Sunday, May 6, 2018

Deep-sea anglerfish caught mating in first-of-Iis-kind video


From ScienceMag by Katie Langin

Anglerfish, with their menacing gape and dangling lure, are among the most curious inhabitants of the deep ocean.
Scientists have hardly ever seen them alive in their natural environment.

That’s why a new video, captured in the waters around Portugal’s Azores islands, has stunned deep-sea biologists.
It shows a fist-size female anglerfish, resplendent with bioluminescent lights and elongated whiskerlike structures projecting outward from her body.
And if you look closely, she’s got a mate: A dwarf male is fused to her underside, essentially acting as a permanent sperm provider.
“I’ve been studying these [animals] for most of my life and I’ve never seen anything like it,” says Ted Pietsch, a deep-sea fish researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Most of what we know about deep-sea anglerfish comes from dead animals pulled up in nets.
Scientists have identified more than 160 species, but only a handful of videos exist—and this is the first to show a sexually united pair.
“So you can see how rare and important this discovery is,” Pietsch says.
“It was really a shocker for me.”

The video was captured at a depth of 800 meters by deep-sea explorers Kirsten and Joachim Jakobsen in a submersible.
The husband and wife team was nearing the end of a grueling 5-hour dive along a steep deep-sea wall on the south side of São Jorge Island, when “something with a funny form” caught their eye, Kirsten Jakobsen says.
Aborting their plan to surface, the filmmakers followed the strange creature around for 25 minutes, capturing its movements through the submersible’s 1.4-meter-wide window.
It was exciting, but also challenging to maneuver the craft to get the best images because the female was only about 16 centimeters long, she says.
After surfacing, the duo sent the video to Pietsch, who identified the species as Caulophryne jordani, known as the fanfin angler. He was entranced by the species’s “gracefulness,” especially the way those whiskerlike structures—called filaments and fin rays—enveloped the animal. “Any prey item touching one of those would cause the angler to turn and gobble up that particular animal,” he says.
“They can’t afford to let a meal go by because there’s so little to eat down there.”

The video was captured in August 2016, but this is the first time it’s been released to the public.
C. jordani’s light show was also a stunner.
Like other deep-sea anglerfish, the female has a bioluminescent, lurelike appendage that drifts in front of her head to attract prey.
But in the video, the filaments and fin rays also appear to emit light at their tips and at intervals along their length—something that’s never been seen before.
Pietsch suspects that the light is bioluminescent—meaning, it’s produced within the animal itself—but he notes that it’s hard to know whether the structures are reflecting light from the submersible or are actually glowing.

The tiny male is also a key part of the discovery.
Like many other species of anglerfish, C. jordani forms a permanent pair bond—once a male finds a mate, he bites into her, eventually fusing with her tissue and gaining sustenance through her blood stream.
Scientists have known about this bizarre reproductive strategy because they’ve seen dead males latched onto dead females, but people have never seen it in the wild—until now.

Bruce Robison, a deep-sea ecologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California, was impressed with how flexible the male was despite its solid attachment, seemingly moving around in any direction he wished.
“There’s no way I would have ever guessed that from a [museum] specimen.”
Anglerfish are an incredibly diverse group, with “a marvelous variety of structures and species,” but they’re hard to study because they dwell hundreds to thousands of meters below the surface of the ocean, says Peter Bartsch, a fish scientist at the Natural History Museum in Berlin.
With recent advances in deep-water exploration technology, he adds, videos like this are much more possible, giving us a better idea about what these mysterious creatures actually look like in their deep, dark home.

Links :

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Exploring and protecting the Antarctic


The Antarctic is one of the least explored places on the planet.
For the first time ever a marine biologist has ventured to unexplored parts of the seabed in a submarine.
Her discoveries have shocked the scientific community and could pave the way for the biggest no-fishing zone in the world

Friday, May 4, 2018

US NOAA layer update in the GeoGarage platform

4 nautical raster charts updated

This is the longest straight path you could travel on water without hitting land : not sure...


