05 December 2008

"Expect massive floods in Johor": impact on Chek Jawa?

In early 2007, there was mass deaths on Chek Jawa following massive flooding in Johor.
20070120 d7645
More about this event and a study on its effects on marine life on Chek Jawa.

The Malaysian media yesterday warned the public to brace for massive flooding in Johor this coming weekend.

Expect another round of massive floods
Ian McIntyre, The Star 4 Dec 08;
KOTA BARU: The Department of Irrigation and Drainage (DID) has warned of the possibility of another round of massive floods here and in northern Johor and Malacca.

DID national hydrology and water resources division director Datuk Lim Chow Hock said that based on the Meteorological Department’s latest forecast, heavy rain is expected in the east coast states, including northern Johor and Malacca, starting Friday.

He said heavy rain is expected to continue on the weekend and by Sunday, some parts -- especially low-line areas -- could be flooded.

He warned the public to make early preparations and to listen to radio and television broadcasts for the latest updates.

They could also refer to the DID website.


Department Upgrades Heavy Rain Warning To Orange
Bernama 6 Dec 08;
KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 6 (Bernama) -- The Meteorological Department has upgraded the weather alert from yellow to orange, with moderate and occasional heavy rain in Terengganu, Kelantan and Pahang to continue until Monday.

In Kelantan, the areas involved are Kota Baharu, Tumpat, Bachok, Pasir Puteh, Pasir Mas, Tanah Merah, Machang, Jeli and Kuala Krai while in Terengganu, the areas are Besut, Setiu, Dungun, Kemaman, Marang and Hulu Terengganu, it said in a statement.

Similar weather condition is also expected to occur over Jerantut, Kuantan, Maran and Pekan in Pahang.

A yellow rain warning, with moderate rain and occasional heavy rain has also been issued for Bera and Rompin in Pahang, Johor, Negeri Sembilan and Melaka from this morning to continue until Monday.

The condition can cause flooding in low-lying areas.

Sungei Buloh celebrates 15th anniversary this weekend

Even the rare Nordmann's Greenshank was spotted visiting Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. This is the first time the 30cm-tall bird had been spotted in Singapore since 1981. It was last sighted at Changi, near what is now the Tanah Merah golf course
'Maybe Sungei Buloh is getting world-renowned, so the birds have heard about it,' quipped wildlife consultant Subaraj Rajathurai, an experienced guide who leads nature trips.

This weekend, many more will be flocking to the Reserve. Humans that is. For the bonanza of activities to celebrate the anniversary of this special wild place.
But do note that parking at the Reserve is closed for the anniversary celebrations.

A free Sungei Buloh shuttle bus will run from Kranji MRT – Kranji Dam Car Park – Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve every hour from 7 am to 7pm.
Parking is available at the Kranji Dam Car Park. Take the free Sungei Buloh shuttle bus to get to the Reserve.

Lots more details the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve website.

New Pulau Ubin flickr group: join now!

Share YOUR favourite photos of Pulau Ubin on the brand new Pulau Ubin flickr group!

Already there are lots of interesting photos being uploaded.

Started just hours ago by fellow flickr Ubin enthusiast cheguthamrin, here's a great opportunity to share our favourite photos of Singapore's last unspoilt island!

There's so much to experience and discover on this fabulous island. Let's show others just how marvellous Pulau Ubin is and why we should try to keep it unspoilt.

More about Pulau Ubin on the wildsingapore website and the Pulau Ubin Stories blog.

04 December 2008

Upcoming ReefFriends training course for volunteer divers

Are you a diver looking to make a difference for our reefs?
Here's a great opportunity to do so!
Photo by Toh Chay Hoon during the first ReefFriends Survey
of Kusu Island in 2008.

ReefFriends is a volunteer based coral reef survey programme that monitors the status of coral reefs of Singapore through bimonthly surveys. This Blue Water Volunter programme is currently sponsored by the National Parks Board. Results of these surveys are submitted to the National Parks Board, NUS Marine Biology Lab and Reef Check.

The ReefFriends training course will cover:
  • What is BWV all about?
  • What is the Reef Friends survey about?
  • Basic coral reef facts
  • Survey techniques
More about the ReefFriends programme on the Blue Water Volunteers website.

Sign up for the ReefFriends training course at this link
https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?key=pv-hJAbBAeYxWcoG4kWO0YA.

Dates: Theory classes: 11, 16, 18 and 23 Dec 08 (Dates of the practical classes to be decided on the first day of the course)
Time: 7-10pm
Venue: Classroom 4, Botany Centre, Tanglin Core, Singapore Botanic Gardens
Cost: The course will cost S$100. This will only cover admin costs (training materials, room bookings etc). It will not include costs for the practical sessions (there will be a minimum of two practical sessions).
Website: http://www.bluewatervolunteers.org/reeffriends/
Contact: reeffriends@bluewatervolunteers.org

Faster, cheaper land reclamation in Singapore

By 2030, another 50 sq km is set to be added - so Singapore will have expanded by a quarter altogether.

An initiative by the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) and Jurong Town Corporation (JTC) will involve scientific analysis of the impact of waves on different stretches of the coastline and reclaimed land. Engineers will then determine the appropriate level of shoreline protection to be put in place for three months until a tenant takes over the land.

The first test case for the new approach is the reclamation that has been done for a mega shipyard in Tuas.

For every kilometre of shoreline of land reclaimed under the new approach for the shipyard, the Government saved five months in construction time and about $11.25 million in costs. The shipyard owner saved nearly three months in construction time and about $4.5 million.

SLA is the gatekeeper for all land reclamation projects in Singapore.

The full article is on the wildsingapore news blog.

Is it safe to move quickly onto reclaimed land?

From Singapore tremors raise fear of building on reclaimed land by Koh Gui Qing, Reuters 9 Mar 07.
"Reclaimed land is made up of sea sand, so buildings will be shaken up more violently during earthquakes as compared to those on non-reclaimed land, which is solid and will not be liquefied by the shake," said Fan Sau Cheong, an engineering professor at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University. He told Reuters that buildings on reclaimed land may shake two to three times more than those on natural land during earthquakes because sand in reclaimed land slides like liquid when saturated with water, in a process called liquefaction.
From Is Singapore quake-proof? Lin Yanqin Today Online 20 Jan 05
"Singapore stands on extensive soft marine clays and sands. You have massive cargo ports and harbours on reclaimed land," Prof Rice said. "I think you should put in place a set of studies to realistically assess the plausible size of earthquakes and the detailed response of structures in Singapore."

