Thursday, September 30, 2010

Aquarium Scuba Diving & Snorkeling - Snorkeling & Scuba Diving in Aquariums

Aquarium Scuba Diving & Snorkeling - Snorkeling & Scuba Diving in Aquariums

Nose-to-nose with a 250-pound grouper, the scuba diver waves at the crowd on the far side of the glass in the aquarium. Did you know aquarium scuba diving - and snorkeling -- with fish is offered at more than 10 aquariums in the U.S., as well as in other countries? At some aquariums scuba diving programs require that you be a certified diver. All aquariums below belong to the Association of Zoos Aquariums. AZA is America's leading accrediting organization for zoos and aquariums and accredits only institutions that have achieved rigorous standards for animal care, education, wildlife conservation and science.

1. Swim with Sharks at Adventure Aquarium in Camden, New Jersey

The SHARKS UP-CLOSE ENCOUNTER lets SCUBA-certified guests dive into the adrenaline-pumping world of Adventure Aquarium's 550,000-gallon Shark Realm. Join SWIM WITH THE SHARKS and you can snorkel with sand tiger sharks, sandbar sharks, nurse sharks and even barracuda. Then, enter Stingray Lagoon and feed stingrays.

2. Downtown Aquarium, Denver, ColoradoThe Downtown Aquarium has both a dive and a "swim with fish" program.

3. Georgia Aquarium's Journey With Gentle Giants

The Georgia Aquarium has both a dive and a swim program for visitors who want to swim with whale sharks. Divers must be certified. During the swim program you'll stay on the surface.

4. California's Monteray Bay Aquarium Underwater Explorers Program

Kids ages 8-13 dive with staffers in the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Great Tide Pool. The kids wear a mask, drysuit, regulator and specialized SCUBA gear.

5. Atlantis Paradise Island, Bahamas

Go deep-water swimming with dolphins in Dolphin Cay at Atlantis Paradise Island in the Bahamas. You'll snorkel and glide alongside these marvelous creatures.

Researchers comb Monterey Bay for ghost fishers - MontereyHerald.com :

Researchers comb Monterey Bay for ghost fishers - MontereyHerald.com :



A research team led by NOAA's Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary recently went in search of ghosts in the waters off Monterey.
They found them — or at least their gear.
Fishing lines, nets or traps lost or abandoned by fishermen can still snare animals, an occurrence known as ghost fishing.
Because the gear continues to work after the fishermen are long gone, marine animals can get caught or trapped in areas specifically set aside for their protection.
"Most of the gear we found was in marine protected areas," said Karen Grimmer, deputy superintendent of the sanctuary.
Although they find gear inside and outside of marine protected areas, the kinds of gear they find tend to differ with location.
Grimmer said gear inside marine protected areas tends to be older, left before the areas were designated as protected. Newer abandoned gear tends to be found outside marine protected areas.
The newer gear is especially worrisome, she said, because it is more resilient than older gear.
Lost and abandoned fishing gear can float in the ocean for years. Lines and cables can drag along the bottom, gouging the sea floor and ripping up animals, while floating nets can entangle and drown marine mammals. Abandoned gear poses a danger to humans by creating underwater hazards for swimmers and divers.
Local dive shop manager Keith McNutt said the most common piece of equipment he comes across is broken fishing line.
"You learn to look for it and avoid it," he said, but most divers carry a knife or scissors to cut themselves free if they get snagged.
Jim Barry, senior scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, said he has been on research cruises where the tether connecting a remotely operated vehicle to the boat became entangled in abandoned fishing gear at the edge of Monterey Canyon.
Although debris on the seafloor is not a good thing, Barry said, there are communities of invertebrates that can settle on abandoned equipment, creating a collection of life in otherwise sparse areas of the ocean.
Though the urge to remove all the lost fishing gear is understandable, Grimmer said, one of the many decisions scientists make is whether to remove lost gear that has a thriving marine community on it.
"If the gear is lying flat against the bottom with a significant number of marine invertebrates growing on it, it becomes a low-priority removal," she said.
Scuba divers can retrieve lost fishing gear in water up to 100 feet deep, while techniques such as using underwater robots are needed in deeper water, according to a report by The SeaDoc Society, a program of the Wildlife Health Center at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.
Grimmer said the recent 14-day research cruise, funded by the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and a state grant to the UC Davis SeaDoc Society, tested the best ways of removing lost gear from water deeper than 100 feet and used a remotely operated vehicle to look for lost and abandoned fishing gear.
Her team removed 400 feet of rockfish gill nets, three crab pots, one prawn trap and 600 pounds of lead clump weights used to ballast underwater robots.
The research team scouted a new protected area in Monterey Bay, the Portuguese Ledge State Marine Conservation Area, which contained an abandoned fishing net, complete with weights and doors, that they hope to retrieve next year.
Grimmer said it would be difficult because "we're going to have to figure out how to cut through steel cables," but the team hopes to continue the work in the future, depending on funding.
Grimmer is pleased with this kind of work, not only because it helps restore a protected area of the ocean, but because she and her staff can work with other agencies such as the California Department of Fish and Game, CSU Monterey Bay and programs such as the Marine Advanced Technology Education Center.
The research cruise is part of a "collaborative effort that enhances inter-agency communication and coordination," she said.
The Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary will post the locations of some abandoned fishing gear the team discovered — but wasn't able to remove — on its website so fishermen can avoid getting their gear tangled

