ANIMALS: Record oyster found

A monster 3lb oyster was found in the bottom of a “box of mixed fish” that was purchased by a fishmonger in Plymouth, England.  The oyster was subsequently “donated to the Mevagissey Sealife Aquarium.”

The massive bivalve—shown below—was affectionately named “Shelly.”

Giant Oyster

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SHARKS: Mystery solved regarding world’s second-largest shark

IMAGE shows a swimmer with a basking shark—a harmless plankton feeder—off the Cornish coast.

The basking shark (Cetorhinus maximus) is the second largest fish in the world, and the whale shark (Rhincodon typus), another harmless giant, is ranked as the world’s largest fish. These large sharks are slow-moving filter feeders, and both species are threatened by overfishing, since “they have a lengthy maturation time, slow growth rate and a long gestation period.”

Basking sharks can “attain lengths of at least 10 meters, but the average size is 7-9 meters and may live up to 50 years, [and] it is a highly migratory species.” Until now, data regarding the seasonal movements of basking sharks were incomplete. From the Washington Post:

Basking sharks were easy to spot in summer and fall. Many cruised near the surface off New England, filtering water through an impossibly wide mouth.

But then, in winter, the sharks vanished from these waters, and scientists couldn’t find them anywhere else. One guess was that they sank to the bottom and hibernated, waiting out a food shortage. But nobody knew for sure: The basking shark became a reminder of the unsolved mysteries of the oceans.

Last week, however, a group of researchers from Massachusetts and Maine said they had found the answer.

.       .       .

Soon, the tags began popping up in places that nobody expected a basking shark to be: near the Bahamas, off Puerto Rico, even the mouth of the Amazon River in Brazil. The sharks had remained undetected because they stayed so deep, between 650 and 3,300 feet, that they were not caught in fishing gear.

There is more plankton in warmer waters, scientists said — but it would be abundant enough off Florida, so there would be no reason to visit Brazil. Gregory B. Skomal of the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries said there could be another reason drawing the sharks south. Female sharks could be giving birth and raising young in tropical waters.

“We’ve never seen pregnant females, and we’ve never seen a newborn basking shark,” he said — and that could be because they haven’t been looking in the right place. Skomal said the data could be used to add protections for the sharks in the newly discovered habitat.

Remember, the third week of July is “Shark Week” on The Conservation Report


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VIDEOS illustrate the beauty and extremes of polar environments

Here’s a neat time-lapse video showing the sun during a winter in the North Pole—it never falls beneath the horizon. Of course, in the winter darkness rules the landscape.

This time-lapse video illustrates the extreme of both the summer and winter skylines in the Antarctic.

This time-lapse video from the South Pole shows the aurora australis or the southern lights.


Chile


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

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HYBRID TECHNOLOGY: Driving 1,000 miles on a single tank of gas

Ford Fusion HybridThe Ford Fusion at right has travelled over 1,000 miles on a single tank of gas. More from the Times Online:

The record attempt took place last month, and it may well have been the slowest driving race in history. According to Gerdes, if more people followed in his tyre tracks, it could help to save the world. You see, he and his team of six (including one Nascar racing driver) did the whole journey of almost 1,500 miles — the equivalent of travelling from Land’s End to John o’ Groats and more than halfway back again — on a single tank of petrol, at a cost of just $36.75 (about £24).

What’s more, the car they drove was no ultra-light eco-buggy, but a Ford Fusion — a mid-sized, four-seat family saloon with a 2.5-litre engine, 156bhp, continual variable transmission and all the mod cons. The Fusion, currently on sale only in North America, includes hybrid petrol-electric technology similar to that of the Toyota Prius, but its fuel consumption figure of 49mpg for city driving isn’t particularly impressive — at least not by European standards.

More about the new Ford Fusion Hybrid:

Hat tip to Kevin.

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RECOMMENDED BLOG: Awkward Family Photos.com

In case you need to LOLROTF, reminisce, or just gawk, here is a blog about awkward or clumsy family photos. The pictures are amusing, fascinating, and some are just weird.

My favorite (below) is America, Frak Yeah!, because nothing says American patriotism like a family from Texas adorned with the American flag.

Bush Family

Another LOL favorite blog of mine is Яolcats, which is the Russian version of LOLcats.

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