Science and the Sea podcast

The University of Texas Marine Science Institute
Science and the Sea podcast

The goal of Science and the Sea is to convey this understanding of the sea and its myriad life forms to everyone, so that they, too, can fully appreciate this amazing resource.

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  1. 12月8日

    Solar Strandings

    Storms on the Sun can have both beautiful and annoying results. They create widespread displays of auroras—the northern and southern lights. But they can damage satellites, disrupt radio communications, and knock out power grids on the ground. They might even cause some whales to strand themselves. Solar storms produce huge outbursts of energy and charged particles. Among other things, those outbursts can change the strength and direction of the lines of magnetic force around Earth. Many animals rely on the magnetic field for navigation, including some birds and fish, sea turtles, and lobsters. The list also includes at least two species of whale: gray and sperm whales. Studies in recent decades have found correlations between the strandings of these whales and solar storms. One study, for example, looked at 400 years of sperm whale strandings in the North Sea. It found much higher stranding rates in years when the Sun was especially “stormy.” A study of 30 years of gray whale strandings found similar peaks—especially when the Sun produced a lot of radio static. Researchers speculate that the storms could essentially “blind” the whales to the magnetic field. The disoriented whales then could find themselves in shallow waters, and unable to escape. There’s no confirmation that the storms are causing these strandings. So scientists are studying the subject in greater detail—trying to understand how storms on the Sun can affect life in the oceans.

    2分
  2. 12月1日

    Big Blanket

    The female blanket octopus glides through the ocean like a winged phantom. When she’s threatened, she extends some of her arms. That spreads the webbing between the arms, like a flowing cape. The shiny cape makes the octopus look bigger—perhaps scaring away predators. The octopus is impressive even without the cape. An adult female can be six and a half feet long—the size of a basketball player. Her mate, on the other hand, is about as big as a walnut—perhaps an inch across. And a female may weigh up to 40,000 times as much as a male. That’s the biggest difference in the size of adult males and females in the animal kingdom. Blanket octopuses are found around the world. They’re in the open ocean and around coral reefs. They’re immune to the sting of a Portuguese man-o’-war, so males and young females sometimes tear off the tentacles and use them to defend themselves against predators. These octopuses are rarely seen. In fact, the first live male wasn’t discovered until 2001. In part, that’s because of its size—it’s tough to spot something that small in the open ocean. In addition, the male is almost colorless. A male grows a long arm that it fills with sperm. When he finds a mate, he rips off the arm and hands it to her—then dies. She then stores it in a pouch until she’s ready to fertilize her eggs. She may accept the arms of several suitors. After the eggs hatch, she may die as well—the final act for this phantom of the oceans.

    2分
  3. 11月24日

    Squirting Cancer

    The mangrove tunicate is a mild-looking little creature. It’s a type of sea squirt. It’s only about an inch long, and it feeds by pumping seawater through its body and filtering out the goodies. It’s found in colonies in the roots of mangrove forests around the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean, and the Atlantic coast of the United States. Yet this little critter is a powerful cancer fighter. Researchers have used a compound it produces to create a cancer treatment known as trabectedin. It’s used against several types of cancer—especially those in soft body tissue, such as muscles and fat. Cancer cells find ways to defeat many types of medication. The cells repair themselves, then continue growing and dividing, forming bigger tumors. A recent study looked at how trabectedin fights cancer. Researchers discovered that the medication “breaks” the DNA inside cancer cells. Although the cells can fix some types of breaks, these appear to be unfixable—the cancer can’t overcome the disruption. That kills the cancer cells and slows or halts their spread. Sea squirts are surprisingly close genetic relatives to people. And they’re easy to handle and study, so they’re popular lab subjects. So scientists have used sea squirts to create other medications, including cancer treatments. One produced from a different species is used to fight skin cancer, for example. So these quiet little creatures may yield even more treatment options in the decades ahead.

    2分
  4. 11月17日

    Helpful Divers

    Marine scientists can’t be everywhere at once. To really understand what’s happening below the waves, though, they need a lot of observations—from many places at many times. So they’re getting help from recreational divers. The divers can carry instruments, or just log what they see. One project is set to begin in December. Known as BlueDot, it’ll provide insights into how the Mediterranean Sea is warming up—not only at the surface, but down to more than a hundred feet. Many divers wear small computers on their wrists. The computer records location, depth, temperature, and more. Divers who undergo special training can upload those observations to a central database. Scientists then analyze the results, producing a much better picture of the changing sea. Another project has been around since 2010—the Great Goliath Grouper Count. Divers at artificial reefs off the coast of Florida log details about the goliath grouper. It’s one of the largest species of bony fish—up to eight feet long and 800 pounds. But the grouper was overfished, so its population plunged. It’s been protected since 1990, so the numbers have gone up. But the extent of the recovery is still unclear. Volunteer divers keep an eye out for the grouper during the first half of June. They report where they see the fish, the depth, the size of the fish, and more. That helps biologists determine the goliath grouper population—even if they can’t be everywhere at once.

    2分
  5. 10月27日

    Porpoise Pits

    Some strange holes pockmark the bottom of the North Sea. They can be anywhere from a few feet to hundreds of feet wide. But all of them are about four inches deep. That doesn’t match the kinds of pits produced by geological processes or ocean currents. Instead, a recent study says they were created on porpoise. Scientists have known about the pits for years. The most common explanation said they were produced by blobs of methane bubbling up through the sediments. But such pits are cone shaped. And wider methane pits are also deeper. To learn more about these odd depressions, researchers studied the floor of the North Sea off the coast of Germany. Using sophisticated sonar, they mapped the sea floor in great detail. They saw more than 40,000 of the pits. And they found that, over a six-month-period, the pits changed. Some of them got bigger, others merged, and new ones took shape. The scientists also studied ocean currents and marine life in the region. And they found that it’s part of the habitat of the harbor porpoise. The team suggested that the porpoises scour the shallow pits while they’re hunting for sand eels, which can burrow a few inches into the sediments. The porpoises are known to use their snouts to dig into the soft sand and mud. That poking around may scare the critters out of their hiding places, making them easy prey. And stirring up one sand eel might make others try to get away as well—escaping from pits dug by hungry porpoises.

    2分
  6. 10月13日

    Helping Hands

    Scientists in Australia are trying to paint the sea floor red. They’re giving a helping hand to the red handfish—one of the most endangered fish on the planet. The fish is only three or four inches long. It’s named for the fins on its sides, which are shaped like small hands. In fact, the fish uses those fins to walk along the ocean floor—it seldom swims. The hands can be pinkish brown, but they can also be bright red, along with the mouth and other body parts. Red handfish used to be common around Tasmania, a large island off the southeastern coast of Australia. Today, the population is down to about 100 adults. They’re found in two small patches that are no bigger than football fields. In part, the population has dwindled because of an explosion in the number of sea urchins. Fishers have caught a lot of rock lobsters, which eat the urchins. Without the lobsters, the urchins have gobbled the kelp that forms an important part of the handfish habitat. Scientists are trying to rebuild the handfish population. In 2021 and ’23, they hatched eggs in the lab, then released the youngsters into the wild. And in late 2023, they gathered 25 adults from the ocean and housed them in tanks. That was to protect them from a “marine heatwave” that could have killed off some of the fish. They, too, were scheduled to be returned to their ocean homes. These efforts could help the red handfish survive—adding some splashes of color off the coast of Tasmania.

    2分

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The goal of Science and the Sea is to convey this understanding of the sea and its myriad life forms to everyone, so that they, too, can fully appreciate this amazing resource.

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