A CURATED COLLECTION OF SCIENCE FACTS AND DELICIOUS FICTIONS !
Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts

2/26/26

BLUE WHALES GONE SILENT?! CLIMATE CHANGE? ALL ENERGY USED TO FIND ENOUGH FOOD - KRILL

THE WEEK : BLUE WHALES NOT SINGING -CLIMATE CHANGE

Excerpt: The study tracked over six years of acoustic monitoring in the central California Current Ecosystem. During those years, blue whale sounds decreased by approximately 40%.

"We don't hear them singing," John Ryan, a biological oceanographer at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and the lead author of the study, said to National Geographic. They are "spending all their energy searching." There's "just not enough time left over" for singing, and that "tells us those years are incredibly stressful." It's like "trying to sing while you are starving,"

"When we have these really hot years and marine heat waves, it's more than just temperature," Kelly Benoit-Bird, a marine biologist at Monterey Bay Aquarium and co-author of the study, said to National Geographic. "The whole system changes, and we don't get the krill." So the animals that "rely only on krill are kind of out of luck." High ocean temperatures lead to algal blooms that can kill krill. And blue whales are "forced to forage over a much larger geographic area when krill populations become depleted," said Newsweek.

Marine heat waves are only going to get worse due to fossil fuel usage. Oceans act as the world's largest carbon sink, meaning they "already absorb more than 90% of the excess heat from climate change," said The Independent. There are "whole ecosystem consequences of these marine heat waves," said Benoit-Bird. If whales "can't find food and they can traverse the entire West Coast of North America, that's a really large-scale consequence."

BLUE WHALES ARE THE LARGEST ANIMALS ON OUR PLANET!

12/14/25

THE GREAT PACIFIC GARBAGE PATCH ? WHERE IS IT? WHAT IS IT? (THE SIZE OF TEXAS!)

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EDU : GREAT PACIFIC GARBAGE PATCH

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a collection of marine debris in the North Pacific Ocean. Marine debris is litter that ends up in oceans, seas, and other large bodies of water.

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also known as the Pacific trash vortex, spans waters from the West Coast of North America to Japan. The patch is actually comprised of the Western Garbage Patch, located near Japan, and the Eastern Garbage Patch, located between the U.S. states of Hawai'i and California.

These areas of spinning debris are linked together by the North Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone, located a few hundred kilometers north of Hawai'i. This convergence zone is where warm water from the South Pacific meets up with cooler water from the Arctic. The zone acts like a highway that moves debris from one patch to another....

Keep reading! Go to that link above!
 

11/2/22

WEIRDEST SEA CREATURES EVER - WHATS A WOBBEGONG? A RED HAND FISH?

OK, this collection of sea creatures is truly the weirdest.  Imagine a fish that has red hands, or a fish that looks like a boulder.  And only if you go to the National Geographic-Kids site here

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS - DISCOVER STRANGE SEA CREATURES

will you get to know hat a WOBBEGONG looks like...

8/5/22

HORSESHOE CRABS PROTECTED IN PHILIPPINES

 The story originates with National Geographic which asks for an email to log-in an read three free stories a month.  I caught it at Daily Mail, a publication based in the UK. 

DAILY MAIL SCIENCE : HORSESHOE CRABS THRIVING IN PROTECTED AREA PHILIPPINES  Beautiful photos.

Their blood is blue and harvesting them is partly in order to make Covid-19 vaccines... 

4/27/22

STOP BUYING and COLLECTING SEA SHELLS - AVOID PURCHASING CRAFTS MADE OF SHELLS

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - SEA SHELL COLLECTING and CRAFTS HARMING OCEAN SEALIFE ECOLOGY 

Excerpt: In the little coastal town of Kanyakumari, in southern India, mountains of newly harvested mollusk shells - living animals still inside them - lie drying out near a sun-drenched beach.  Next up for these seashells : a dunking for a few hours in large cats of oil and acid to clean them.  Any remaining flesh or scaly growth is then scraped off each shell by hand by one of hundreds of local o, and they're given another soaking in oil. After a final hand-polishing, many are shipped to artisans in nearby towns who craft jewelry and other memeotos to sell to tourists.  The remaining shells are destined for elsewhere in India and abroad.

***

My opinion is if a shell or item that includes shells, such as shelled mirrors, has made it all the way to a charity thrift store, then OK, buy it, but there are so many ways to use draw, paint, mache, or use other techniques to image shells, buying ones that involved killing the animals inside, hurting the ocean n and sea creature ecology is wrong.


5/29/21

ONE QUARTER OF THE GREY WHALES DIED IN THE PACIFIC LAST YEAR. WHAT'S HAPPENING?

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - WHALE DIE OFF IN THE PACIFIC by  Kate Linthicum

Excellent article, photographs and graphics.  But you have to sign up with your e-mail and I know some of you don't want to.

