Giant crabs make Antarctic leap

King crabs have been found on the edge of Antarctica, probably as a result of warming in the region, scientists say.

Writing in the journal “Proceedings B”, scientists report a large, reproductive population of crabs in the Palmer Deep, a basin cut in the continental shelf.

They suggest the crabs were washed in during an upsurge of warmer water.

The crabs are voracious crushers of sea floor animals and will probably change the ecosystem profoundly if and when they spread further, researchers warn.

Related species have been found around islands off the Antarctic Peninsula and on the outer edge of the continental shelf.

But here the crabs (Neolithodes yaldwyn) are living and reproducing in abundance right on the edge of the continent itself.

Search for life

The researchers sent the Genesis, a submersible remotely operated vehicle (ROV) operated by the University of Ghent in Belgium, into the Palmer Deep in March last year.

The idea was to look at what life was down there, rather than specifically to look for crabs; and the team was somewhat surprised by how many they found.

King Crabs - now living on the edge of Antarctica's Continental Shelf

Judging by the density of the crabs and their tracks, the scientists estimate there may be 1.5 million crabs in the basin.

A female crab retrieved from the area was found to be carrying mature eggs and larvae.

“Our best guess is there was an event, or maybe more than one, where warmer water flushed up across the shelf and carried some of the larvae into the basin,” said project leader Craig Smith from the University of Hawaii.

It is believed that this species cannot tolerate water colder than 1.4C.

The seas here get warmer as you descend; and the crabs were only found below 850m.

The researchers calculate that they have probably been there only for 30-40 years; before that, the water would have been too cold even at the bottom of the Palmer Deep.

They cannot as yet survive on the continental shelf, which is at a depth of about 500m; but that could change.

“If you look at the rate at which the seas are warming, (the continental shelf) should be above 1.4C within a couple of decades, so the crabs are likely then to come into shallower waters,” Professor Smith told BBC News.

Predators

The upper limit of the crab-dwelling zone – 850m – also marks the line between abundant seabed life above and depleted life below.

“Above the crab zone, the abundance and diversity of plants and animals was high, with echinoderms including brittlestars, sea lilies and sea cucumbers,” said Professor Smith.

“We found none of them in the crab zone itself, and when we went 50-100m above we found very few – so we think the crabs are venturing up into shallow waters to feed.

“We would expect extinctions in some of these organisms.”

These findings reinforce the belief of other scientists that king crabs will change the ecology of the Antarctic perimeter once they arrive – and that they would arrive at some point, washed from warmer waters along the South American coast, has long been expected.

With a legspan of up to a metre, the animals are generally top predators in the seafloor ecosystem.

Large and dominant organisms that easily crush other animals

Large and dominant organisms that easily crush other animals

The king (or stone) crabs are a group of about 120 species – and one member, the red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) is already having an ecological impact in Norwegian waters following its slow spread from Russia.

However, in Northern latitudes they are also now important commercially, with Norwegian fishermen alone allocated a quota of thousands each year.

Fishing crabs for profit in this part of the Antarctic would not be permitted. But fishing could in time be used as a means to control them, said Professor Smith, if their ecological impacts become too severe.

 

Written by Richard Black, Environment Correspondent BBC News

Article originally published by the BBC. Visit http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14803840

 

Welcome to our new Junior Open Water Divers

The Sea Bees Team would like to congratulate Anousheh and Alex on completing their Junior Open Water Diver Course.

Their positive attitude, superb mask clearing and big Big BIG smiles ensured that everyone on the boat had a great time!

Goin' Diving - what smiles!

Julie has still not stopped talking about you and is really proud to have been your instructor. You are definitely two of her favourite students!

The proud father and instructor and two very happy students!

The proud father and instructor with two great students!

We know it’s time for you to go back to school but we hope you will take back some great holiday and diving memories and please send us photos when you next go diving – we miss you already!

What lies beneath the sea?