As Singapore's history does not go back long enough to document earthquakes which may have occurred centuries ago, it should not think it is immune to the threat of a major earthquake off Sumatra's western coast, Prof Rice said.

He likened Singapore to Mexico City, which was devastated by an earthquake in 1985 because it was built on the bed of an old lake.
What about sea level rise?

From Vulnerable to rising seas, Singapore envisions a giant seawall By Wayne Arnold, International Herald Tribune 29 Aug 07
Singapore got a preview of just what havoc rising sea levels could cause back in 1974 when a rare astronomical event caused the tides to rise 3.9 meters, more than double the usual level.

"It eroded the coast very badly," said Wong Poh Poh, an associate professor specializing in beach geography at the National University of Singapore, who studied the event.

Areas along the Singapore River were inundated, as were parts of the airport and a coastal public park built on reclaimed land. Wong later discovered that during such periods of elevated sea levels, the variations between high and low tide are accentuated, putting the country's reservoirs, many of which lie adjacent to the coast, at risk.
More background on reclamation in Singapore

From Singapore Finds it Hard to Expand Without Sand by Koh Gui Qing PlanetArk website, 12 Apr 05
Under a Concept Plan 2001, Singapore wants to add another 99 sq km (38 sq miles) over the next five decades. Civil engineers say that would be costly and require massive amounts of sand.

When reclamantion works began in earnest in the 1960s, the depth off Singapore's shore was about 5 metres (16 ft). That has sunk to about 20 metres (65 ft), requiring four times as much sand -- and four times more money -- to fill every square metre.

For a sense of scale, and cost, take Singapore's Changi Airport. Its 20 sq km (7.7 sq mile) of reclaimed land required 272 million cubic metres (9.6 billion cubic ft) of sand, said a civil engineering professor at a local university. The sand alone would have cost at least S$1.9 billion.

For now, Singapore may refocus on its own undeveloped land. About 41 percent of the island is either undeveloped or taken up by reservoirs, cemeteries, farms, army camps and nature reserves.
More links to land reclamation and shore protection in Singapore

Fishy power of vortices: new green energy source?

Fish scales, tails and the way they swim have inspired a new approach to generating energy from the tides and moving water.
Silversides on the reef!
Most attempts to tap water power have employed underwater windmills - tidal turbines use the force of lift to turn their blades. We live in air so we are used to lifting surfaces that support birds, sail boats and airplanes.

In water, however, Nature has devised a different strategy. Most natural swimmers - from tiny sperm to giant whales - create vortices (or little whirlpools) that they push off of to propel themselves forward.

How Fishy Technology Could Power the Future
Michael Schirber, LiveScience.com 4 Dec 08;
Editor's Note: Each Wednesday LiveScience examines the viability of emerging energy technologies - the power of the future.

Think like a fish not like a bird, say researchers trying to harvest energy from water currents. Their new fish-inspired power generator can work in slow-moving currents where traditional turbines are less effective.

Tidal streams and moving rivers in the United States could generate 140 billion kilowatt-hours per year, or about 3.5 percent of the nation's electricity demand, according to the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI).

Most of the attempts to tap this potential have employed underwater windmills. These so-called tidal turbines use the force of lift to turn their blades.

"We live in air so we are used to lifting surfaces that support birds, sail boats and airplanes," said Michael Bernitsas of the University of Michigan.

In water, however, Nature has devised a different strategy. Most natural swimmers - from tiny sperm to giant whales - create vortices (or little whirlpools) that they push off of to propel themselves forward.

Bernitsas realized that these same vortices could be used to drive a generator. He and his colleagues have created a machine called VIVACE (Vortex Induced Vibrations for Aquatic Clean Energy), whose cylinders oscillate up and down in moving waters.

"This device works naturally in the marine environment," Bernitsas told LiveScience.

A description of VIVACE appears in a recent issue of the Journal of Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering.

Shedding vortices

Bernitsas' group has built a working prototype in their lab. The spring-supported cylinder bounces up and down in a tank of moving water.

The mechanism that drives VIVACE is called vortex shedding.

As water smacks into the cylinder, the induced turbulence builds up into a vortex that eventually rolls off the back, giving the cylinder a little push as it goes. The next vortex that forms will spin in reverse and give a push in the opposite direction.

These opposing forces cause the cylinder to vibrate up and down. Similar vortex-induced vibrations can be seen with a flag pole or car antenna as wind rushes past, but you wouldn't be able to extract much energy from this shaking because the air is too thin.

The high density of water, on the other hand, makes the vibrations about 800 times more energetic than they would be in air at the same speed. For this reason, the VIVACE system can extract three to 10 times more energy from a given volume of moving water than tidal turbines, Bernitsas said.

It can also work in currents as slow as 2 knots (about 2 mph). In contrast, tidal turbines are not economically viable in tides that do not reach 5 to 7 knots. This is based on a recent EPRI report that assessed the available technology.

"As the cost comes down and as the cost of fossil fuels goes up, slower tidal passages will become economical," said Roger Bedard, EPRI's ocean energy leader.

Something fishy

The vortices that fish use to move through the water may come off their own body or from another fish next to them. In fact, schools of fish can move faster than single fish thanks to this "sharing" of vortices.

The VIVACE design does not try to mimic this "school" behavior - the cylinders are kept far enough apart so that their vortices do not interfere with each other.

"Fish know better," Bernitsas said. "They can harness the vortices generated by the fish ahead of them. I am not that smart."

However, Bernitsas and his collaborators have tried to replicate the roughness of fish scales on their cylinders. They found that a rough cylinder surface could increase the power output by 40 to 70 percent compared to a smooth surface.

"The roughness helps to convert more of the kinetic energy of the water into vortex energy," Bernitsas explained.

Fish tails may also be worth copying. The team has begun to experiment with passive tails that could keep vortices from interfering with each other.

The catch of the day

Bernitsas' group is working with the U.S. Navy to install two VIVACE systems in the next year: one in the Detroit River and another in an ocean environment somewhere.

The proposed design calls for modules with several cylinders grouped together, like rungs on a ladder. Although the size can be varied, the cylinders for the Detroit River project will likely be about a foot in diameter and 20 feet in length. The researchers plan to generate 3 to 5 kilowatts from the slow-moving (1.5-knot) river.

Although a commercial plant is still a long way off, the researchers have estimated that the cost of electricity from a mature VIVACE installation would be roughly 5.5 cents per kilowatt-hour, which is similar to the current price of wind generation.

"I have no comment about their design other than, let's put it in the water and try it and use an independent organization for review of the test results," Bedard said.

03 December 2008

Sea anemone venom may help treat multiple sclerosis

A component of venom from the Caribbean sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus was found to halt--and may reverse--the paralysis seen in an experimental form of multiple sclerosis.

