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about 8 years ago
Manta Ray hot lunch Marianas Variety (Press Release) — The Manta Ray Band will be having a hot lunch this Saturday, Feb. 6, 2016, to raise funds for their trip to the Tumon Bay Music Festival on Guam next month. The lunches are $5 each and include fried chicken, lumpia (fried spring roll ...
about 8 years ago
gulfnews.com Whale shark sightings along UAE coast not alarming: experts gulfnews.com Dr. Elsayed Ahmad Mohammed, Regional Director, Middle East and North Africa, of International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), told Gulf News that the recent appearances of the fish make sense given the whale shark feeds close to the surface and often ... and more »
about 8 years ago
KHON2 Whale shark surprises tour group off Haleiwa KHON2 A group led by North Shore Shark Adventures was visited by a whale shark Friday morning, the intimate experience captured on video. They were about three miles off Haleiwa when the shark slowly emerged. “It swam right up to the boat, really slow ... and more »
about 8 years ago
Thanh Nien Daily Carcass of beached whale shark to be preserved by Vietnamese scientists Thanh Nien Daily The Nha Trang Oceanography Institute in central Vietnam has decided to preserve the carcass of a whale shark that died after it got caught in a fishing net last week. Fishermen and local authorities on Thursday handed over the dead fish to the institute. Giant whale shark to be embalmed for scientific researchVietNamNet Bridge all 2 news articles ...
about 8 years ago
National Geographic Manta Rays Get Crittercams for First Time Ever National Geographic We didn't think suction cups would work because manta ray skin is really rough like sand paper. We knew suction cups worked well on the smooth skin of whales. The cups were originally designed to move pieces of glass. But we gave it a try, and with a ... Scripps Grad Student Receives Prestigious Environmental FellowshipScripps Oceanography News all 4 news articles » ...
about 8 years ago
Video From a Whale Shark's Point of View National Geographic Their goal was to deploy Crittercams on whale sharks to get a glimpse of the sharks' underwater world and to better understand their behavior along the reef. Like most people, Wilhelm had never seen a whale shark. He worked on the Crittercams for about ... and more »
about 8 years ago
Zap2It Dominic Monaghan on meeting the Whale Shark: 'I had this sort of out of body experience' Zap2It “Wild Things With Dominic Monaghan” returned to Travel Channel with its third season on Wednesday (Jan. 27). The premiere, aptly titled, “Majestic Mozambique,” finds our host on the hunt for the elusive — and quite massive — Whale Shark. Early on in ... Monaghan knows where the 'Wild Things' areVirgin Islands Daily News all 9 news articles ...
about 8 years ago
CBC.ca Brian Keating swims alongside La Paz's mysterious whale sharks CBC.ca They're such huge animals," said Keating, who saw his first whale shark less than 15 minutes out of the bay. By the day's end, Keating had met at least a dozen whale sharks. He even managed to snap a few underwater photos from their tail end as proof.
about 8 years ago
FIS Fishing ban for giant manta ray FIS The Ministry of Production (Produce) has banned the capture of the giant manta ray (Manta birostris) in the Peruvian marine waters, in order to preserve this species on the coast of the country. The measure, established by a ministerial decree, is in ... and more »
about 8 years ago
The National Whale shark seen swimming in Abu Dhabi marina The National ABU DHABI // A whale shark between three and four metres long has been seen swimming in the marina at the InterContinental Abu Dhabi. Employees at the hotel first noticed the fish at 1.45pm on Friday and quickly took a video and photos to capture the ...
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Tuesday
Apr062010

Explosive radiation (in) rocks!

ResearchBlogging.org

Much like internal waves, I always loved the idea of explosive radiation.  Not the nasty, pernicious Chernobyl kind; I mean the rapid evolution of a whole bunch of species from a common ancestor, over a relatively short period of time.   There's a few textbook examples of explosive radiations, but none so well-worn (possibly even hackneyed) as that of the cichlid fishes in the rift lakes of eastern Africa.  The startling diversity of these little fishes in lakes Tanganyika, Malawi and Victoria has kept evolutionary biologists busy (and Africans fed) for years.  See for example, the paper by Elmer and colleagues cited below, which points out that due to the drying-out of Lake Victoria 15-18,000 years ago, either all the cichlids there evolved since then based on stock that re-colonised from Lake Tanganyika, or they sought refuge elsewhere during the dry spell and returned when the lake refilled.

Cichlids are nice and all, but if you look around, you start to see radiations all over the place.  Turtles, bivalves and salamanders in the US south-east; tetras in the Amazon, eleotrid gudgeons in Australia, and gobies on coral reefs are just a handful of aquatic examples that are still with us, but there are many others in the fossil record too (hence my title) including trilobites and ammonoids and lots more.  Presumably these are the sorts of patterns that led Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge to develop the concept of punctuated equilibrium back in the 70's: theirs was the idea that evolution proceeds not gradually, but in fits and starts, in response to dramatic environmental changes and chance events.  The way I see this idea, most of the species we observe around us are the dregs of explosive radiations past, whittled away by extinctions to just the most successful few, either gradually or equally punctuated.  Cases like the rift-lake cichlids are just ones in which relatively few have gone extinct yet (but see the effects of the introduced Nile perch!)

All of this was just a preamble for what I really wanted to post about, which was about a radiation I only heard about recently.  Late last year I was at a scientific exchange  of US and Russian fish health researchers organised by the National Fish Health Research Laboratories and sponsored by the Living Oceans Foundation, at which one of the Russian speakers  Maxim Timofeev introduced us the radiation of several groups, including amphipods, in Russia.  Amphipods are (usually) tiny shrimp-like animals that live on the bottom or among dense plants or algae; read more about them in the Väinölä paper cited below.  Well, in Siberia's Lake Baikal, the worlds oldest, largest and deepest freshwater lake, they underwent a remarkable radiation, to produce over 300 species (a third of the worlds entire fauna), including spectacular beasts such as the fish predator (!) shown here. I mean, HOW AWESOME IS THAT THING?  Freaks me almost as much as giant wetas used to do, when I was younger (if you don't dig on bugs, I recommend not clicking that link...).  Anyway, I had no idea these things existed until Maxim gave his talk.  Don't you just love discovering new critters you never knew about before?  And not just one, but hundreds.

(Check out this link about Baikal fauna too; the language is just terrific.  Try this turn of phrase on for size: "When it comes to tenderness and gustatory qualities of meat, the omul knows no rivals")

Elmer, K., Reggio, C., Wirth, T., Verheyen, E., Salzburger, W., & Meyer, A. (2009). Pleistocene desiccation in East Africa bottlenecked but did not extirpate the adaptive radiation of Lake Victoria haplochromine cichlid fishes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106 (32), 13404-13409 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0902299106

Väinölä, R., Witt, J., Grabowski, M., Bradbury, J., Jazdzewski, K., & Sket, B. (2007). Global diversity of amphipods (Amphipoda; Crustacea) in freshwater Hydrobiologia, 595 (1), 241-255 DOI: 10.1007/s10750-007-9020-6