Marine scientists have discovered strange new species, but their census also reminds us how little we know about the creatures of the deep…

Holidaymakers forced out of the water on the Costa Blanca by an “invasion” of jellyfish will probably not have had time to admire the creatures’ bright purple hue or the way their luminous transparent bodies emit a ghostly, yellow glow at night. Seen from below, with a shaft of sunlight illuminating the purple veins of their pulsing domes, they are as beautiful as a Tiffany glass lampshade.

As the beach-bound swimmers gaze longingly at the sparkling but forbidden Mediterranean, they should take comfort that the Spanish environment ministry had been preparing for the arrival of hordes of “mauve stingers” for some weeks, as part of Plan Medusa. Like the hapless authorities in a Fifties’ monster movie, they had produced posters and advertising campaigns warning swimmers to brace themselves for an onslaught of the purple jellies (Pelagia noctiluca), just one of the species posing a hazard to bathers this year, as well as the potentially deadly Portuguese Man o’ War with its 100-foot tentacles and the box jellyfish, which leaves welts that burn for three weeks.

Some of those barred from the water may be gladdened by the news that the Mediterranean has been identified in the Census of Marine Life as one of the world’s top five areas for marine biodiversity. The others are the oceans off Australia, Japan, China and the Gulf of Mexico, each containing as many as 33,000 individual forms of life that can be scientifically classified as species. In total, the census now estimates that there are more than 230,000 known marine species – but that this is probably less than a quarter of what lives in the sea.

The Census of Marine Life is being co-ordinated in Washington DC by the Consortium for Ocean Leadership and has involved scientists in more than 80 countries working over the past decade. They hope that by creating the first catalogue of the world’s oceans we can begin to understand the great ecological questions about habitat loss, pollution, overfishing and all the other man-made plagues that are being visited on the sea. The truth is that at present, much of what pass for scientific “facts” about the sea and what lives in it are still based on guesswork.

So far, the census tells us that fish account for about 12 per cent of sea life, and that other easily recognisable vertebrates – whales, turtles, seals, and so on – are just 2 per cent of what lives beneath the waves. It is the creepy-crawlies that are out there in really big numbers; almost 40 per cent of identified marine species are crustaceans and molluscs – things like crabs, shrimp, squid and sea-snails. Jellyfish are part of the Cnidaria group, along with anemones and corals – about 5 per cent of the total.

The census continues to gather images and data relating to a myriad range of creatures that could have slithered from the pages of science fiction. Neither Jules Verne nor Isaac Asimov could do justice to the shape and form of Chiasmodon niger – “the great swallower” – with its cadaverous skull, metallic pink flesh and needlelike teeth, accompanied by an enormous ballooning stomach that allows it to swallow animals bigger than itself. And surely there is something enchanting about the “Yeti crab” (Kiwa hirsuta), another new discovery from the Pacific, with a delicate, porcelain-smooth carapace and arms longer than its body, encased in “sleeves” of what look like ginger fur.

Chiasmodon Niger - definitely not a beer belly!

In shallower waters, the iridescent pink fronds of Platoma algae from Australia resemble the sheen of a pair of pink stockings caught in the glow of a nightclub stage. Juvenile Antarctic octopuses, speckled brown, mauve and orange, look like exquisitely carved netsuke ornaments, perfectly proportioned and endearing for their donnish domed “heads”.

For its bizarre variety and for its enduring mystery, we must learn to treasure the sea. It is easy to be captivated by intelligent, seemingly friendly sea creatures such as dolphins or even by the hunting prowess of the more sinister sharks. The Marine Census helps us understand that it is the less glamorous, less appealing and less dramatic creatures that are the great bedrock of life on which the oceans depend. As Nancy Knowlton, one of the census scientists, observes, “most ocean organisms still remain nameless and unknown” – and how would we begin to start naming the 20,000 types of bacteria found in just one litre of seawater trawled from around a Pacific seamount?