This study was done in 2001 and is featured here as part of my effort to prepare for the upcoming Workshop for Nature Guides on Cnidarians.

Sea Anemone Toxin Halts Experimental Multiple Sclerosis; Findings May Lead To New Treatments For Disease
ScienceDaily 21 Nov 01;
Sea anemones use venom to stun their prey, but one component of that venom halts--and may reverse--the paralysis seen in an experimental form of multiple sclerosis, according to a study by UC Irvine's College of Medicine and the University of Marseilles, France.

If the findings conducted on rats prove effective in humans, they could result in a new class of drug treatments for multiple sclerosis, one of the most common diseases of the nervous system, known for its devastating and progressive loss of sensation and function. The study appears in the Nov. 20 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Christine Beeton and Heike Wulff, physiology and biophysics researchers, and their colleagues found that a component of venom called ShK from the Caribbean sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus blocks ion channels located in white blood cells that had been activated to cause an experimental form of multiple sclerosis called EAE. By blocking the channels on these activated cells, ShK prevented the activated cells from attacking the nervous system and causing paralysis.

The white blood cells, also known as T cells, that were activated to cause experimental MS, contained unusually high numbers of a particular ion channel. Usually, such inappropriately activated cells are destroyed by the body's thymus gland, which regulates production of immune cells. But in many cases of multiple sclerosis, these disease-causing cells slip through and can attack nerve cells. Ion channels are found on the surface of cells and play crucial roles in communicating between cells and regulating cellular behavior.

"This experimental form of multiple sclerosis is caused by T cells with high numbers of unique ion channels that may trigger the T cells into attacking neurons and eventually cause paralysis and death," said Beeton. "Our experiments show that we can block these channels, and only these channels, and protect neurons from damage. If these findings hold after testing in other animals and people, they may result in an effective treatment for MS."

Multiple sclerosis is a debilitating disease in which T cells and other components of the immune system literally attack their own nervous system, resulting in tremors, burning, sensory deprivation, paralysis and eventually death. Immune cells cause the disease by stripping away a protective sheath called myelin that normally surrounds neurons and helps them transmit crucial nerve signals.

The disease can strike the young and elderly and can take years to develop. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society estimates that between 250,000 and 350,000 people in the United States suffer from multiple sclerosis. There is no known cure, though certain treatments can address symptoms and even slow the disease's course if detected early.

ShK blocked the ion channels and stopped the activated cells' destructive activity. By continuously blocking these T cell channels with ShK, the researchers found they could reverse the experimental disease, even after the initial onset of symptoms. In some rats that were showing signs of paralysis, their function was nearly fully restored.

ShK is the most potent inhibitor known for these channels on the activated T cells, but its short life span in the bloodstream reduces its effectiveness as a therapeutic drug.

"ShK may not last long enough to prevent or treat disease on a long-term basis," Wulff said. "But it appears to match the biochemical structure of the channel well enough to block it and change the T cells' responses. Our group is searching for chemically similar substances that last longer in the body."

"This research shows that we may be able to effectively treat the disease while preserving the immune system by targeting a specific cellular ion channel," Beeton said. "Still, researchers will have to find out what dose works best to treat MS, whether it can work on other illnesses and at what stage of a disease treatment should begin."

The researchers' work was supported by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the French Association pour la Recherche sur La Sclérose en Plaques, Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

Beeton's and Wulff's colleagues in the study include Michael Cahalan and George Chandy at UCI, Jocelyne Barbaria, Olivier Clot-Faybesse, Dominique Bernard and Evelyne Béraud of the Faculté de Médecine, Marseilles, France, and Michael Pennington of Bachem Bioscience, King of Prussia, Pa. Béraud's team at the University of Marseilles induced the experimental form of MS in the rats. Michael Pennington and his team at Bachem synthesized the ShK venom component that was used in the study.

Anemones are like us!

The genome of the starlet sea anemone resembles the genome of humans and other vertebrates more than it resembles the genomes of fruit flies and nematode worms. This is because both the anemone and vertebrate genomes have retained many ancestral genes that flies and nematode worms apparently lost over time. The genes of flies and worms also have been jumbled up among the chromosomes, making it hard to track genes through evolution.
A view into the mouth of the starlet sea anemone, Nematostella vectensis. The anemone, only a few inches long and endowed with between 16 and 20 tentacles, lives in the mud of brackish estuaries and marshes. It is becoming a popular laboratory subject for studies of development, evolution, genomics, reproductive biology and ecology. (Nicholas Putnam/UC Berkeley photo) on the UCBerkeley website)

This study was done in 2007 and is featured here as part of my effort to prepare for the upcoming Workshop for Nature Guides on Cnidarians.

Sea anemone genome provides new view of our multi-celled ancestors
EurekAlert 5 Jul 07;
First analysis of starlet sea anemone genome shows it is nearly as complex as human genome

Berkeley -- The first analysis of the genome of the sea anemone shows it to be nearly as complex as the human genome, providing major insights into the common ancestor of not only humans and sea anemones, but of nearly all multi-celled animals.

"We are looking close to the base of the animal tree of life," said Daniel Rokhsar, faculty member in the University of California, Berkeley's Center for Integrative Genomics and head of a team reporting the analysis in the July 6 issue of Science. " What was the common ancestor of all animals like" What did it eat" Did it have muscles" a brain" Comparing genomes is a way of looking back in time to infer features of the ancestral genetic blueprint for animals."

According to Rokhsar, program head for computational genomics at the Department of Energy's Joint Genome Institute (JGI) in Walnut Creek, Calif., and UC Berkeley professor of genetics, the analysis of the genome allowed the team "to compare the sea anemone with other animals and see what the genome of their last common ancestor looked like, even though such creatures have been extinct for 600 or 700 million years."

The genome of the starlet sea anemone - Nematostella vectensis, a delicate, few-inch-long animal in the form of a transparent, multi-tentacled tube - was sequenced at JGI as part of its Community Sequencing Program. The raw sequence has been available to scientists on the Internet for the past year. The anemone burrows in the mud in brackish water along the east and west coasts of the United States and in the British Isles, and is becoming an increasingly important model system for the study of development, evolution, genomics, reproductive biology and ecology, thanks in large part to the urging of late marine biologist and UC Berkeley zoology professor Cadet Hand Jr.

All animals comprised of more than one cell are lumped together as "metazoan." But scientists usually distinguish between the sponges - strange animals unlike any other - and all the rest, which are dubbed eumetazoans (literally "true animals") and are characterized by defined tissues and distinct embryonic layers.

