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Saturday Candlelight

It’s been a bit hectic round here, but I wanted to get a quick note up to let family and friends that check daily (both of you) know about tonight’s global event Earth Hour.

All you have to do is turn off the lights, the computers, the TV all the electric devices you can safely, for one hour. 60 minutes.

Last year we joined some 36 million Americans and turned out all the lights for an hour. We had a candlelight dinner and played scrabble by candlelight. It was a remarkably refreshing hour. An hour of family connectedness, an hour of calm and quiet.

We’ll be doing the same tonight, the only things left running will be the phones and the fish pump. We hope you’ll join us at 8:30pm local time for a candlelight dinner, or a picnic under the stars, or whatever electricity lite activity you want to do. Please.

Escape

Beaver Sign 1,2,3

Johann: I got a picture of some trees along the entry to the woods. Someone has been busy!

We all needed a family outing where we felt like we were getting away, at least for a few hours. We decided to go to Pequot Woods Park and check out the trails there. Johann and I had just gone there with some friends from the homeschooling group, but our trip there was cut short when the boy fell into the pond. We followed them home so he could change clothes and did something else together, which was a nice afternoon, but we still wanted to go back to the woods.

Along the flooded path

Eric: Tammy at the end of the path, except it wasn’t the end of the path just two days before, when the pond was still covered in ice. Unfortunately none of us had on waterproof hiking boots (since none of us own them) so, crossing would be a bit more challenging this time.

We also wanted the opportunity to walk the trails at a slower pace, so we could see signs of animals, maybe even spot some, and have time to notice things like moss, lichen, fungus, interesting tree roots or rock formations. Too many people rush through and don’t notice anything.

Fuzzy Forest

Johann: In the shadows there was a lot of fuzzy moss carpets.

Moss Sandwich

Johann: I thought the blanket of moss on these tree roots looked like a moss sandwich.


Tree Clams

Johann: I’ve been studying about molluscs a lot lately, and I have found a new one – the tree clam. Ha ha.
I liked how these fungi looked like clam shells and Mommy thought they look like a fairy ladder going up the tree. I agree.

Flexibility Overcomes

Eric: In this area that is so marked by the glacial processes that formed the coast of Long Island Sound, a sight like this is not unusual, but it still makes me stop.


Someone told us it only takes an hour to walk all of the trails there. We were there for about 2 1/2 hours and only did the main loop. But Eric and Johann got some wonderful pictures. We saw some hooded mergansers, mallard ducks, and a beaver and we started to relax a little.

Johann after Fungi

Eric: Johann shooting the fungi growing under a fallen tree.

Conch Shells

Johann: These fungi reminded me of chips or conch shells from the color and the way they rolled up.


Whooo

Johann:Whooo, Whooo, Whooooo is there with that big camera?

Trail Flooded

Eric: With the melt-off and the beaver’s industry the low spot along the pond edge became the new brook course. I love the power of water. It finds its way always. You can see from the left and right edges of the image that it is moving pretty swiftly too.


If we could have gotten further away from civilization, I think it would have been more relaxing. The background noise of cars speeding by on the highway made it hard for me to completely relax, but I did feel more rejuvenated when we got home. We decided we need to invest in good hiking boots for the whole family so that we can do a lot of hiking while we are still here.

Lodge of Odd Fellows

Eric: Interestingly, this beaver lodge is not in the middle of the pond, but hard up against the shore.

Beaver

Eric: This was the best we could get of the beaver. At this point it was really too dark to get a good shot of it, but I figured a grainy shot was better than nothing!

Deep Sea Fishing Impacts Sea Mounts

Deep Sea News and Seamounts in PLoS

ResearchBlogging.orgDr. McClain over at Deep Sea News recently published a very readable open access paper at PLoS ONE about the potential connectedness of seamounts and nearby habitats. I love that the paper was highly accessible, both in the writing and the fact that anyone can download it from PLoS One and read it for free, especially since, in the case of Davidson Seamount and Monterey Canyon, there are significant implications on management policies, if the goal is to protect and preserve the diversity within the canyon.

A Little Closer to Home

Tim Shank and his lab have been doing a lot of work on connectivity, including genetic analysis, among and between the seamounts of the North Atlantic, especially the New England Seamounts and the Corner Rise Seamounts. Though I haven’t seen any papers yet (I believe Walter Cho is working on this for his Ph.D.) what I have been exposed to is that they are finding connectivity between seamounts and seamount areas, but it is a complex situation with very different connectivity from one species to the next, one depth to the next and one region to the next. Connectivity factors likely include reproduction and recruitment strategies, bathymetry, depth, habitat availability, and hydrodynamics (regional and local).

So Why Should We Care?

Ultimately understanding how these deep sea ecosystems are interconnected is critical for conservation and management of marine resources, including potentially many commercially important species (and the deep sea cephalopods who lay egg capsules on the deep corals, thank you very much!). It needs to be studied further to understand the extent of the connectivity. Connectivity studies have a significant number of challenges though, not the least of which is the seemingly simple task of identifying the interaction time and space scales of the relevant processes. In part these define the boundaries of populations. Identifying all the species using traditional morphological taxonomy and molecular techniques, can be a herculean task as well.

Unfortunately, the seamounts are also being impacted by deep sea fishing. Trawling across the mounts can remove entire communities of slow growing deep sea corals and the complex communities they support, potentially causing a significant effect on the deep sea coral community connectivity as well.