In the clear blue waters of the Maldives I once found myself ignoring a pair of giant manta rays just five metres from where I was kneeling on the sand staring at a coral outcrop. I had spotted a small black shape that looked like a sponge. Sponges hold a particular fascination for me, because they are so varied in colour, shape and size and they have an almost miraculous life cycle. But this sponge was moving, and it was in fact a Maldivian sponge-snail – a mollusc that survives by mimicking a sponge.

Afterwards, back on the surface, I was ridiculed by the other divers for taking photographs of the small black snail instead of watching the manta rays. But it is the mystery of the sea and its life forms that holds me, and makes me want to fill my mind with the images I gather when I dive, knowing that they exceed anything I can ever conjure from my imagination.

The final Marine Census results will be formally presented at the Royal Society in October, but hidden within the already released information is a dark message. Maps showing the density of large fish populations in tropical waters reveal that numbers of many of the biggest open ocean species have declined by more than 50 per cent since the Sixties and specific species, including many of the sharks, by as much as 90 per cent.

The Census of Marine Life also points to the effect of so-called “alien species” being found in many of the world’s marine ecosystems. The Mediterranean has the largest number of invasive species – most of them having migrated through the Suez Canal from the Red Sea. So far, more than 600 invasive species have been counted, almost 5 per cent of the total marine creatures in the Mediterranean.

The well named "Yeti Crab"

Those annoying jellyfish on the Spanish holiday beaches may be sending us a message, or at least a warning. In recent years there have been other jellyfish “invasions”. In 2007, 100,000 fish at Northern Ireland’s only salmon farm were killed by the same “mauve stingers” that are affecting the Spanish beaches. The swarming jellies covered 10 square miles of water.

In 2005, and again last year, Japanese fishermen battled swarms of giant Nomura jellyfish, each measuring six feet across and weighing 200kg. Once seen infrequently, they now regularly swarm across the Yellow Sea, making it impossible for Japanese boats to deploy their nets. One fishing boat capsized after the jellyfish became entangled in its nets.

There is evidence that the global jellyfish invasion is gathering pace. As Mediterranean turtles lose their nesting sites to beach developments, or die in fishing nets, and the vanishing population of other large predators such as bluefin tuna are fished out, their prey is doing what nature does best: filling a void. Smaller, more numerous species like the jellyfish are flourishing and plugging the gap left by animals higher up the food chain. According to the Spanish environment ministry: “Jellyfish blooms have been increasing in recent years, and one of the suggested causes is the decline in natural predators – as well as climate change and pollution from land-based sources.”

Beware - large enough to capsize a fishing boat!

Beware - large enough to capsize a fishing boat!

In the meantime, the warning posters are pasted along the beachfront, spotter boats cruise the bays looking for the “invaders”, and patrols along the sand teach holidaymakers what to do if they are stung.

This is not quite Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and clearly it is unwise to talk as if the jellyfish had some kind of plan. But many marine experts have been saying for several years that we need to start loving jellyfish – because in the not too distant future, they may be the most plentiful marine species around. With typical culinary inventiveness, Japanese chefs have already begun experimenting with recipes for jellyfish ice cream and jellyfish tofu. It may be the future of seafood.

 

Article reproduced with the kind permission of Tim Ecott – author of Neutral Buoyancy/Stealing Water/Vanilla:Travels in Search of the Luscious Substance (timecott@hotmail.com)

Published by The Telegraph – http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/sunandsea/7925677/What-lies-beneath-the-sea.html

 

The Mantis Shrimp – Most Complex Vision in the Animal Kingdom

Here I am again with my next article on the Mantis Shrimp  also known as Stomatopoda. Once you have read to the end, I am sure you will agree they are amazing creatures. Read on about their amazing vision.

The eyes of some groups of mantis shrimp are probably the most complex in the animal kingdom. Their eyes are unusual for several reasons:

* they have stereo vision with just one eye;

* each eye is up on a stalk, with a wide range of motion;

* mantis shrimp have up to 16 visual pigments (in contrast, we humans only have 3 (red, blue, and yellow);

* mantis shrimp can also see ultra-violet and infra-red light, and some can even see polarised light.