"Anything the sea anemone has that also is found in humans, flies, snails or any other eumetazoans must already have been present in the common ancestor of eumetazoans," Rokhsar said.

Simply by comparing living animals, scientists have inferred that the early eumetazoans had many of the features we associate with animals today: a nervous system, muscles, senses, a gut and even sperm with little tails. By comparing genomes, it is now possible to infer which genes were present in this ancient progenitor and how their chromosomes were structured, Rokhsar said.

Surprisingly, the team found that the genome of the starlet sea anemone, which is lumped with jellyfish and corals into the earliest diverging eumetazoan phylum, Cnidaria, resembles the human and other vertebrate genomes more than it resembles the genomes of such well-studied "lab rats" as fruit flies and nematode worms. According to Nicholas Putnam, postdoctoral fellow at the JGI and lead author of the study, this is because both the anemone and vertebrate genomes have retained many ancestral genes that flies and nematode worms apparently lost over time. The genes of flies and worms also have been jumbled up among the chromosomes, making it hard to track genes through evolution.

The anemone genome, on the other hand, has apparently changed less through time and makes a good reference for comparison with human and other vertebrate genomes in order to discover the genes of our common ancestor and how they were organized on chromosomes.

The sea anemone, for example, has about 18,000 genes, while humans have about 20,000. According to the researchers, this implies that the common ancestor had about the same number of genes, between 18,000 and 20,000. Many of the anemone's genes lie on its 30 chromosomes in patterns similar to the patterns of related genes on the 46 chromosomes of humans.

"Many genes close together in the sea anemone are still close together in humans, even after six or seven hundred million years," said Putnam. "We think we can identify where roughly half of the genes were located on the ancestor's chromosomes."

This similarity is present in the sea anemone and human genomes, despite the obvious differences between the two species.

"Complexity in the genome is not connected in any simple way to complexity of the organism," Putnam noted. Much of an organism's complexity can be ascribed to regulation of existing genes rather than to novel genes, he said, and the genome analysis will allow further study of such regulation.

The ancestral eumetazoan already had the genetic "toolkit" to conduct basic animal biochemistry, development and nerve and muscular function, according to the team's analysis. These functions were conferred by combining ancient genes that are found outside animals with about 1,500 new genes not seen before in earlier forms of life.

"We can trace the evolutionary history of roughly 80 percent of eumetazoan genes even further back in time to before the origin of animals, since related genes are found in fungi, plants, slime molds and other non-animals," said Rokhsar. "Only 20 percent of the ancestral eumetazoan genes seem to be unique to animals. Fifteen percent of these seem to be completely novel - we can't identify any related gene in non-animals. The other five percent were formed through substantial modifications to very ancient genes."

The novel genes of the eumetazoa are involved, to a large degree, with conversation among cells. "In the early animals, cells figured out how to talk to each other and coordinate their activities," Putnam said.

"The genes common to all complex cells are involved with critical signaling pathways inside the cell, while the new animal-specific genes seem to confer new modes of interaction between cells," Rokhsar said, noting that new genes appear in eumetazoa that let cells stick to one another, signal one another and transmit nerve impulses at a new structure called the synapse.

This makes sense, he added, because eumetazoans are characterized by tissues and organs in which cells must cluster and communicate, whereas single cells generally need to interact only with the outside environment and only loosely with their fellow cells.

"Basically, the sea anemone has all the basic mechanisms of interacting with the outside world seen in more morphologically complex creatures," Putnam said.

Rokhsar looks forward to comparing the sea anemone genome with the genomes of other animals and their relatives - sponges, placozoans and choanoflagellates - to learn more about the earliest eumetazoans and other early animals.

"Our goal is to learn how genes and genomes evolved throughout of the history of animals," he said. "This will help us to better understand not only animal origins, but also how biodiversity is created and shaped by genomic change."

Warrior Anemones: blobs can be belligerent

Clashing colonies of sea anemones fight as organized armies with distinct castes of warriors and scouts and protected reproductives! Who would imagine!
Warrior anemones reach over from several rows behind the front to attack animals from a neighboring colony. (Rick Grosberg/UC Davis photo)

When the tide is out, the anemones are quiet, contracted blobs. As the tide covers the colonies, "scouts" move out into the border to look for empty space to occupy. Larger, well-armed "warriors" inflate their stinging arms and swing them around. It's not just polyps along the border that clash. Polyps three or four rows away from the front will reach over their comrades to engage in fights. Towards the center of the colony, poorly armed "reproductive" anemones stay out of the fray and conduct the clone's business of breeding.

When anemones from opposing colonies come in contact, they usually fight. But after about 20 or 30 minutes of battle the clones settle down to a truce until the next high tide.

This study was done in 2005 and is featured here as part of my effort to prepare for the upcoming Workshop for Nature Guides on Cnidarians.


Anemone Armies Battle To A Standoff
ScienceDaily 25 Aug 05;
Clashing colonies of sea anemones fight as organized armies with distinct castes of warriors, scouts, reproductives and other types, according to a new study.
The sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima lives in large colonies of genetically identical clones on boulders around the tide line. Where two colonies meet they form a distinct boundary zone. Anemones that contact an animal from another colony will fight, hitting each other with special tentacles that leave patches of stinging cells stuck to their opponent.

David J. Ayre from the University of Wollongong, Australia, and Rick Grosberg from UC Davis have previously taken individual anemone polyps from separate colonies and studied fighting strategies one-on-one. But that's like trying to understand two armies by taking a single soldier from each side, Grosberg said.

Now, the researchers have been able to study two entire colonies as they clash.

When the tide is out, the polyps are contracted and quiet. As the tide covers the colonies, "scouts" move out into the border to look for empty space to occupy. Larger, well-armed "warriors" inflate their stinging arms and swing them around. Towards the center of the colony, poorly armed "reproductive" anemones stay out of the fray and conduct the clone's business of breeding.

When anemones from opposing colonies come in contact, they usually fight. But after about 20 or 30 minutes of battle the clones settle down to a truce until the next high tide.

It's not just polyps along the border between two clones that clash. Polyps three or four rows away from the front will reach over their comrades to engage in fights, Grosberg said.

Differentiation into warriors seems to depend on a combination of signals from enemy stings and the genetics of the colony. Different colonies react differently to similar signals, explaining why different clones are organized into so many different kinds of armies. But borders between colonies can remain stable for years, even though the two colonies organize their armies in different ways.

The study shows that very complex, sophisticated, and coordinated behaviors can emerge at the level of the group, even when the group members are very simple organisms with nothing resembling a brain, Grosberg said. The research was published in the June issue of the journal Animal Behaviour.

