Monday, September 22, 2014

Following Nemo: Clownfish make epic ocean journeys


From National Geographic by Jason Bittel 

Turns out finding Nemo could take a while. A new study reveals that baby clownfish can travel up to 250 miles (400 kilometers) in search of a new reef—an almost unthinkable distance for a creature just a few millimeters long.

Scientists already knew that clownfish larvae hatch in the safety of their parents’ sea anemone, but then leave this sanctuary in search of a home of their own.

A spine-cheek clownfish nestles in its bulb tentacle sea anemone. 
A spine-cheek clownfish nestles in its bulb tentacle sea anemone. 
Photograph by David Doubilet, National Geographic Creative

This is the opposite of the plot in Pixar’s Finding Nemo, in which a father clownfish, Marvin, sets out across the open ocean to find his son Nemo after he was caught in an amateur aquarist’s net.
(Read more about clownfish in National Geographic magazine.)
But until recently, scientists didn’t know just how truly epic the voyage was.
“This study is the first to directly measure long-distance dispersal [of clownfish larvae] over hundreds of kilometers,” study co-author Stephen Simpson, a marine biologist at the U.K.’s University of Exeter, said by email.

Fishy Accents

Tracking larvae has always been extremely difficult—after all, it’s not as if you can attach a GPS tag or GoPro camera to such a tiny organism.
So instead of tracking a single larva’s trek, Simpson and his team caught hundreds of Omani clownfish (Amphiprion omanensis) living in two coral reefs that are hundreds of kilometers apart off the southern coast of Oman. (See a map of where clownfish live in the world.)
The team removed a tiny part of each fish’s fin before releasing them unharmed into the ocean.
They then ran a DNA analysis on these fins, which revealed that fish living on Reef A have a different genetic signature than a fish living on Reef B, according to the study, published September 17 in the journal PLOS ONE.
The scientists liken these signatures to accents that are as easily recognizable as the difference between someone from New York City and someone from London.
By comparing the DNA signatures from the fin samples, the team proved what they’d long suspected—the two reefs were swapping clownfish despite being so far apart.
(See more coral reef pictures.)

“That larval fish can disperse between remote reef locations is impressive,” said David Coughlin, a professor of biology at Widener University in Pennsylvania who wasn’t involved in the study.
“However, it seems likely that some small number of larval fishes would end up at other reef locations as a matter of chance.”

In other words, the ocean’s currents probably have a greater impact on where the little fishies end up than which way they point their minuscule fins.
In fact, the team’s research showed that greater numbers of larvae traveled from the northern reef to the southern reef, and this mirrored the predominant current of the ocean.

Into the Great Wide Open

If you’re picturing a tiny, bright orange clownfish larvae plunging headlong into the high seas—stop.
Nearly see-through and smaller than a grain of rice, clownfish larvae don’t look much like Nemo. These defenseless youngsters also have it tough from the get-go.
The larvae can’t metamorphose into adults until they find a host anemone.
Other animals, like lobsters, may spend nearly a year in this open-ocean phase, called the pelagic larval duration (PLD).
However, the PLD of this species of clownfish lasts just two to three weeks, limiting the amount of time they can travel and find a new home. (See beautiful pictures of clownfish and anemones.)
And they’re easy prey: Of the many thousands of clownfish that hatch, only a lucky few will ever reach a reef—and most of those will be eaten within the first 24 hours, study co-author Hugo Harrison, a research fellow with the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, said by email.

“These kids don’t have it easy,” Harrison said.
“Pretty much everything is out there to eat them!”
For instance, clownfish larvae must escape hungry mouths large and small, from enormous filter feeders like baleen whales to tiny jellyfish, shrimp, copepods, and even zooplankton.

Why Risk It?

If there’s so much danger in the open ocean, why do clownfish venture out at all?
Because dispersing to new environments is “crucial” for the animals, said Harrison.
Traveling far from home ensures genetic diversity among the fish, and mixing up genes serves as a buffer against extinction.
It also allows species to colonize new habitats as they become available or to recolonize areas that were previously disturbed or depleted.
(Also see “Do You Know Where Your Aquarium Fish Come From?”)
Overall, the paper’s authors think the research could shed new light on just how connected even seemingly isolated marine populations are and may even help scientists develop and better manage marine reserves in the future.
In any event, the next time your kids want to watch Finding Nemo, you can tell them all about the real-life struggles of clownfish and their young.
Though you might need to censor it a bit.  