"Here's Looking at you Kid!"
“Here’s Looking at you Kid!”

Researchers discovered first of all that there were filters, coloured filters, inside the eye. Not in all of the eye; just in six rows of visual elements that go down and bisect the eye.

These colour filters are stacked up one on top of another, and it reminded them very much of some of the early satellites, the remote sensing satellites that could detect colour on earth by using a black and white vitacon tube. You take a picture through one filter and then you take a picture through another filter and then you use a computer to figure out the color image. They have that capability, it appeared. And that was the first idea of how they were doing it.

Humans see colour with three primary visual pigments. It turned out the stomatopods have up to sixteen, that have peaks of spectral sensitivity ranging from about 350 nanometers, well under the UV, way beyond what we mere humans can see, out to about 700. So, they have tremendous capacity in terms of the visual pigments, and then you add on top of that the colour filters, and that package has a mind-boggling capability of distinguishing spectral differences.

Intricate Detail of the Eye

Intricate Detail of the Eye

They can also see polarised light! Is there no end to their talents? There’s also the capability of incredible range-finding capacity. We can tell how far something away is by parallax. We have two eyes and the images are slightly different. Stomatopods actually have three different focal points in one eye, three different focal points in the other eye, so it has hexnocular (six eye) vision to tell how far away things are. So, it’s a very, very complicated eye that works very differently than the way ours does. The have a row of ommatidia, or visual units, that come down over the eye. All of the color and the UV and the polarizing capacity are within that row, so it scans the world by moving the eye stalk around and rotating it. So it’s sort of like a scanner looking at the world. When it gets really interested in something, the two eyes come over together and the rows actually cross.

I am not cross-eyed - I have six eye vision!

I am not cross-eyed - I have six eye vision!

We want to hear about your favourite critters too – what “gets you going” underwater? Let us know so we can share it with everybody.

 

Matthew – Sea Bees’ latest DM off to conquer University

Well, Matthew disappeared for 3 weeks and, whenever we asked after him, his instructors said that he was ” busy at the moment”. Suddenly, Matthew seemed to have several instructors, each putting him through his paces in their own style.

And, finally, on the day he was leaving to return to England, he was told that he had passed his Divemaster Course with ‘flying colours’.

After 4 gruelling weeks involving theory / rescue scenarios / guiding and mapping practice / handling the boat, tanks, customers, equipment / swim tests / stress tests and more exams, Pam, his main instructor as well as the other Sea Bees instructors who all had a hand in his making, Matthew passed the Final Test…

'Final Test' for Matthew on the boat

'Final Test' for Matthew on the boat

I think he looks quite good – don’t you? Finally, Pam, his main instructor put him out of his misery…

Congratulations - you've passed!

Congratulations - you've passed!

Matthew is not sure whether to believe this or not, so everyone turned up to make sure he understood properly (with mask, snorkel and bottle! :grin:)

The Sea Bees Instructors all congratulate their 'student'

The Sea Bees Instructors congratulate their 'student'

Matthew is now ready to take on the Student Union Parties at University in England (see below) and I am sure he will be able to teach them a thing or two. Everyone at Sea Bees looks forward to having him back and on the boat soon and wishes him all the best in his studies. Break a leg Matthew – they all miss you on the boat already!

Matthew - ready to face his co-students at University!

Matthew - ready to face his co-students at University!

 

 

 

 

The Mantis Shrimp – World’s Fastest Punch

Mantis shrimps are mere inches long but can throw the fastest punch of any animal. They strike with the force of a rifle bullet and, with the aid of super-speed cameras, we can truly appreciate how powerful this animal is.  (And the online administrator is OBSESSED WITH THEM!)

A few years ago, an aggressive creature named Tyson smashed through the quarter-inch-thick glass wall of his cell. He was soon subdued by nervous attendants and moved to a more secure facility in Great Yarmouth, England. Unlike his heavyweight namesake, Tyson was only four inches long. But scientists have recently found that Tyson, like all his kin, can throw one of the fastest and most powerful punches in nature. He is a mantis shrimp.