Jellyfish stingers are as fast and powerful as bullets

Ultra-high-speed camera capture shows stingers to be one of the fastest cellular processes in nature. And powerful too! The pressure generated at the site of impact is more than 7 GPa, which is in the range of that generated by some bullets, and sufficient to penetrate the shells of some crustaceans!
Nematocysts (stinging cells) of Portuguese Man o' War (Physalia physalis, 100x),coastal Charleston, SC. (Image courtesy of Southeast Regional Taxonomic Center)

This study was done in 2006 and is featured here as part of my effort to prepare for the upcoming Workshop for Nature Guides on Cnidarians.

Nanosecond-scale Release Of Stinging Jellyfish Nematocysts
ScienceDaily 9 May 06;
By using an electronic ultra-high-speed camera, researchers have characterized the explosive discharge of stinging jellyfish nematocytes and show that this event represents one of the fastest cellular processes in nature. The research is reported by Thomas Holstein of the University of Heidelberg and his colleagues in Current Biology.

Nematocysts (also known as cnidocysts) of jellyfish and other cnidarians are giant exocytotic organelles of the stinging cells used for prey capture and defense. These miniature cellular weapons contain a cocktail of hemolytic and neurotoxic poisons, making some cnidarians the most venomous animals known. Injection of the toxins requires an effective release mechanism that breaks the physical barrier of the prey's outer-surface tissue. It was known already that a high pressure (15 MPa) drives nematocyst discharge, and that stylets can penetrate even thick crustacean shells. However, neither the kinetics nor the forces involved were known, simply because discharge is so fast that it had not been previously resolved by conventional high-speed imaging.

To clarify these issues, the researchers studied nematocyst discharge with an electronic framing-streak camera at a framing rate of 1,430,000 frames per second. They show discharge kinetics of nematocysts in Hydra to be as short as 700 nanoseconds, creating an acceleration of up to 5,410,000 g. The researchers calculate that although the accelerated mass is very small (~1 nanogram), a pressure generated at the site of impact is more than 7 GPa, which is in the range of that generated by some bullets, and sufficient to penetrate the cuticle of crustacean prey. The researchers propose that the high speed of discharge is caused by the release of energy stored in the stretched configuration of the collagen-polymer of the nematocyst capsule wall. This ingenious solution allows the cellular process of vesicle exocytosis to release kinetic energy in the nanosecond range by a powerful molecular spring mechanism.

Timm Nüchter of University of Frankfurt in Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Martin Benoit of LM University Munich in München, Germany; Ulrike Engel of Darmstadt University of Technology in Darmstadt, Germany and University of Heidelberg in Heidelberg, Germany; Suat Özbek of University of Heidelberg in Heidelberg, Germany; Thomas W. Holstein of University of Frankfurt in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, Darmstadt University of Technology in Darmstadt, Germany, and University of Heidelberg in Heidelberg, Germany.

This work was supported by the DFG and Hamamatsu Photonics Germany.

Nüchter et al.: "Nanosecond- scale kinetics of nematocyst discharge." Publishing in Current Biology 16, R316-R318, May 9, 2006. DOI 101016/j.cub.2006.03.089

Dead dugong in Phuket: entangled in fishing net?

A young female dugong was found dead, likely drowned because of entanglement in fishing gear.
As the population of dugong in Phuket waters is estimated at only about 10 individuals, the death represents a significant loss in the total population. An autopsy found the dugong had been feeding well, before its untimely death.

Dead dugong thought victim of fishing gear
Phuket Gazette 3 Dec 08;
The healthy young dugong probably got entangled in fishing gear and drowned, researchers say.

LAEM PANWA: More bad news for Phuket’s tiny dugong population came early yesterday morning, when the carcass of an immature female was found floating less than a kilometer offshore from Laem Ka, up the coast from the Sea Gypsy Village in Rawai.

Dugong researcher Kanjana Adulyanukosol from the Phuket Marine Biological Center (PMBC) said the carcass was recovered at about 6 am by local fisherman Boonlert Sukasem, who brought it to Chalong Pier and notified local conservationist Sutha Prateep na Thalang, who in turn notified the PMBC.

The fact that it was still floating indicates it had died no more than about 24 hours before its discovery, Ms Kanjana said.

At 167 kilograms and 191 centimeters long, the animal was an immature female about five years old. Dugong reach maturity at about 10 years of age, she said.

As for the cause of death, the animal had signs of bleeding abrasions on the head and right side of the body. These were recent but minor injuries, not enough to have been the cause of death on their own.

A necropsy performed later that afternoon indicated that the dugong had been feeding well, with a wide variety of seagrasses in both its large and small intestines, she said.

PMBC veterinarian Sontaya Manawattana said a clot of pus was found in the mammal’s windpipe and that it had water in its lungs, indicating that the animal suddenly went into shock and drowned.

Although the exact cause cannot be confirmed, Dr Songtaya said the most likely cause of the sudden death was that the animal became ensnared in fishing gear and was unable to get to the surface to breath.

It is not easy for dugong to drown and there is a lot of abandoned fishing gear in the area where the dugong was found, he said.

As the population of dugong in Phuket waters is estimated at only about 10 individuals, the death represents a significant loss in the total population, he said.

The PMBC also plans to do a necropsy of another dead dugong found stranded Saturday night at Koh Sikao in Trang, which still has a sizable dugong population.

On a more positive note, PMBC researchers observed from a hillside one dugong foraging in Thang Khen Bay, near the PMBC at Laem Panwa on November 29, Ms Kanjana said.

New coral species from the murky ocean deeps

Bits and pieces of the mysterious bamboo corals had been seen for years, brought up in the nets of trawlers. But none of these fragments hinted at the size, beauty and importance of the corals and for other life at such depths. The deep-sea corals were clearly providing cover and solid foothold for fish, crabs and other animals in the otherwise mucky, largely deserted expanses of deep ocean floor.
Unlike better-known hard corals, deep sea corals live in pitch-black, cold waters. A newly found deep sea species, shown here, also has very unusual and impressive skirt of long tentacles on its trunk that billow in the current.

New fanlike coral found in deep sea
'Bamboo corals' so abundant they provide oases for many sea creatures
Larry O'Hanlon, MSNBC 1 Dec 08;
A spectacular new species of coral has been discovered thriving in veritable forests on the peaks of undersea mountains off the coast of the Pacific Northwest. The large candelabra or fanlike "bamboo corals" have been spotted by marine scientists growing to heights in excess of 3 feet (1 meter). They are so abundant they create oases for numerous other deep sea creatures.