The longest sailable straight line path (shortest distance GC) on Earth.
Image: Chabukswar & Mukherjee, 2018

see also GCmap

From Gizmodo by George Dvorsky

Back in 2012, a Reddit user posted a map claiming to show the longest straight line that could be traversed across the ocean without hitting land.
Intrigued, a pair of computer scientists have developed an algorithm that corroborates the route, while also demonstrating the longest straight line that can be taken on land.

The researchers, Rohan Chabukswar from United Technologies Research Center Ireland, and Kushal Mukherjee from IBM Research India, created the algorithm in response to a map posted by reddit user user kepleronlyknows, who goes by Patrick Anderson in real life.
His map showed a long, 20,000 mile route extending from Pakistan through the southern tips of Africa and South America and finally ending in an epic trans-Pacific journey to Siberia.
On a traditional 2D map, the path looks nothing like a straight line; but remember, the Earth is a sphere.

 Researchers confirm that the longest straight line
on Earth by sea without hitting land begins in Pakistan and ends at Russia.
 Rohan Chabukswar, Kushal Mukherjee | arXiv

Anderson didn’t provide any evidence for the map, or an explanation for how the route was calculated.
In light of this, Chabukswar and Mukherjee embarked upon a project to figure out if the straight line route was indeed the longest, and to see if it was possible for a computer algorithm to solve the problem, both for straight line passages on water without hitting land or an ice sheet, and for a continuous straight line passage on land without hitting a major body of water.
Their ensuing analysis was posted to the pre-print arXiv server earlier this month, and has yet to go through peer review.

One obvious way to calculate the straight lines would be through a so-called “brute force” method, requiring a computer to measure the length of every stretch of ocean.
To that end, Chabukswar and Mukherjee acquired a map from NOAA showing the Earth’s surface at a very reasonable resolution of one mile (1.8 km).
Anything above sea level was considered land, and everything below water—an obvious limitation, but it’s the best data the researchers could acquire.
More problematically, however, the high degree of resolution provided required a computer to parse through a mind-boggling number of routes.

“There would be 233,280,000 great circles to consider to find the global optimum, and each great circle would have 21,600 individual points to process—a staggering 5,038,848,000,000 points to verify,” the researchers wrote in their study.
Let’s read that number aloud for full impact: That’s five trillion, 38 billion, 848 million points.

Chabukswar and Mukherjee did not have the computing power for such an operation, nor the time, so they turned to an optimization scheme called “branch-and-bound.”
Computer scientists use branch-and-bound algorithms as a way to solve optimization problems, and it lowers the overall amount of search time by breaking up tasks into smaller chunks, or subsets.
The optimization happens as each subset is analyzed, and pruned when it doesn’t meet the search criteria.
As the branches and sub-branches are iteratively eliminated, so too is the amount of data that requires analysis.

Armed with this technique and a regular laptop computer, Chabukswar and Mukherjee calculated the sea route in just 10 minutes.
And fascinatingly, their algorithm came to the same answer as the one shown in Anderson’s map, showing a straight line that extends from Pakistan to Russia along a path that runs for 19,939 miles (32,089.7 km).

Longest driveable straight line path on Earth.
Image: Chabukswar & Mukherjee, 2018

This view with a perspective directly above the path reveals a straight line.
Image: Chabukswar & Mukherjee, 2018

The researchers also calculated the longest possible straight line on land without hitting a major body of water, such as a lake.
The path, which took the computer 45 minutes to calculate, begins near Jinjiang, China, and cuts a swath through Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Russia.
The line continues through Poland, the Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, France, Spain, and finally ending near Sagres in Portugal.
That’s a total of 15 countries!
It’s not as long as the longest sailable path, but it still covers an impressive distance totaling 6,985 miles (11,241 km).

Chabukswar and Mukherjee call it a “driveable” path, but that’s highly unlikely given the many obstructions, such as mountains and forests, that are sure to be in the way.
Also, the land path intersects many rivers, which the researchers excluded as a variable.
Some major detours would likely be required to locate bridges, and to avoid some dangerous or challenging terrains.

On a similar note, the sea path, while a straight line, is probably not the safest or most ideal route given that it skirts treacherous Antarctic waters.
What’s more, the most expeditious sea route from Pakistan to Siberia would involve a trip through Indonesian waters, and the Philippine Sea.
As the researchers conclude in their study:
“The problem was approached as a purely mathematical exercise,” the researchers write.
“The authors do not recommend sailing or driving along the found paths.”