Links :

Sunday, September 21, 2014

I am a surfer


There isn't a whole lot of surfing going on in Alaska, but Homer based Scott Dickerson aims to change that.

Surfing in Alaska is experienced by a very few and forgotten by not one of them.
While we don’t always remember the individual waves ridden, or even the specific sessions, it’s the whole adventure that is so memorable.
It’s the rawness and beauty of the total wilderness that we discover waves in that sticks in our daydreams.
Those mornings after a long stormy night when there’s a bit of frost on the deck of the boat but the wind is calm, the stars are out and the only thing you can hear is the roaring of surf outside the bay.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Norway, the slow way : the route of the Hurtigruten

 Enjoy the complete cruise of M/S Nordnorge from Bergen to Kirkenes in 37 minutes.
The original footage was 8040 minutes. The speed in this timelapse varies between 100x to 300x normal speed.
Footage is from the live broadcast "Hurtigruten Minutt for Minutt" aired on television in June, 2011.

Links :
  •  NYTimes by Reif Larsen : A journey in which I travel north, on the world’s most beautiful voyage, searching for the specter of my grandfather and a glimpse of the ever-elusive midnight sun.

Friday, September 19, 2014

Photos reveal China building on reefs in disputed waters

Johnson South Reef which China calls Chiga Reef with the Marine GeoGarage

From SMH by Lindsay Murdoch

Spy photographs obtained by Fairfax Media reveal that China is rapidly building artificial islands on reefs in fiercely disputed areas of the South China Sea.


For centuries they were dots in turquoise waters, home only to sea birds.
But the latest images show that land reclamation and construction is underway on Kennan and Burgos islands in the heart of the Spratly Islands and on its eastern and western extremes, as China aggressively presses territorial claims in the resource-rich waters.

 left picture : 31 March 2014 / right picture : 7 August 2014
CNES 2014, distribution Astrium Services/Spot Image SA/IHS


The United States warned last week that China's accelerated land reclamation work had proved "intimidating and worrisome" for other regional countries, including the Philippines and Vietnam.

Burgos Reef, June 2014. Materials for constructing breakers and dredging appear.
 Burgos Reef, June 2014. Materials for constructing breakers and dredging appear.

US Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Russel, the senior US diplomat for East Asia, said that while Beijing rightly points out it is not the only claimant country to have carried out such work "the pace of China's reclamation in the sensitive disputed waters of the South China Sea vastly outstrips what other claimants have done in the past by many orders of magnitude."
"What I think the effect of what they are doing is to destabilise the situation and make it harder, not easier, for the claimants to resolve their claims peacefully," he said.
The US has stepped up surveillance flights over the region, despite Chinese protests, including reportedly from bases in east Malaysia.

Burgos Reef, July 29, 2014. The reclaimed portion appears with an altered shoreline that has been reinforced by breakers.
Burgos Reef, July 29, 2014.
The reclaimed portion appears with an altered shoreline that has been reinforced by breakers.

Carl Thayer, an expert on the South China Sea from the University of New South Wales, said that while the photographs do not support speculation China is building military bases or airports on the islands they support the "official Chinese position that land reclamation and other construction activities will improve the quality of life for Chinese living on these artificial islands."
"This basic infrastructure could support economic activities, including rudimentary medical facilities and, if the Chinese were so inclined, serve as lilypads to small search and rescue aircraft," Professor Thayer said.
"These photographs alert analysts to keep a close watching brief on Chinese activities and to adjust assessments of their military utility as construction continues."


Kennan Reef, April 2014. Waterways are dredged while excavated residue is used to reinforce the land.
Kennan Reef, April 2014.
Waterways are dredged while excavated residue is used to reinforce the land.