"They look really, really big when you're underwater," said marine biologist Peter Etnoyer of Texas A&M University. Etnoyer is also the co-author of the Deep Sea News blog which appears on the Discovery News Web site.

Etnoyer and his colleagues discovered the corals at depths of 2,300 to 3,300 feet (700 to 1,000 meters) in the famous Alvin submersible. A paper officially describing the new species as well as giving it an official scientific name will appear in the late December issue of the journal Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington.

Bits and pieces of the mysterious bamboo corals had been seen for years, brought up in the nets of trawlers, Etnoyer said. But none of these fragments hinted at the size, beauty and importance of the corals and for other life at such depths.

"Bamboo corals have remarkable scientific utility," says coral researcher Tom Shirley of Texas A & M's Harte Research Institute. "Their growth rings are imprinted with carbon isotopes that allow us to unravel their growth history." Cross-sections exhibit growth rings that indicate some colonies can be 150 years old and more.

Deep sea fans like the bamboo coral are animals that feed on suspended organic material that floats by. Unlike better-known hard corals, deep-sea corals live in pitch-black, cold waters. The new deep-sea species also has very unusual and impressive skirt of long tentacles on its trunk that billow in the current. It's a feature that can only be seen and appreciated by looking at the living organism, as they could with Alvin, Etnoyer explained.

The deep-sea corals were also clearly providing cover and solid foothold for fish, crabs and other animals — essentially a shelter — in the otherwise mucky, largely deserted expanses of deep ocean floor.

"They provide a lot of shelter, food and breeding grounds," said deep-sea coral researcher Di Tracey of New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research. That makes them important for fisheries, since deep sea fish can't thrive without places to breed.

Deep-sea corals of the same genus Isidella appear off the coast of New Zealand as well, Tracey said. That's one reason why marine biologists are meeting there on Dec. 5 for the Fourth International Deep Sea Coral Symposium.

"We have a lot of deep-sea corals in the world that haven't been described," Tracey said. "We've known about them since the 18th century, but they've been sort of out of sight, out of mind."

Now with the help of technological advances like the Alvin and remotely controlled submersible vehicles, these unusual creatures can finally be given the scientific attention they deserve, she said.

Older is better: marine reserves

While marine reserves protect from over-fishing and human damage, they are unlikely to protect from global warming.

Old reserves were more effective in reducing coral loss, for yet unknown reasons. We need to think long term and act now to establish marine reserves that can better protect coral reefs from unknown future threats.

These results should sound a warning bell for reef managers believing that marine reserves will be more resilient to climate change. The biggest stresses put on coral reefs are ocean warming and disease outbreaks.

These were among the findings of a study of data on 8540 coral reefs in the Indian, Caribbean and Pacific regions over the 18 years from 1987 to 2005.

Old reef parks survive warming better
University of Carolina, ScienceAlert 2 Dec 08;
Marine reserves might help restore local fish populations but they are failing to protect fragile coral reefs from the effects of global warming.

These are the findings of Associate Professor John Bruno from the University of New Carolina, who presented at the Ecological Society of Australia's annual conference at the University of Sydney.

Professor Bruno and his former graduate student Elizabeth Selig, compared data collected from 8540 coral reefs in the Indian, Caribbean and Pacific regions over the 18 years from 1987 to 2005. They compared coral cover, sea surface temperatures and whether the reef was in a marine reserve or not.

"We found that while coral loss was reduced in marine reserves, the rate of coral decline with warmer temperatures was just the same in marine reserves as in highly fished areas," he says.

Professor Bruno believes these results should sound a warning bell for reef managers believing that marine reserves will be more resilient to climate change.

"The biggest stresses put on coral reefs are ocean warming and disease outbreaks," he says. "These stresses are regional and global in scale and local protection through marine reserves is unlikely to help these reefs resist such changes.

"Marine reserves are very important for protecting fish populations, maintaining coral reef food webs and protecting against anchor damage, but they are unlikely to reduce coral losses due to ocean warming."

But, Professor Bruno found that marine reserves that have been around for a long time - at least 15 years - were more effective in reducing coral loss then reserves that have been around for a shorter time period.

"We don't know the reason for this result, although we can speculate that it could be due to longer-term marine reserves being better managed or established," he says. "But the key thing is that we need to think long term and act now to establish marine reserves that can better protect coral reefs from unknown future threats.

"Restoring and protecting corals from climate change requires urgent implementation of regional and global strategies to deal with the root causes of climate change, including reducing carbon emissions."

Professor Bruno with colleagues from James Cook University and the Australian Institute of Marine Science also looked at data from Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, specifically comparing water temperatures with outbreaks of the devastating white syndrome disease that kills coral. They found that warmer ocean temperatures do increase the likelihood of an outbreak.

Clams speak up: revealing long term impacts to coastal waters

Clams have been silent witnesses to the changes that humans have inflicted upon their waters.
Big venus clam with siphon
A recent study shows it is possible to identify and trace wastewater inputs to coastal food webs by examining the organic matrix of a clam. This new technique allows coastal researchers and managers to document changes over longer periods of environmental change. Such as discerning natural from human-driven influences and tracing changes due to urbanization or climate.

These shells don't clam up: Innovative technique to record human impact on coastal waters
EurekAlert 2 Dec 08;
With their sedentary lifestyles and filter-feeding habits, clams have been silent witnesses to the changes that humans have inflicted upon their waters. These clams are silent no more, as Dr. Ruth H. Carmichael of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab and her colleagues have reported in their recent paper in the prestigious journal Aquatic Biology. Using stable isotope techniques, Carmichael demonstrated it is possible to identify and trace wastewater inputs to estuaries and coastal food webs by studying the organic matrix in the shell of the hard clam Mercenaria mercenaria.

This work presents a novel application of established biochemical techniques that can be applied to refine diet analyses for shellfish, trace nitrogen entry to coastal waters relative to changes in urbanization or climate, and help discern natural from human-driven influences on coastal ecosystems.

Using this new technique will allow coastal researchers and managers to document increases in waste loadings to coastal waters over longer periods of environmental change.

"This technique is exciting because it gives scientists and coastal managers a way to look into the past and trace human influences, in this case wastewater pollution, into local waters and ultimately into the organisms living there," said Dr. Carmichael. "Tools that help us define and trace specific sources of human-influence on our coastal waters are essential to inform management and future research efforts."

Dr. Carmichael's article can be downloaded at http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/ab/v4/n2/

02 December 2008

How do sea turtles find their way home?

