scuba diving news

Becoming a Shark Conservationist

Shawn Heinrichs in front of a pile of shark fins.

Paul Hilton

Stop Shark Finning
26-73 million sharks are killed for their fins each year.

SOMETIMES THE BATTLE TO SAVE SHARKS GETS UGLY

Fighting for shark conservation is often frustrating and discouraging.

With more than a decade of investigative experience, I have seen just about every imaginable act of cruelty and wanton destruction. I have gone undercover in some of the most remote locations in the world: Taiwan, Indonesia, Ecuador, Peru, Costa Rica, Fiji and Africa. My objective is to combine powerful stories with images, exposing the truth.

One chilling experience occurred in 2010 in Manta, the shark-fishing hub of Ecuador. I was on assignment to document large-scale landings of shark species. With its tuna stocks severely depleted, the local fishing community had turned to targeting sharks.

When I entered the town, the tension weighed heavily. What followed next were perhaps the most intense 24 hours of my life. In the first hour, I had to fend off teenage bandits using only my monopod. Dinner ended abruptly when the restaurant owner informed my group that intoxicated fishermen were about to storm in and assault us. We slipped quietly out the back door.

Wielding bloodstained machetes, fishermen hacked the fins off the bodies of sharks piled on the beach. Twice a razor-sharp machete was pressed against my jugular, as angry fishermen cursed me and threatened to cut my throat. Each time I defused the situation with a smile, proclaiming myself a pescador de tiburones (shark fisherman). As the last sharks were processed, our fixer grabbed me and said, “The fishermen say as soon as they are done chopping the sharks, they are coming for you.” It was time go.

Our photos were the “smoking gun” images circulated globally by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Almost overnight, sharks became a priority on the CITES agenda. Finally, at the 2013 CITES meeting, historic protections for many species of sharks (and rays) were achieved.

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“Doc Deep” Prepares to Break the World Record for Deepest Scuba Dive

Video of Dr. Guy Garman Prepares For World Record Deep Scuba Dive

The record for the world’s deepest scuba dive could be broken this weekend in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

On August 15th, 2015, Dr. Guy Garman — also known as “Doc Deep” — will attempt to set the new world record for deepest scuba dive, and plunge to a depth of 1,200 feet off the coast of St. Croix.

According to video details, Dr. Garman has nearly 600 dives and has been training for the last 2 years to accomplish the goal. His deepest dive-to-date was to 810 feet on April 18, 2015. His attempt this coming weekend will be supported by the Scuba Tec dive team, a division of St. Croix Ultimate Bluewater Adventures in St. Croix.

The current world record was set on September 18, 2014, when Ahmed Gabr successfully dove to 1,090 feet off the coast of Egypt in the Red Sea.

Video credit by MJSVisionsVI

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Robotic Dive Buddy

caddy-fp7.eu

CADDY project

Can submersible drone technology help make solo diving a safer activity? Researchers at Divers Alert Network Europe are testing an underwater drone and floating satellite designed to understand the body language of a scuba diver in distress.

The Cognitive Autonomous Diving Buddy, or CADDY, is actually two drones — one on the surface, one near the diver — which work in tandem to monitor and respond to any unsafe conditions experienced during a dive. The underwater drone is capable of assessing a diver’s behavior for any signs of distress, and the surface drone maintains a communication link to a command center or surface team. Together, the two drones ensure that a diver is in constant communication with outside sources, even if the diver is disabled or harmed.

www.caddy-fp7.eu

The CADDY project replaces a human buddy diver with an autonomous underwater vehicle and adds a new autonomous surface vehicle to improve monitoring, assistance, and safety of the diver’s mission.

“When you consider that half of diving accidents involve unaccompanied scuba divers, CADDY will surely revolutionize the underwater experience,” says Professor Salih Murat Engi, the project’s principal coordinator.

In case of emergency, the drones are equipped with lights, cameras and navigation systems, and are able to guide a diver back to safety.

The project is a collaborative effort between DAN Europe, a nonprofit medical and research organization, and the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme FP7, which focuses on cognitive systems and robotics research.