My Tiny Personal Connection

This last year I have been working part time with video captured on several deep sea cruises to the New England Seamount Chain and the Corner Rise Seamounts. Much of the work has been producing support video and a DVD for a variety of presentations, which I can’t present here. I can, however, finally show one piece of the package I put together, which was the last piece we did to give to the funding partners.

Your Seamounts on Fishing


The Future?

While I loved deep sea biology and invert communities before, spending many hours scouring HD video of these invert communities helped really hook me on the idea of studying them long term. As I watched the communities of inverts on the screen I had so many questions about their distribution, their physiological adaptations, limitations on growth and distribution, recruitment triggers, etc… etc… etc. I would love to be able to study these communities, the larval distribution, development and recruitment for the communities and individual species, and the ecological and anthropogenic pressures on these communities.

(Yes, I would still also love to study cephalopods and larval development and ecology within the mangroves, still lot’s of wake-me-up-in-the-middle-of-the-night questions there too!)

Notes

All footage in the piece was taken on the 2005 Deep Atlantic Stepping Stones mission, but not necessarily from the same dive or on the same seamount. The final sequence is the result of an otter door impacting and dragging across a part of the Kükenthal Seamount. An otter-door is a large metal rudder that holds the trawl nets wide open.

There is more impact footage from the mission, including trash and meters upon meters of clean parallel lines cut through communities of coral and sponges where the rollers on the bottom of the net rolled through. The otter door impact zone, however, was the starkest example of clearing the communities from the seamount in the video I surveyed, devastating damage.

Sources and Further Reading

Peter J. Auster, Jon Moore, Kari B. Heinonen, Les Watling (2005). A habitat classification scheme for seamount landscapes: assessing the functional role of deep-water corals as fish habitat. Cold-Water Corals and Ecosystems, 761-769 DOI: 10.1007/3-540-27673-4_40

Craig R. McClain, Lonny Lundsten, Micki Ream, James Barry, Andrew DeVogelaere (2009). Endemicity, Biogeography, Composition, and Community Structure On a Northeast Pacific Seamount PLoS ONE, 4 (1) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004141

Rhian Waller, Les Watling, Peter Auster, Timothy Shank (2007). Anthropogenic impacts on the Corner Rise seamounts, north-west Atlantic Ocean Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK, 87 (05) DOI: 10.1017/S0025315407057785

Whales in PLoS and Antarctica

An amazing discovery in Pakistan adds more clarity to the story of whale evolution. Maiacetus inuus recently discovered and published in the open access journal PLoS One, was found as two adult skeletons (male and female) and one near full term, precocious, fetus within the female skeleton. This is an important discovery since it gives developmental information definitive gender identification of the adult skeletons and a strong suggestion of the delivery method. The fossil fetus was found in a position that strongly suggests that Maiacetus gave birth on land after hauling out of the water. All large land mammals deliver head first, but all marine mammals deliver tail first to very precocious babies. Maiacetus is about 48 million years old and is clearly a transition between the very early amphibious whale, Ambulocetus, and the fully aquatic whales of the Basilosaurus family.

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Skull of the adult female and the fetus (colored baby blue)

Even though this ancestral whale has many adaptations, such seal-like bodies and a very powerful swimming tail, maybe even with flukes, and is well on the way to becoming a modern whale, they were still heavy boned and thus not for the open ocean. With the head first birthing position they would have returned to the shore to rest, mate, and give birth. But, like the modern sea lions and their relatives, the maiacetus body was no longer well adapted to life on land. As Ed put it, rather depressingly considering my talents and the economy, maiacetus innus was a jack-of-all-trades and master of none, fully adapted to neither environment.

pone-04-02-gingerich2-tm

Artist’s conception of a male Maiacetus innus as it would have appeared in life, with skeleton reconstruction overlaid.
Credit: John Klausmeyer and Bonnie Miljour University of Michigan Museums of Natural History

Read more about this awesome find at: Not Exactly Rocket Science, The Loom, Laelaps and A Blog Around The Clock. This is such a wonderful discovery that each of the aforementioned blogs highlights a slightly different aspect of the discovery.

Here is a National Geographic Channel short video about the Rodhocetus balochistanensis, another protocetecean possibly a contemporary of maiacetus, discovered by the same team.

Of course along with ancient whales I have the opportunity to present another of my father’s images from Antarctica:

humpbacksii-3125

A pair of humpback whales feeding on krill in the Antarctic. I love the throat pleats visible in the whale that is feeding on it’s side.

Come a long way from maiacetus innus haven’t they? Amazing animals, even more so when you consider their evolutionary journey.

picture-3

The humpback feeding picture above was taken where the northern most of the camera icons in this new Google Earth 5.0 (complete with ocean data!) screen shot. The other two camera icons are from the pictures in the previous post.

You’re Going to do What??!

In her last post, Tammy told everyone about Dad’s recent travels. He has sent me some images that can be posted here, so over the next few days I’ll be bringing some of the photo’s and where possible the locations where the pictures were taken in Google Earth.

First up though is One of the Channels north of the circle. From the time stamp on the photo and the ships GPS track this should be Lamaire Channel.

the_gullet-1803-2

In the Lamaire Channel

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Screen shot from Google Earth of the Lamaire Channel and the photo location. Inset shows entire Antarctic Peninsula with main image area selected in yellow circle.

Along with the beautiful landscape Dad sent along a few animal photos including this beauty:

humpback-1853

A pair of Humpback Whales feeding in the waters south of Anverse Island

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The previous Lamaire Channel photo is the camera icon in the lower left corner, the humpback whales are the upper icon.

More to come later this week!

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