MARINE
LIFE NEWS
Reports
of marine wildlife from all around the British Isles, with pollution incidents
and conservation initiatives as they affect the flora and fauna of the
NE Atlantic Ocean
1 February
2010
On
going back up Marazion Beach, south Cornwall,
as the tide turned (on the lowest tide of the year)
my partner and I looked around some uppershore pools and discovered five
Giant
Gobies, Gobius cobitus.
in three small pools. They averaged about 18 cm in length.
Giant Goby
Photograph
by David Fenwick Snr
This
large goby is a very rare find on the south-west shores of Britain and
the Channel Islands. Their rarity in Britain is because they are on the
northern edge of their natural distribution based on water temperature
for breeding. Also, their bathymetric
zone
is probably in shallow water, and not normally intensively fished, and
not encountered by rockpoolers except on the
low spring tides.
The
Giant
Goby is a protected species under the Wildlife
and Countryside Act Schedule 5.
Full
Report & Photographs (Link)
Aphotofauna
BMLSS
Giant Goby Reports
BMLSS
Gobies
25
January 2010
A
ten metre long Sperm Whale, Physeter
macrocephalus,
was discovered after becoming stranded on rocks at Beadnell
Bay on the Northumberland
Coast, north-east England. The whale had been dead for several days.
The Sperm
Whale is the largest species of toothed whale,
reaching 18 metres (59 ft) and weighing 57 tonnes (male). This whale is
capable of diving to a depth of more than 1000 metres and can remain submerged
for over an hour. A fatty substance in the blood prevents dangerous nitrogen
bubbles forming in their blood on deep dives, so they are able to descend
to great depths, and return to the surface without decompression.
Whales
& Dolphins in British Seas
The
last BMLSS recorded stranding of a deep water
Sperm
Whale on the English North Sea coast occurred
when two were stranded in separate incidents
on North Sea coasts in February 2006.
Previous
Scottish Stranding 2009
BMLSS
Cetaceans
January
2010
Ray's
Bream,
Brama
brama, continue to be washed up on the North Sea coasts of Northumberland
and on eastern Scottish shores.
Ray's
Bream
Photograph
by Paul Castle,
Highland
Council
At
least fifty Ray's Bream
were discovered by the beach cleaning staff between Roker
and Seaburn, at Sunderland,
Wearside, north-east England.
BMLSS
Ray's Bream
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FORUM
NEWS
Marine Wildlife
of the North-east Atlantic Ocean Mailing Groups
Marine
Wildlife of the North-east Atlantic Ocean
Yahoo
Group
New
Group: http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/Glaucus
With
the closure of Smart Groups at the end of November
2006
most of the 7500+ messages have been
filed at:
Marine
Wildlife of the North-east Atlantic Ocean Jiglu
http://www.Jiglu.com/spaces/glaucus/
However,
in November 2009,
all these messages were deleted
without warning. Sorry.
This was out of my control.
Images
can be uploaded to flickr.
http://www.flickr.com/groups/glaucus/
Wet
Thumb (Marine Aquariology) Forum Link
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All
reports by Andy Horton unless the credits are given
to
other observers or reporters.
Cornish
Marine Wildlife (Ray Dennis Records) 2008
|