“Diver safety is an essential component of the CADDY project and whenever diver safety is involved, DAN steps in,” Engi says. “We’re here to represent the diving community and assist in building future technologies that will take diving to the next level.”

For more information on this project, visit www.caddy-fp7.eu

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2015 International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame Inductees & Early Pioneers

The International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame is dedicated to the pioneers of diving, celebrating their contributions in the field of dive travel, entertainment, art, equipment design and development, education, exploration and adventure.

If you…

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July Sea Hero: Giacomo Palavicini

Shawn Jackson

Giacomo Palavicini

OCCUPATION: Director, Roatan Marine Park
FOUNDED: The Shark Legacy Project, to protect sharks on Roatan
VALUE OF A LIVE SHARK: $47,000 annually, as demonstrated by SLP

Now the director of the Roatan Marine Park, Giacomo Palavicini in 2010 was instrumental in demonstrating the value of shark tourism in Honduras, and in persuading its government to declare a shark-fishing moratorium. For that he is our July 2014 Sea Hero.

How did you first get involved with Roatan Marine Park?

In 2009, I started working side by side with the Roatan Marine Park (RMP) when I started the Shark Legacy Project (SLP) with the idea to give protection to sharks on Roatan due to their importance and value as a tourism attraction for diving.

This alliance helped to get the moratorium for shark fishing in Honduras in 2010.

In 2012 I was offered to be the executive director of the RMP to achieve a stronger stand towards conservation, awareness and enforcement.

What is the biggest challenge you face at the marine park?

Our biggest challenge is the fact that there is a huge gap between government and communities. And you can also see it with NGOs. We have worked hard to close that gap and help the communities to feel empowered and understand that its in their best interest in taking care of their resources.

Tell us a little bit about your work in shark conservation, and in persuading Honduras to enact protections. What’s been your most rewarding moment on that project?

Our conservation effort here with the SLP was something I didn’t expect to happen so fast. We started working with the dive shark operators Waihuka Adventure Divers and with them I could get a rough estimate of the value of each shark per year as a tourism attraction for diving — this value is around US $47,000.

With the RMP we went in November 2009 to the fishing authorities and other government agencies just after the political turn over in 2009 and we presented proof that sharks were being fished in the Bay Islands, and also presented the values we obtained from the shark diving operators. This information caught their attention so I added the fact that if they made an effort to protect these animals they would not only insure a steady good income from tourism but also the protections would give the government a positive image that would help reduce the negatives they had.

Sadly enough, a week after we met in Tegucigalpa, the government confiscated a big cargo of sharks — mostly hammerheads, all juveniles — and this actually made them make the decision to close the fisheries in February of 2010 and declare a sanctuary for sharks in June of 2011.

How can divers and Scuba Diving’s readers help further your work?

We all have the power to say no. We need to do research when we go for vacation and the when we go to a restaurant, dive operation or even a destination that has poor or not environmentally responsible practices — we should say no and find some other place. Businesses only see money, sadly, so when their income is being affected by their bad practices, they will shift if they want to stay in business.

So if for example you go to a restaurant and you realize they serve shark, turtle or other endangered species, not only leave the place but make sure that you tell your friends.

You can be proactive with the many NGOs that work towards preserving our natural heritage, and be a responsible diver and human being towards how we care for our natural surroundings.

What’s next for you and the Roatan Marine Park?

The RMP is working hard to become a stronger NGO, to be sustainable and have the capability to impact in a positive way more people, helping creating alternatives for local fishers and community members. We need to reduce the fishing pressure on our reefs so they can recover and our fishermen can continue fishing as their fathers did, but in a more responsible and sustainable way.

We also want to expand our patrols all around the island of Roatan, not only for enforcement but also to help in prevention or rescue of marine incidents of boats or other cases.

Is there anything else you would like readers to know about?

The world is changing, and also our oceans, so we have the responsibility as divers and lovers of the ocean to care for it. You can do it on a daily basis, teaching our kids not to touch marine animals, enjoying with our eyes and heart, and that everything we do at home does have an effect on our oceans so be responsible on how we use our resources. And if you come to any of our marine protected areas, support all of us as good, responsible divers — you can do that by understanding the rules and regulations of the park and sharing your passion with others.

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