Magnetic attraction! A study suggests that baby sea turtles may read the magnetic field of the beach of their birth and "imprint" on it.
An adult loggerhead turtle that has returned to nest on a beach in Florida.
Photo credit: William Irwin, from the UNC News website

Sea turtles are among nature's most impressive ocean travelers. No matter how long or far they journey, they seem to remember where home is. Some populations of sea turtles, for example, cross entire oceans and are absent from their home beach for more than a decade before returning to reproduce.

No place like home: New theory for how salmon, sea turtles find their birthplace
EurekAlert 1 Dec 08;
CHAPEL HILL – How marine animals find their way back to their birthplace to reproduce after migrating across thousands of miles of open ocean has mystified scientists for more than a century. But marine biologists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill think they might finally have unraveled the secret.

At the beginning of their lives, salmon and sea turtles may read the magnetic field of their home area and "imprint" on it, according to a new theory in the latest issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The Earth's magnetic field varies predictably across the globe, with every oceanic region having a slightly different magnetic signature. By noting the unique "magnetic address" of their birthplace and remembering it, animals may be able to distinguish this location from all others when they are fully grown and ready to return years later, researchers propose.

Previous studies have shown that young salmon and sea turtles can detect the Earth's magnetic field and use it to sense direction during their first migration away from their birthplace to the far-flung regions where they spend the initial years of their lives.

The new study seeks to explain the more difficult navigational task accomplished by adult animals that return to reproduce in the same area where they themselves began life, a process scientists refer to as natal homing.

"What we are proposing is that natal homing can be explained in terms of animals learning the unique magnetic signature of their home area early in life and then retaining that information," said Kenneth Lohmann, Ph.D., professor of biology in the UNC College of Arts and Sciences and the first author of the study. "We hope that the paper will inspire discussion among scientists and eventually lead to a way of testing the idea."

The theory builds on previous studies with sea turtles by Lohmann and his team. In 2001, they showed that baby turtles use magnetic information to help guide them during their first migration across the Atlantic Ocean. And in 2004 they discovered that sea turtles several years of age possess a more sophisticated "magnetic map" sense that helps them navigate to specific areas rich in food.

Sea turtles and salmon are among nature's most impressive ocean travelers but, no matter how long or far they journey, both seem to remember where home is. Some populations of sea turtles, for example, cross entire oceans and are absent from their home beach for more than a decade before returning to reproduce. Salmon hatch in rivers, then migrate hundreds of miles out into the ocean before returning to their home river several years later to spawn.

Just why marine animals migrate such vast distances to return to their own birthplace, sometimes bypassing other suitable locations along the way, is not known. Scientists speculate that natal homing evolved because individuals that returned to their home areas to reproduce left more offspring than those that tried to reproduce elsewhere.

"For animals that require highly specific environmental conditions to reproduce, assessing the suitability of an unfamiliar area can be difficult and risky," Lohmann said. "In effect, these animals seem to have hit on a strategy that if a natal site was good enough for them, then it will be good enough for their offspring."

The study notes that the Earth's magnetic field changes slightly over time and thus probably only helps animals arrive in the general region of their birthplace. Once an animal is close to the target, other senses, such as vision or smell, may be used to pinpoint specific reproductive sites. Salmon, for example, are known to use smell to locate spawning grounds once they have drawn near.

Lohmann said one problem making it difficult to test the new theory is the low survival rate of sea turtles. Only one out of about 4,000 baby sea turtles survives to adulthood and returns to its natal site to breed. A similarly small percentage of baby fish survive.

Lohmann also notes that if the theory is correct, it could lead to new ways of helping save sea turtles and salmon. "Ideally, it might be possible to steer turtles to protected areas where we would like them to nest," Lohmann said, noting the animals' endangered status. "It might also be possible to use magnetic imprinting to help re-establish salmon populations in rivers where the original population has been wiped out."

Along with Lohmann, UNC researchers Catherine Lohmann, Ph.D., lecturer of biology, and Nathan Putman, a graduate student in the department, co-authored the paper. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation.

To see associated pictures, go to: http://uncnews.unc.edu/embargoed/science-and-technology/sea-turtles.html

Lohmann's Web site: http://www.unc.edu/depts/geomag/

01 December 2008

5 Dec (Fri): Workshop for Nature Guides - Cnidarians

I will be sharing about these intriguing animals at the Easy (Not Hard) Cnidarians Workshop by the Leafmonkey Workshop this coming Friday.
Various kinds of colonial anemones (Order Zoanthidea)What are "easy cnidarians"? These "not hard" cnidarians include anemones, soft corals and other non-hard corals. Come join us if you are a nature guide or thinking of becoming one.

The focus of this workshop is on connecting ordinary people with nature. If you are a nature guide and have been struggling, trying to digest and convert biological facts to fun stories for your visitors, this workshop is for you!

This workshop aims to bring experienced and new nature guides together to brainstorm ideas. Let's learn from one another, and come up with new ways to share our passion.

Be prepared to work hard, have fun, make new friends and definitely learn new ways of looking at guiding and our wild places.

More details of the event on the Leafmonkey Workshop

Time: 7 - 9.30pm
Venue: Civil Service College, 31 North Buona Vista Road Singapore 275983 [Map]
Website: http://leafmonkeyworkshop.blogspot.com/
Contact: leafmonkey@gmail.com

Chek Jawa intertidal walk dates for Jan-Jul 09 now online

Bookings open today for walks in Jan-Mar 09. To book a tour call the Pulau Ubin Hotline (Tel: 6542-4108) or visit their Information Kiosk between 8.30 am and 5.00 pm. More details on the NParks website, Pulau Ubin page.

Chek Jawa intertidal walks, Jan-Jul 09

Available for booking from 1st Dec 08 onwards
9th Jan 09 Fri 2.00 PM
10th Jan 09 Sat 3.00 PM
11th Jan 09 Sun 4.00 PM
7th Feb 09 Sat 2.00 PM
8th Feb 09 Sun 3.00 PM
9th Feb 09 Mon 4.00 PM
9th Mar 09 Mon 3.00 PM
10th Mar 09 Tue 4.00 PM

Available for booking from 1st Mar 09 onwards
1st Apr 09 Wed 8.00 AM
2nd Apr 09 Thu 8.00 AM
3rd Apr 09 Fri 10.00 AM
15th Apr 09 Wed 8.00 AM
16th Apr 09 Thu 8.00 AM
29th Apr 09 Wed 8.00 AM
30th Apr 09 Thu 8.00 AM
1st May 09 Fri 8.00 AM
2nd May 09 Sat 10.00 AM
15th May 09 Fri 8.00 AM
28th May 09 Thu 8.00 AM
29th May 09 Fri 8.00 AM
30th May 09 Sat 8.00 AM
31st May 09 Sun 9.00 AM
13th June 09 Sat 8.00 AM
14th June 09 Sun 8.00 AM
27th June 09 Sat 8.00 AM
28th June 09 Sun 8.00 AM
29th June 09 Mon 9.00 AM

Can't make it for these dates?
Consider joining the free Chek Jawa Boardwalk tour every last Sunday of the month with the Naked Hermit Crabs

At a guided tour of the Dubai Aquarium

"Can eat or not?" is apparently not a uniquely Singaporean point of view. As this wry account of a guided tour of the 65,000-fish Dubai Atlantis Aquarium reveals. Just because a guided tour is available, doesn't necessarily mean the appropriate marine conservation values are imparted.
If wishes were fishes, I wouldn’t be here:
A resident of the aquarium at the Atlantis hotel

Randi Sokoloff / The National


Tastes like fish
The National 27 Nov 08;
Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus... tasty? The Atlantis serves up piscatorial knowledge to Roland Hughes.