Defence analysts in the US and Asia have been tracking the movements of a 127-metre Chinese dredging ship, the Tian Jing Hao, that is believed to have transformed at least six reefs into artificial islands this year, sucking up the seabed and disgorging it on reefs at the rate of 4,500 cubic metres per hour.
Tensions were heightened in the region in May when China moved an oil drilling platform into an area of the sea disputed with Vietnam which prompted an eruption of anti-Chinese rioting in Vietnam.
The Philippines has attempted to shore up its claims in the sea, releasing dozens of ancient map which officials said show that China's historical southernmost territory was always Hainan island, just off the Chinese coast.

Kennan Reef, July 29, 2014. An increased number of construction equipment, materials and container vans used as shelter for the workers appear.
Kennan Reef, July 29, 2014.
An increased number of construction equipment, materials and container vans
used as shelter for the workers appear.

Philippine officials said the maps dating from the Song Dynasty in the year 960 do not include Scarborough Shoal as Chinese territory, an area where China has been engaged in a acrimonious stand-off with the Philippines.
The Philippines, a close US ally, has brought a case to a United Nations court in The Hague challenging China's sovereignty claims.
China claims the near entirety of the South China Sea, a major maritime thoroughfare that is also claimed by Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Brunei.

Links :

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Adventurer Daniel Fox's spectacular album from Alaskan islands

The intrepid explorer is currently three weeks into a monstrous 1,000 mile Pacific kayak expedition from Victoria, Canada, to San Francisco, California
The intrepid explorer is currently three weeks into a monstrous 1,000 mile Pacific kayak expedition from Victoria, Canada, to San Francisco, California

From DailyMail by Jack Crone

  •  Daniel Fox, 40, from San Francisco, took on the challenge to document the region's spectacular scenery and animals
  • Armed with few supplies, he camped on site where Russians founded early settlement in Alaska in the late 1700s
  • Adventurer says it's his mission to bridge the gap between people and nature - and sees the world as his studio
  • He says: 'Unfortunately many of today's youth are immersed in totally different reality, living in front of a computer'
  • He's currently kayaking a staggering 1,000 miles from Victoria, Canada to San Francisco to raise charitable funds
These breathtaking photos were captured by adventurer Daniel Fox - who spent three months circling the remote and unspoiled islands of Alaska in just a kayak.
The explorer, 40, from San Francisco, took on the challenge to offer people a tantalising glimpse into the region's spectacular scenery and animals.
Mr Fox, also a wildlife photographer, first visited the north-western state in 2013 and fell in love with the abundance of sea otters, deer and eagles. 

This mesmerising picture shows explorer Mr Fox inside strolling through the famous Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau Alaska
This mesmerising picture shows explorer Mr Fox inside strolling
through the famous Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau Alaska

He decided to return this summer and spent three months travelling around the islands by kayak, meeting humpback whales and brown bears along the way.
Armed with just a few supplies he camped on the site where Russians established one of their first settlements in Alaska in the late 1700s.
He regularly awoke to bears and deer inspecting his tent - but the animals were merely curious about the lone human camping in the open air.
He said: 'I camped where the Russians established the location of their first Alaska settlement and first substantial European settlement on the Pacific Coast of North America, north of California.
'I dined watching humpbacks breaching and feeding, listening to their roaring splash echoing around, bouncing off the steep mountains.

Mr Fox claims claims that it's his mission to bridge the gap that has developed between nature and people(above he kayaks in the Mendenhall Glacier)
Mr Fox claims claims that it's his mission to bridge the gap that has developed between nature and people(above he kayaks in the Mendenhall Glacier)

This beautiful photo was taken at the outset of the trip - he is pictured at Bear Glacier next to his kayak in April 2014 in British Columbia, Canada
This beautiful photo was taken at the outset of the trip - he is pictured at Bear Glacier next to his kayak in April 2014 in British Columbia, Canada

A sea lion yawns at Daniel Fox as it sits on rocks in Kodiak Island, Alaska - the explorer describes himself as an artist and a storyteller
A sea lion yawns at Daniel Fox as it sits on rocks in Kodiak Island, Alaska - the explorer describes himself as an artist and a storyteller

'I went back to Mendenhall Glacier but this time paddling the lake and exploring the icebergs. It was during that outing that I found this amazing iceberg cave.
'Kayaking is a really intimate relationship with the water and the places you visit. You are sitting in this small cockpit, feeling every little ripple, wave, breeze, or current.'
Mr Fox, who counts Sir David Attenborough as one of his heroes, describes himself as a photographer, storyteller and artist and says his mission is to bridge the gap between nature and the public.

