While conducting magnetic experiments in 2006, the company SharkDefense Technologies discovered how certain metal alloys would keep sharks away by affecting the shark’s electric sense.
After extensive testing on several different shark species, SharkDefense Technologies and HEFA Rare Earth Canada, Co. Ltd are now finally ready to put their product on the market: metal alloy thingamajigs that keep sharks away from fishing gear by generating a small voltage as soon as the product is placed in saltwater.
Unlike popular food fishes like tuna and swordfish, sharks are equipped with an electric sense organ and will therefore stay clear of this type of voltage generating alloys. By placing a small piece of metal alloy near the bait at each hook, you cause sharks to shun your fishing equipment like the plague. This is a win-win situation for fishermen and sharks, since the fishermen will able to focus on more expensive target species and the sharks will avoid getting entangled in fishing gear and die.
Continuously submerged in seawater, the metal alloys continue to emit electricity for up to 48 hours.
A Taiwan research team has successfully extracted a brain-boosting nutrient from squid skin, according to an announcement made by the Council of Agriculture’s Fisheries Research Institute.
The nutrient in question is phospholipid docosahexaenoic acid, commonly known as PL-DHA, a substance known to improve a persons memory and enhance learning ability.
According to the institute official, PL-DHA is superior to TG-DHA another form of docosahexaenoic acid commonly found in deep-sea fish oil — when it comes to inhibiting degradation of the intellect since PL-DHA can cross the blood brain barrier and be absorbed directly by the brain.
Researchers at the institute have also showed that PL-DHA is effective in reviving neural cells and enhancing the content of three oxidation-resistant enzymes — GSH, CAT and SOD. In addition to this, the fatty acid will moderate the oxidative damage to neural cells that can be induced by free radicals in the body, which means that it will decrease the pace of plaque and tangle accumulation in brain cells.
Quoting medical reports, the institute official stressed that Alzheimer’s and other forms of senile dementia is known to be associated with the accumulation of plaque and tangles in the brain.
Thanks to the efforts of local resident Pak Dodent, coral destroyed around Sumatra by the 2004 tsunami is now making a remarkably recovery.
Dodent lives on the island of Pulau Wey off the north coast of Sumatra and the narrow channel between his small village Ibioh and a nearby island was particularly devastated by the enormous forces unleashed by the tsunami.
“It was like a washing machine out there and all of the coral was broken,” Dodent explained to a reporter from the Telegraph. Afterwards I thought to myself what can I do to make the coral grow again and I started to experiment.“
After some experimentation, Dodent decided to aid the corals by dropping concrete mounds over the sandy bottom, since reef building corals need a suitable surface to attach them selves to. He creates the concrete mounds by pouring concrete into a bucket, and he also embeds a plastic bottle or tube into the concrete so that a part of the plastic sticks up.
When the concrete is set, the devoted reef gardener drops his mounds by boat in the shallow waters near the beach and leaves them there for a month to allow any potentially harmful chemicals present in the concrete to dissipate. After that, he carefully begins to transplant corals to the mounds by harvesting small patches of corals from the healthy reef on the far side of the island. “I am careful to only take a little from here and there so that I don’t affect the healthy eco system”, says Dodent.
Dodent uses cable ties to attach the transplants to the plastic bottles and tubes to prevent the corals from being dislocated by water movements.
Almost four years after the tsunami, Dodent’s coral garden is now covered with coral and has attracted an abundance of fishes and other animals. The coral is thriving and there is virtually impossible to the underlying concrete mounds. The garden currently comprises over 200 square metres and is home to over 25 different species of coral.
To prevent algae from overgrowing the new coral and killing it, Dodent regularly cleans infested coral patches with a toothbrush, but fishes and other coral eating organisms will soon alleviate him of this task. “I monitor and clean it for one year, after that it is up to the fishes,” he says.
Dodent has now recently received a small grant from Fauna and Flora International to develop his project.