Atlantis, the multi-billion-dirham hotel on the Palm Jumeirah, is flashy even by Dubai’s standards, a glittery relic to a time that never was. Nowhere is this more evident than in its aquarium, which plays host to a gaudy clash of mythologies: underwater worlds, alien invaders and faux-Greek architecture.

For a fish tank that so stunningly displays its contents – ultra-thick glass magnifies its 65,000 fish to make them more visible – the Atlantis aquarium is surprisingly coy about who its inhabitants actually are. Not a single sign can be found telling the public what species any of the fish are, leaving visitors to play an underwater guessing game. Only Sammy, the giant whale shark who has attracted almost as many column inches as Barack Obama in recent months, is recognisable amid the vast swarms of fish on display.

The hotel’s guides, however, have developed an unusual methodology for informing the public about sea life.

“This is very tasty,” says one enthusiastic guide clad like a waterborne Indiana Jones, gesturing at a fish of unrevealed breed. “We eat this where I come from. It is very popular, very meaty.” The fish gawps on, oblivious to the fact that the cowboy-hatted man on the other side of the glass is thinking “dinner”. It feels like going to the Al Ain Zoo and having the wardens extol the virtues of eating lion meat.

The next specimen is even less lucky. He is on display for everyone to touch, feel and wonder where kebab skewers would fit best. He’s a horseshoe crab, one of the ugliest of all the beasts on show at Atlantis, resembling as he does a face-hugging monster from the film Alien after a bad haircut.

“It tastes like crab,” its handler informs me without irony. She lifts the seemingly comatose crab out of the tank and turns it over to reveal a desperately flailing set of at least a dozen legs, all frantically clawing in the air, searching for ground that is not there. “The best part is under here,” she explains, lifting the crab’s thin, long tail and poking it where it certainly does not wish to be poked. “They have a lot of meat under this part.” She pops her victim back into the shallow tank, where it shuffles along to its colleagues, some of whom flop around on their backs. Apparently 10 per cent of horseshoe crabs die because they cannot right themselves after flipping over – US crab lovers have launched a campaign called Just Flip ‘Em, but it has clearly not hit Atlantis yet.

Last of all on my tour is the Queensland Grouper, one of the largest, meanest and least energetic fish I have ever encountered. Its guide, a knowledgeable and enthusiastic women, is the best yet, and tells me everything I should know and more about this less-than-noble animal. Its mouth is so powerful that it can, apparently, suck a grown man into its stomach in one gulp.

“It is very much like the cod or the hammour that we eat here,” my guide informs. “But it is more oily than the hammour, very tasty.”

No Atlantis representatives were available for comment as to whether it was company policy to discuss the taste of the aquarium’s fish.

Wildfacts updates: Red List changes

What are some of the changes to the Red List? I have made some quick updates to the wild fact sheets based on the newly launched Singapore Red List.
Here's some of the good new and bad news, and other discoveries.

Some animals are no longer on the Red List such as the File clam (Lima lima) on the left, and and the Leaf oysters ( (Isognomon ephippium) on the right.
Also off the list are the Polished nerites (Nerita polita) and the Spotted top shell (Trochus maculatus). But the Flat-spire nerite (Nerita planospira) has been added to the list.
Off the list are the Miliaris cowrie (Cypraea miliaris) on the left and the Onyx cowrie (Cypraea onyx) on the right, and many other cowries also.
Leaving only three on the list: the Arabian cowrie (Cypraea arabica), the Tiger cowrie (Cypraea tigris) and the Gold-ring cowrie (Cypraea annulus).

Meanwhile, I found some new things from the Red Data book. Like the true identity of this feisty crab.
According to the Singapore Red Data Book, this crab had been known for a long time as Eriphia smithii which is restricted to the western part of the Indian Ocean. The one in Southeast and East Asia is a new species and was recently named Eriphia ferox for its fierce temperament. We can still call it the Red-eye reef crab as we always do. Sadly, we make acquaintance with this crab as it joins the Red List.

And this little animal is NOT a mole crab. It's Gomeza bicornis, a masked burrowing crab belong to Family Corystidae.
According to the Singapore Red Data Book, these crabs are usually buried in the sand with only their antennae sticking out. The interlocking hairs on the antennae probably form a breathing tube for the buried crab!

And from the Red List I finally find out what these elegant snails are.
They belong to Family Turritellidae. Alas, so far, I've only seen shells of dead snails, usually occupied by a hermit crab.

Sadly, some animals have beed added to the list. While the Brown or Floral egg crab (Atergatis floridus) was already on the 1994 list, it has been joined by the Red egg crab (Atergatis intergerrimus).
Other crabs that have been added to the Red List include the Spotted box crab (Calappa philargius) below left and the other two box crabs on our shores Calappa lophos and Calappa hepatica.
Also sadly joining the list, are our Velcro crabs (Camposcia retusa).

Among the echinoderms, the large, marvellous Cake sea stars (Anthenea aspera) have been added to the list. They come in a wide range of patterns and colours as these two Cake sea stars show.
Other additions include the Cryptic sea star (Cryptasterina sp.) and the Key-hole sand dollar (Echinodiscus truncatus).

Also joining the list are the Ocellated sea cucumber (Stichopus ocellatus).
And the Basket star - Euryale aspersa - is listed as Data deficient, possibly Endangered, but Chay Hoon found one at Sisters Island!

And an animal that is listed as 'Presumed Nationally Extinct' is the Watering pot shell (Brechites penis).
We saw one at Changi last year! That's why I think it's important to keep going out to check up on our shores.

I've also uploaded a new page about the Red List, plus a page about the shores we have lost.

LinkWithin

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