Mantis shrimps are aggressive relatives of crabs and lobsters – they are known as Stomatopods – and they prey upon other animals by crippling them with devastating jabs. Their secret weapons are a pair of hinged arms folded away under their head, which they can unfurl at incredible speeds.

The Peacock Mantis Shrimp - Intelligence, Superb Colouring but be careful of that appendage!

The Peacock Mantis Shrimp - Intelligence, Superb Colouring but be careful of that appendage!

The ‘spearer’ species have arms ending in a fiendish barbed spike that they use to impale soft-bodied prey like fish. But the larger ‘smasher’ species have arms ending in heavy clubs, and use them to deliver blows with the same force as a rifle bullet.

Fastest claw in the west

When Sheila Patek, a researcher at USC Berkeley, tried to study these heavy-hitters on video, she hit a snag. “None of our high speed video systems were fast enough to capture the movement accurately” she explained.

“Luckily, a BBC crew offered to rent us a super high speed camera as part of their series ‘Animal Camera’.” With this cutting-edge equipment, Patek managed to capture footage of a smasher’s strike, slowed down over 800 times. What she found was staggering. With each punch, the club’s edge travels at about 50 mph, over twice as fast as scientists had previously estimated.*

“The strike is one of the fastest limb movements in the animal kingdom”, says Patek. “It’s especially impressive considering the substantial drag imposed by water.”

Water is much denser than air and even the quickest martial artist would have considerable difficulty punching in it. And yet the mantis shrimp’s finishes its strike in under three thousandths of a second, out-punching even its land-living namesake.

The need for speed

If the animal simply flicked its arm out, like a human, it would never achieve such blistering speeds. Instead, mantis shrimps use an ingeniously simple energy storage system. Once the arm is cocked, a ratchet locks it firmly in place. The large muscles in the upper arm then contract and build up energy. When the latch is released, all this energy is released at once and the lower arm is launched forwards.

But Patek found that even this system couldn’t account for the mantis shrimp’s speed. Instead, the key to the punch is a small, structure in the arm that looks like a saddle or a Pringle chip.

When the arm is cocked, this structure is compressed and acts like a spring, storing up even more energy. When the latch is released, the spring expands and provides extra push for the club, helping to accelerate it at up to 10,000 times the force of gravity.

This smasher’s arm is truly state-of-the-art natural technology. “Saddle-shaped springs are well-known to engineers and architects”, explains Patek, “ but is unusual in biological systems. Interestingly, a recent paper showed that a similarly shaped spring closes the Venus’s fly trap.”

The moment a Mantis Shrimp strikes

The moment a Mantis Shrimp strikes

Killing with bubbles

Patek’s cameras revealed an even bigger surprise – each of the smasher’s strikes produced small flashes of light upon impact. They are emitted because the club moves so quickly that it lowers the pressure of the water in front of it, causing it to boil.

This releases small bubbles which collapse when the water pressure normalises, unleashing tremendous amounts of energy. This process, called cavitation, is so destructive that it can pit the stainless steel of boat propellers. Combined with the force of the strike itself, no animal in the seas stands a chance.

Large smashers can even make meals of crabs, buckling their thick armour as easily as they do aquarium glass. And they are often seen beating up much larger fish and octopi, which are unfortunate enough to wander past their burrows.

Not just a good right hook

Some scientists think that the mantis shrimps’ belligerent nature evolved because the rock crevices they inhabit are fiercely contested. This competition has also made these animals smarter than the average shrimp. They are the only invertebrates that can recognise other individuals of their species and can remember the outcome of a fight against a rival for up to a month.

Take a look at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAu2f87QAQU – this should show you why they are also known as ‘thumb splitters’!

And, Roy Caldwell, also from USC Berkeley, discovered that mantis shrimps have the most sophisticated eyes of any animal….