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Comments from GeoGarage editor :

In the "Longest straight line paths on water or land on the Earth" document from Rohan Chabukswar and Kushal Mukherjee, the thrust of this paper is that they did a search of the possibilities to prove the original assertion, rather than just calculate it.
Their assumptions might also have been slightly different, given that they were using a dataset of heights with respect to sea level, rather than coastlines.

With the limits of the used dataset, the results show some issue in matter of lands crossing.

"The path originating in Sonmiani, Las Bela, Balochistan, Pakistan (25◦16′30′′ N, 66◦40′0′′), threading the needle between Africa and Madagascar, between Antarctica and Tiera del Fuego in South America (see above figures), and ending in Karaginsky District, Kamchatka Krai, Russia (58◦36′34′′ N, 162◦14′0′′ E)
The path covers an astounding total angular distance of 288◦35′23′′, for a distance of 32 089.7 kilometers.
This path is visually the same one as found by kepleronlyknows, thus proving his assertion"

In some previous articles from GeoGarage blog -see Links below- cited by the analysis, we also criticized the route given by kepleronlyknows, for the start and end points given the longest straight path you could travel on water without hitting land.

In practice, intermediate points along a Great Circle (GC) track are determined
and GC approximations are set by sailing a series of Rhumb Line (RL) tracks with constant courses.
View of the composite GC route (with 1731 wpts, length 10Nm)
on a Mercator map with OpenCPN software.

So another Great Circle (GC) composite route -with the start and end positions provided by Rohan/Kushal- has been created in kmz format to be viewed in Google Earth with 1731 waypoints with different bearings separated by 10 Nm .
The total length of the GC route is 17316.5 Nm.

 Start point (in red Rohan/Kushal)

 End point (in red Rohan/Kushal)
by the way, the end point of the red route is 3.45 Nm inside the lands. 
So the corrected length is 17,313 Nm

 The issue is that :
the Red route (Rohan/Kushal) crosses 2 islands :
the Fenimore rock in the Aleutian Island chain (US Alaska), probably not on ETOPO1 shoreline...

... and also Anjouan island in the Comoros
(see yellow GE coastline)

see Rohan/Kushal route in Google Earth :
kmz file to open in GE

The path fits the brief—the longest continuous line across the earth’s waters—but you may want to think twice before firing up your rudderless boat.
Unfortunately, an autonomous boat probably won’t be sailing the newly verified path anytime soon.
In fact, the researchers don’t recommend that anyone sail or drive these paths since the algorithm analysis does not ensure safe conditions along these tracks.
The authors note, a little pointedly: “The problem was approached as a purely mathematical exercise." (ref : Ellipsoid model, geoid model or any other, see Figure of the Earth)

So the game to find the longest straight path you could travel on water without hitting land is still open...

Links :

Thursday, May 3, 2018

How to lie with maps

Cover art from 'How to Lie With Maps'
 by Mark Monmonier, third edition 
University of Chicago Press © University of Chicago Press

From Financial Time by Alan Smith

The internet has profoundly shaped cartography, but has not made it more honest 

At the height of the 1820s boom in South American bonds, Gregor MacGregor, a veteran of Simón Bolívar’s campaigns against Spanish rule on the continent, arrived in London to sell bonds in the thriving Central American republic of Poyais.
Inevitably, a map appeared — which the Poyais-bound passengers on London’s first emigrant ships to the country must have clutched excitedly on the long journey to their new home.
Upon arrival, the fledgling country’s newest citizens found just one problem — Poyais itself didn’t exist.
Hundreds of settlers who had exchanged their life savings for a fresh start in the new world had unwittingly become victims of one of the most sophisticated confidence tricks in history.
Marooned in an uninhabited mosquito-infested swamp, most would pay with their lives.

 Detail from a map of Mosquitia and the Territory of Poyais

It’s easy to see how people were duped.
The handsome “Map of Mosquitia and the Territory of Poyais” tapped into our innate trust of maps.
If the map says so, then it must be true.
In fact all maps lie, even good ones, says professor Mark Monmonier, author of the classic book How to Lie With Maps.


