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Freediving for Science

Claire Paris, Ph.D., and Ricardo Paris

Q3/Q4 2020

Knowing that other researchers and students could benefit from learning the freediving skills they were applying to underwater research, Claire and Ricardo Paris collaborated with others to draft a course that would raise awareness of the risks, promote safety, teach the required skills and establish guidelines for freediving in science. The University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science approved the first scientific freediving course to establish safety protocols, plan underwater fieldwork and prepare students for other scientific freediving specialties.

Science We Need for the Ocean We Want

Tiffany Atkinson and Craig McLean

Q3/Q4 2020

With the stress of today’s 7.8 billion people on Earth expanding to a projected 8.5 billion in 2030, we need to make changes. To have an ocean capable of healthfully and prosperously supporting a growing population, it’s necessary to have sustainable development with circular and recycling economies that will eliminate wasted byproducts of production and impacts on the air and ocean. The U.N. General Assembly declared 2021-2030 as the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development to provide “the science we need for the ocean we want.”

The Shipwrecks of the Florida Keys

Stephen Frink

Q3/Q4 2020

Historical shipwrecks are scattered throughout the Florida Keys, and local dive communities with the assistance of the Florida Keys Tourist Development Council have intentionally sunk some ships that have become amazing artificial reefs. Donated ships must first be cleaned of oil and other pollutants as well as contaminants such as fire-retardant paint containing polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Then the ships are made safe for diver access before sinking them in a manner prescribed as safe for marine life and coral reefs.

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Serpents of the Shallows

Ethan Daniels

Q3/Q4 2020

First seen in the geologic record from approximately 167 million years ago, snakes now live on much of the planet, but very few of the more than 3,000 known living species are venomous. Sea snakes evolved much more recently and are the result of remarkable mutations, adaptations and repeated invasions into the marine world by terrestrial snake ancestors. The seas are home to more than 60 species of sea snakes that swim and hunt amid warm, shallow coral reefs, estuaries, seagrass beds, mudflats and open waters.

Innovations in Adaptive Diving

Kenneth J. Hoser

Q3/Q4 2020

Participation in diving as an adaptive recreational sport has increased significantly along with innovations of viable options for people who want to explore adaptive diving. One of the biggest concerns is how to provide these individuals with safe access to diving. As the dive industry welcomes new programs developed for adaptive diving, more dive businesses should get training in adaptive diving and create conditions to accommodate these divers. Certified dive instructors and medical professionals should evaluate individuals for their ability to function safely, given their condition and current medications.

A Predator’s Dream

Ned and Anna DeLoach

Q3/Q4 2020

For both predators and prey, survival on the reef depends on innovation. Both populations must continually acquire advantages over the other by evolving new and improved physical adaptations that must be countered by the opposition. Prey species tend to hold the upper hand — they are a little too fast, well-camouflaged or spiky to be caught under normal circumstances. To even the odds, predatory reef fishes devise novel hunting strategies. Joining forces with third-party species equipped with specialized hunting skills has become the gold standard.

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