More on this in our next ‘Mantis Shrimp Obsessed Blog Administrator’ article…

 

Team Sea Bees gets the wind up its sails

Team Sea Bees took part in Six Senses Raceweek, now one of Asia’s most popular regattas. With perfect sailing conditions – wind, rain, waves and enough squalls to keep everyone happy, Peter Dyer and the Sea Bees crew got to grips with challenging conditions and ended up with a third place.

Peter Dyer's Team Sea Bees enjoying great sailing conditions

Peter Dyer's Team Sea Bees enjoying great sailing conditions

IRC 2 class was won by Mark Chapman and his Piccolo crew from Cdr Pornprom Sakultem onRoyal Thai Navy 4 in second, and Peter Dyer’s Team Sea Bees in third.

Peter Dyer’s other crew, Team Land and House, secured the Firefly 850 Sport class title from Ian Coulson and Clarence Tayong’s Voodoo in second, and John Newnham’s Twin Sharks finishing third.

Nice one gentlemen – and I hear that you were excellent participants for the 5 successive nights of partying!

Team Sea Bees

Team Sea Bees at the Six Senses Phuket Raceweek Presentation

 

Thailand’s “Green Season”

It is Low Season again – time to ask what the difference is between “High” Season and “Low” Seaon apart from the fact that it’s summer in Europe?

The answer is quite simple: there is (almost) no difference.

The weather is pretty good most of the time, although the humidity is much higher than normal. It’s a widespread myth that it rains all the time over here…. it’s not like that at all…we have the occasional rain shower during the day, but this usually lasts only for a short time, after which the sun reappears.

As evidence, we have these pictures from our guest Simon Hyslop, a recent guest.


The visibility and current under water is not much different compared to the rest of the year. Many people prefer the low season, because there are not as many boats and divers at the varies dive spots. Due to the location of our Phuket dive sites are we able to offer day trips year round from our Island.

A big thank you to our dive guest, Simon Hyslop, for his fun, frolics and photos!

Double okay from Simon!

Mai Khao Marine Turtle Foundation Mini Marathon

These turtles were definitely worth getting up at 3am in the morning to run for! And with over 700 runners, it seems no one had a problem with an early start with the race starting at 4.45am. And whilst the rest of us were sleeping, they were raising lots of money.

Congratulations to all of those who took part, to the Marriott Group for their inspiring idea and to Simon and Brandon from the Sea Bees Dive Shop at JW Marriott who made sure we were well represented there.

(Administrator: Why do I think that Simon & Brandon didn’t actually go to sleep at all but came straight from a night out in Patong?!?!?!)

“Green Season” und das Wetter

Und wieder ist offiziell Low Season. Zeit, sich mal zu fragen, wo eigentlich der Unterschied zur High Season liegt. Mal ganz davon abgesehen, dass es jetzt auch in Europa endlich Sommer geworden ist. Die Antwort: es gibt (fast) keinen Unterschied! Es ist halt nur ein bisschen unbeständiger – ab und zu bringt ein kräftiger Regenschauer angenehme Abkühlung, kurze Zeit später scheint aber wieder die Sonne. Der weit verbreitete (Aber)Glaube, dass es den ganzen Tag nur regnet, stimmt also nicht.

Einen guter Beleg dafür sind nachfolgende Fotos, welche unser Gast Simon Hyslop am 20. Juni hier bei uns gemacht hat.

Die Unterwasserströmungen sind nicht großartig verändert,  was auch für die Sichtweiten gilt.

Wir können, durch die geschützte Lage der Tauchplätze rund um Phuket, jeden Tag Ausfahrten mit der Excalibur II anbieten. Viele erfahrene Taucher schätzen gerade die Nebensaison, um die Insel sowie die wunderschönen Tauchplätze rund um Phuket, in etwas ruhigerer Atmosphäre zu erkunden.

Nachfolgend noch ein paar Impessionen unter Wasser von Simon – Vielen Dank: