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2008, Oceanography 21(3):8–11, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2008.42
Author | Stories and First Paragraphs | Full Article | Citation
Cheryl Lyn Dybas is a marine scientist and policy analyst by training. She also writes on a freelance basis about the seas for The Washington Post, BioScience, National Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation, and many other publications.
Mosquitoes, once unheard of on the 8,000-foot-high rim of Tanzania's Ngorongoro Crater, have landed.
"With them comes pestilence," said Teete, a member of a Maasai tribe that lives in the round, mud-hut-lined village of Seneto. "The mosquitoes make us sick with malaria."
A full moon rises over Hawaii's Mo'omomi Bay. Not a good time to go fishing, at least if you are out to catch aholehole (Hawaiian flagtail, Kuhlia sandvicensis), said Kelson Poepoe, conservation biologist and founder of Hui Malama o Mo'omomi (Hawaiian for "group to protect Mo'omomi Bay").
At an underwater summit higher than the world's tallest building, brittle stars have executed a take-over that could show Wall Street a thing or two.
On Macquarie Ridge off New Zealand, tens of millions of brittle stars live tip-to-tip, completely obscuring the undersea mountain they call home. Corals and sponges usually dominate seamount peaks, filtering food that arrives with passing currents. But, not on this seamount. Here, brittle stars and more brittle stars cover the 100-square-kilometer seamount. The seamount's base is 850 meters deep, but its top is relatively shallow, 90 meters beneath the ocean's surface.
Dybas, C.L. 2008. Ripple marks—The story behind the story. Oceanography 21(3):8–11, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2008.42.