A third edition has just been published more than two decades after the second, an intervening period in which the world wide web has profoundly reshaped the public perception and usage of maps.
A call with Mr Monmonier in his upstate New York home reveals a passion for maps undimmed by time.
Now 75, he still teaches cartographic design classes at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School.
A 2014 self-published autobiography details his journey from a 1969 PhD — one of the first doctoral dissertations to involve digital mapping — through decades of researching, teaching, writing and consulting on cartography and “spatial thinking”.
As we talk, it soon becomes clear that it is the actual impact of maps — particularly on culture, politics and science — that interests Mr Monmonier most.

 A map of Atlantis 'in its prime' from the Theosophical Publishing House of London (1896)
 
His attention-grabbing book titles (From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow: How Maps Name, Claim, and Inflame) are a clue that he wants to share his understanding of that impact far and wide. He hopes to debunk many of the myths associated with maps.
For example, the widely reported death of printed maps: “They haven’t died — they have just become more specialised.”
And unlike some map purists, he describes Google Maps as “an enormously valuable tool” both in itself, and as a platform for a variety of different mash-ups that allow people to put their own data on it.
He is even relatively lenient on Google Maps’ notorious use of the Mercator projection (which exaggerates area away from the equator, making Greenland appear as large as South America).
“It does not distort angles. This mathematical property, called conformality, allows only a minimal, largely unnoticeable distortion of local shapes and distances on individual [map] tiles at the more detailed zoom levels [Google Maps’ primary role]”.

 Graphic showing how two different map projections distort reality
© University of Chicago Press

Mr Monmonier is a technology enthusiast up to a point.
But if there is one area that continues to cause him concern, it’s the general ability of readers to know what a good map looks like.
The goal of How to Lie With Maps is to introduce a healthy scepticism in the way that we read and create maps.
“I’m not as optimistic as I’d like to be [about the state of map literacy] . . . people are not concerned about understanding technology as long as it seems to work”.
He cites the example of choropleth maps — those that use different shades of lightness and darkness to represent intensity — as easy to create, but also easy to get wrong.
But while uninformed errors might lead to regrettable mistakes, Mr Monmonier is keen to point out that maps lie open to deliberate manipulation: “Machiavellian bias can easily manipulate the message of a choropleth map . . . the white lies of map generalisation might also mask the real lies of the political propagandist”.
He talks about maps where readers are “very easily impressed by large areal units that may have relatively few people.
So when they look at a national map of the US where we have some states with relatively low populations — Montana, Wyoming and Idaho — they obviously create a much greater impact than, say, Massachusetts [which is smaller but has a greater population]”.


This seems like the right time to bring up a particular map now hanging in the White House.
Last year, Trey Yingst of the One America News Network tweeted a picture of a county-level map of the 2016 US presidential election heading into the West Wing.
It shows America predominantly Republican red with just small pockets of Democrat blue. Monmonier suggests the map “plays to the mindset of our president.
The fact is that Trump lost the popular vote by millions of votes — but the map doesn’t show this.
It needs to be balanced by another map”.
The cartographer Kenneth Field has done just that.
Using the same results data, he used dots to represent voters instead of continuous shaded areas to represent voting regions.
The difference is profound — Field’s results map looks a lot less red.
It is a stark example of the influence a cartographer can exert over a naive map reader.

Uses of maps for political propaganda are not new: How to Lie With Maps includes a German map from 1940 that portrays the UK as the aggressor in world war two.
More recently, observers have noted how China has adopted a new map projection that no longer requires distant disputed waters and islands of the South China Sea to be framed in an inset.

 'A Study in Empires' from from Facts in Review 2, no. 5 [February 5, 1940]

Mr Monmonier’s book also cites maps produced by the media as being particularly prone to “cartographic glitches”.
So, perhaps somewhat riskily, I finish our discussion by asking him for his thoughts on maps produced by the FT.
He promises to review and respond by email.
After a nervous wait, the professor’s opinion arrives “Excellent maps . . . I shared them with my map design class on Friday”.
With academic credibility conferred, I decide that now might be the time for us to step readers through the FT’s map design process.

Links :