals that it also doubles as a fully-fledged floating laboratory.
    Indeed, Pegaso's "RV" designation stands for "research vessel", and the boat is equipped with a five-man submarine, a decompression chamber for deep sea diving and a small team of marine biologists.

     The research vessel is equipped with a five-person submarine.
    Weighing 14 tons, it is the world's only privately owned diver-lockout sub, according to its management company, allowing divers to enter and leave underwater via different chambers.

    Alex Flemming is the chief executive of the yacht's managing company, Pegaso Marine.
    He explains that anyone who charters the yacht can have as much or as little involvement in the research as they like, with the one condition that they always allow a group of scientists to travel with them.
    Flemming believes demand for boats of this type represent a growing trend within the yachting community, where people are looking for something more than just a hedonistic getaway.
    "The historic perception of the superyacht set is the south of France, drinking champagne and having a lovely time," he said. "
    But suddenly people are going: 'Hang on a second. I can go somewhere further afield and be a part of something bigger.'
    "This is about getting the most out of time and also feeling as though they're doing some good," he added.

     Along with cutting edge scientific facilities are all the luxury comforts you'd expect from a superyacht. Boasting six double bedrooms, the number of scientists is dependent on the number of guests on board.

    According to Sean Dooley of the Ocean Preservation Alliance (OPA), the boat is owned by an accomplished diver and marine preservationist who wishes to keep his identity private.
    "This is his fourth vessel. He'd already been yachting for 15 years and traveled around the world twice," claimed Dooley. "It was at that point he said: 'Let's do something different.'"


    The boat's original dining area was converted into a lab and fitted with scientific equipment capable of everything from tagging endangered marine life to monitoring water pollution levels.
    As well as the decompression chamber, the vast array of diving equipment on board RV Pegaso includes a machine that produces high-quality oxygen -- allowing trained guests to dive deeper, longer and safer.

     The sub has standing room of 1.8meters and can travel to 170 meters under water, allowing guests to explore at depths few have ventured before.

    One of the biggest draws -- for guests and scientists -- is the five-person submarine on board.
    Weighing 14 tons, managing company Pegaso Marine claim it's the world's only privately owned diver-lockout sub, allowing divers to enter and leave underwater via different chambers and explore depths few others have ventured before.


    Such experiences can be transforming.
    Dooley recounts the journey of a guest aboard a similar research vessel in the Socorro Islands, just off Mexico, who helped scientists tag giant manta rays in an effort to track their migration patterns.
    The vital data was packaged into a video that the guest then presented to the president of Mexico.
    "He was able to help conduct important research that will have a lasting impact. And as he kept telling us, this was the best trip he'd ever had," said Dooley.


    But all this worthy enterprise does nothing to distract from the luxury embellishments at hand on RV Pegaso.
    True to its owner's vision of combining high-level research with opulence fit for a sultan, guests who are not otherwise tagging hammerhead sharks or monitoring the breeding habits of whales, can enjoy comforts that include an eight-person spa pool, bar, cinema, gym and extensive observation lounge.
    "When we do trips with our clients, they still like wonderful meals, they still like massages, they still like the luxury of living aboard a superyacht," said Dooley.
    "But we've got a whole other layer of richness you just can't get from your average superyacht."

    Links :