The question of why the whales are dying is a difficult one but malnutrition seems to be the cause.  The last whale I saw beached up was a male and he was on the rocks quite some time before a high tide took him away.  He looked a bit slim but perhaps he lost his mother?

12/9/19

MASSIVE OCTOPUS NURSERY UNDER MONTERREY BAY


NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - DEEP SEA - OCTOPUS NURSERY

EXCERPT: All in all, King estimates that more than 1,000 octopuses known as Muuscoctopus robustus were nestled among the rocks, most of which appeared to be inverted, or turned inside out.  For this species, that inside-out pose is common among females that are brooding, or protecting their growing young.  In some cases, the submersible's camera could even spot tiny embryos cradled within their mother's arms.

11/21/19

THE ATLANTIC OCEAN ALSO HAS A TEXAS SIZED SEA OF PLASTIC and GARBAGE


NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ON ATLANTIC OCEAN SEA OF PLASTIC

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - ATLANTIC OCEAN GARBAGE PATCH WORSE THAN EVER by Sarah Gibbons

If you're wondering how they know read these articles!

EXCERPT from the latest!
"To look for increases in North Atlantic Ocean plastic, scientists turned to an old, reliable contraption called the Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR).  The torpedo-shaped contraption has been sampling the North Atlantic for plankton since the 1930's."

9/13/19

7/21/18

LISTEN TO THE BOWHEAD WHALE MAKE JAZZ MUSIC UNDER THE SEA!


NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC : BOWHEAD WHALE JAZZ MUSICIAN OF SEA  by Carrie Arnold

EXCERPT:  New recordings of the little - studied bowhead whale show that the mammals sing intricate and variable songs - more like jazz musicians than Beethoven or Bach.

Other whale songs are predictable and simple ditties repeated over and over throughout seasons or years, says study leader Kate Stafford, a marine biologist at the University of Washington.

"With bowheads, there are lots of different songs.  Every year, it's just completely different."


3/25/16

GHOST LIKE OCTOPUS DOWN 5000 FEET - NEW SPECIES - NECKER ISLAND - RIDGE AREA OFF HAWAII

HONOLULU SUN TIMES - NEW GHOST-LIKE OCTOPUS SPECIES OFF HAWAII

EXCERPT:

According to NOAA’s Michael Vecchione, the ROV was traversing a flat area of rock interspersed with sediments at 4,290 meters when it came across an octopod sitting on a flat rock dusted with a light coat of sediment.
         
The animal didn’t appear to be very muscular and lacked pigment cell, causing it to appear “ghost-like,” according to Vecchione, who also noted that the octopod was “unlike any published records and was the deepest observation ever for this type of cephalopod.”

The octopod is believed to be a member of the incirte octopods. These octopods lack fins and cirri. They are also similar in appearance to shallow water Octopus.

Cirrate octopods have been reported in depths of over 5,000 meters. However, the deepest published reports for incirrates are all less than 4,000 meters. ...

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National Geographic Video



3/12/13

SEA MONSTERS : INTERACTIVE MAP FROM NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

From December 2005 came the National Geographic Sea Monster interactive.
ZOMMIFY THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SEA MONSTER MAP  link here!

Giant Squid and other Oceanic Mysteries always make me wonder if Sea Monsters were real.  I was told long ago that they were put on maps not because of sightings but because of the fear sailors felt when they went into then uncharted territories of the sea.  Frankly, oceanic dinosaurs wouldn't surprise me.

3/26/12

JAMES CAMERON (IN A SUBMARINE OF HIS OWN DESIGN) TRAVELS SEVEN MILES DOWN TO THE BOTTOM OF THE TRENCH

William J. Broad's article for the New York Times is one of the best on JAMES CAMERON'S TRIP, which after seven years of planning, and a couple weeks delay due to rough seas, was cut short due to a leak. The pressure seven miles down is intense, the leak was to a hydraulic gear, but this layman scientist has reported that there was little to no visible life that far down.

"No government can send people so deep." His team includes scientists from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the University of Hawaii... And National Geographic was a sponsor.

3/24/12

EXCLUSIVE NEW TITANIC IMAGES FROM NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

6 beautiful pictures linked here... don't get fooled by the smooth model...most of the ship looks like sea life has taken root.

10/27/11

ALBINO SHARK WITH ONE CYCLOPS EYE IS REAL!



"The shark fetus, which measured "22-inch-long, has a single, functioning eye at the front of its head—the hallmark of a congenital condition called cyclopia, which occurs in several animal species, including humans," according to National Geographic."

3/27/11

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC : THE ACID SEA

Link now to the NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC article THE ACID SEA which has pictures of sea creatures who live in healthy water and then those of the same species who live in acid water.

THERE IS CLEARLY A NEGATIVE IMPACT FROM ACID and OTHER POLLUTION!

Imagine loosing your arms or growing to half the size you should?