Swim with the fish at Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach - Travel - LATimes.com

Swim with the fish at Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach - Travel - LATimes.com


Scuba divers who prefer diving in 80-degree water rather than our local 65- to 75-degree waters, can pay for an afternoon dive in the Tropical Reef Habitat at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach.  No plane ticket to the Caribbean or Micronesia needed — just your swimsuit and dive card.
The aquarium launched its “Dive Immersion program” on June 1.  It costs $299 ($279 for aquarium members) for a 2 1/2-hour session offered daily, 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
The program includes:
  • A personal behind-the-scenes tour of the dive program;
  • All equipment except your swimsuit (mask, fins, wetsuit, BCD, air tank, weights, etc.);
  • A dive lasting approximately 45 minutes in the 350,000-gallon Tropical Reef Habitat, which contains more than 1,000 animals, including sea turtles, zebra and blacktip reef sharks, porcupine puffers, groupers, clownfish (like Nemo), sea horses and sea dragons.

  • An underwater digital camera to use during your dive — you leave with the memory card containing the pictures you shoot using the aquarium’s camera.
  • A certificate of completion;
  • A souvenir towel.
The maximum number of divers is four, so neither the divers nor the fish feel crowded.  The Tropical Reef Habitat mimics the waters off Palau in Micronesia and features 16 exhibits.
Divers need their swimsuit, a photo identification card and proof that they have been certified for open-water diving by a nationally recognized scuba-certifying agency such as PADI, NAUI or SSI.   Many divers bring their own mask and booties but let the aquarium supply the rest of the gear.  Reservations must be made at least 24 hours in advance.  The experience may cost a bit more than a local boat dive, but the fees help support the nonprofit aquarium.
The Aquarium of the Pacific also welcomes scuba-diving volunteers.  Divers must be available for one four-hour shift per week, have rescue diver certification and have logged at least 50 open-water dives.
More information is available at: Aquarium of the Pacific, 100 Aquarium Way, Long Beach, CA  90802; (562) 590-3100.
– Terry Gardner, Special to the Los Angeles Times

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

How is a Tank Hydro Tested?

We all know that our scuba tanks need to be visually inspected every year, but every 5 years a scuba tank needs to be hydrostatic tested. So, what exactly does that mean? How do they do it? Click on this link to read more. Lots of photos with step by step explanation.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Dive Vacation Checklist

There is nothing worse than getting to that dive destination after saving up money and vacation days to find you forgot that one thing that makes a good vacation great from sun glasses and lotion to fins and extra fin straps. This list comes from experience. Many of these things I have forgotten and many more my travel companions or students have forgotten. As often as not it is just a matter of overlooking the obvious and not lack of knowledge.

This list is a starting point. Feel free to tell me what I forgot to add and I will add you it to the list... with proper credit ,of course.

COMPLETE ARTICLE

Tank Strap Threading Instructions

Turtle near Mona Island Puerto Rico

 This turtle cirled me before swimming off.

NYT: Coral reefs face 2nd major global die-off - Technology & science - The New York Times - msnbc.com



NYT: Coral reefs face 2nd major global die-off - Technology & science - The New York Times - msnbc.com

Monday, September 20, 2010

Fox Crime | Fox Crime Scuba | Fox Scuba Divers | Mediaite

Watch this video. Might be a good reason to wear those adult diapers.

Fox Crime Fox Crime Scuba Fox Scuba Divers Mediaite

Scuba Divers remove more than 500 venomous lionfish in Florida Keys inaugural lionfish tournament - National scuba diving | Examiner.com


More than 100 scuba divers collected 534 venomous Indo-Pacific red lionfish during the first tournament dedicated to reducing the population of the invasive species in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.
The September 11 tournament in Key Largo, organized by Reef Environmental Education Foundation (REEF) and the Sanctuary, is the first of three Keys-based lionfish roundups. The event attracted 27 teams which competed for cash and prizes to collect the most, largest and smallest lionfish.
Scuba Divers remove more than 500 venomous lionfish in Florida Keys inaugural lionfish tournament - National scuba diving Examiner.com

An Oil Rig Gets a Second Life as a Hotel for Scuba Divers - WSJ.com

I thought this was a great use of an old oil rig.



An Oil Rig Gets a Second Life as a Hotel for Scuba Divers - WSJ.com