Daniel Fox splashes water into the camera as he kayaks around the stunning scenery in June this year in Afognak Island, Alaska
Daniel Fox splashes water into the camera as he kayaks around the stunning scenery in June this year in Afognak Island, Alaska

Not one to shy away from adventure, he is currently kayaking down the Pacific coast from Victoria, Canada, to San Francisco, California.
The astonishing 1,000 mile journey is in aid of Wilderness Immersion for Leadership and Discovery (W.I.L.D.), a foundation Mr Fox started to connect young people with wildlife.
The goal is to raise $14,500 in sponsorship so that two underprivileged teenagers can attend a 30-day sea kayaking camp in Alaska in 2015.
He is now three weeks into the journey, has kayaked more than 300 miles, bringing him to waters off the coast of north Oregon, and has raised just under $5,000. 

"Really rarely do we have the capacity to just focus on one single thing.
The minute of nature is a daily exercice is like a meditation; to try to disconnect from all our distractions and just to basically stop :
Stop, breathe, relax, listen, enjoying the moment"
(see Paddling magazine)

The intrepid explorer is currently three weeks into a monstrous 1,000 mile Pacific kayak expedition from Victoria, Canada, to San Francisco, California
The explorer says 'nature is raw, rough, cruel, pretty, beautiful, inspiring, but above all, a humble experience' (pictured above is a red fox)

The adventurer said he would regularly wake to find deer sniffing through his belongings (above a black sitka deer inspects his camp on Kodiak island)
A lone brown bear looks straight into the camera as it  walks along the beach in this image taken in May 2014 on Admiralty Island, Alaska
A lone brown bear looks straight into the camera as it  walks along the beach in this image taken in May 2014 on Admiralty Island, Alaska

On his foundation's website, Mr Fox says: 'Ever since I was a young boy, I found my inspiration and comfort in nature. It taught me about life, and death. 
'Nature is raw, rough, cruel, pretty, beautiful, inspiring, but above all, a humble experience.' 
Explaining his inspiration for starting the foundation he says: 'Unfortunately many of today's youth are immersed in a totally different reality. 
'Living in front of the computer, the television omnipresent and socially connected via smartphones, they spend little time in nature and rarely disconnect from technology. 

 Mr Fox stands to admire the stunning green landscape at Three Saints Bay in Kodiak Island, Alaska
 Mr Fox stands to admire the stunning green landscape at Three Saints Bay in Kodiak Island, Alaska

Mr Fox's goal is to raise $14,500 on his current expedition so that two underprivileged teenagers can attend sea kayaking camp in Alaska in 2015 (a bald eagle above) 

Mr Fox's goal is to raise $14,500 on his current expedition so that two underprivileged teenagers can attend sea kayaking camp in Alaska in 2015 (a bald eagle above) 
'If their lives exist on the screen now, it’s unrealistic to think they will have the desire to connect with the natural world as they mature. 
'Yet, humans have always been connected with nature - 99.9% of our evolution comes from living in natural environments and our psychological underpinning is still entrenched in many ways with nature.' 
To track his progress on his 1,000 mile challenge, you can visit his W.I.L.D. website.

 Explaining his inspiration for starting the foundation he says: 'Unfortunately many of today's youth are immersed in a totally different reality'

Explaining his inspiration for starting the foundation he says: 'Unfortunately many of today's youth are immersed in a totally different reality'

Mr Fox first visited the north-western state in 2013 and fell in love with the abundance of sea otters, deer and eagles (above a bird flies near Afognak Island, Alaska)
Mr Fox first visited the north-western state in 2013 and fell in love with the abundance of sea otters, deer and eagles (above a bird flies near Afognak Island, Alaska)

Daniel Fox photographed three otters playing in the water on Kodiak Island, Alaska, this summer during a three month kayaking trip around the state's islands
Daniel Fox photographed three otters playing in the water on Kodiak Island, Alaska, this summer during a three month kayaking trip around the state's islands

Links :