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What does your sandwich cost, rare species in the deep, dong worms, and more! Monday Morning Salvage: June 26, 2017

Posted on June 26, 2017June 26, 2017 By Andrew Thaler
Weekly Salvage

Flotsam (what we’re obsessed with right now)

  • NPR did a great breakdown on the full carbon cost of one sandwich.
  • Public Lab was born from the desperate need for unconflicted data during the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Since then, they’ve grown into a global movement for citizen science. They just relaunched their world-changing balloon mapping kit on Kickstarter. Get yours now!

Jetsam (what we’re enjoying from around the web)

  • People Don’t Care if Their Fish Is Sustainable and this is a pretty gigantic problem for the sustainable seafood movement.
  • Scientists say the rapid sinking of Louisiana’s coast already counts as a ‘worst case scenario’.
  • oceanbites takes on nitrogen in the open ocean: Nitrogen Deposition on the Open Ocean.
  • The EU and UK are gearing up for an epic fight over fish stocks: The real Brexit battle will be at sea over claim to fish stocks.
  • In a Bering Sea battle of killer whales vs. fishermen, the whales are winning. Pro-Tip: I’ve read Moby Dick a *few* times. The whale always wins.
  • Treasure trove of deep-sea specimens includes dongs of the deep. Control yourselves.
via Newsweek.
  • Fish that fart together stay together. Well done, Hakai, well done.
  • Rick MacPherson from Deep Sea News, with one of the most important pieces you’ll read all week: Pride, Actually.
  • Environmental NGOs: Shipping Needs to ‘Shape Up or Ship Out’ on Ship Emissions.
  • Antarctica Is Melting, and Giant Ice Cracks Are Just the Start.
  • National Geographic has an amazing piece on life under the ice: Deepest Dive Ever Under Antarctica Reveals a Shockingly Vibrant World.
Photograph by Laurent Ballesta.
  • What can MPAs do for Sharks? A lot, if they’re large, well-designed, and enforced.
  • Ship Automation Without Consultation – The Problem With Robot Ships.
  • It’s so cute! This Tiny Underwater Robot Will Dive into the Deadly Fukushima Nuclear Plant.

  • An absolutely stunning look at Russia’s Mammoth Pirates.

Lagan (what we’re reading from the peer-reviewed literature)

  • Turner and friends (2017) Stakeholder perspectives on the importance of rare-species research for deep-sea environmental management. DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr.2017.05.004.
  • McCauley and friends (2017) Widely used marine seismic survey air gun operations negatively impact zooplankton. DOI: 10.1038/s41559-017-0195.
  • Madoui and friends (2017) New insights into global biogeography, population structure and natural selection from the genome of the epipelagic copepod Oithona. DOI: 10.1111/mec.14214.
  • Schulte and friends (2015) Climate Change and the Evolution and Fate of the Tangier Islands of Chesapeake Bay, USA. DOI: 10.1038/srep17890.
  • Roach and friends (2017) Microbial bioenergetics of coral-algal interactions. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3423.

Driftwood (what we’re reading on dead trees)

  • Sea Power: The History and Geopolitics of the World’s Oceans by James Stavridis.

Feel free to share your own Foghorns, Flotsam, Jetsam, Lagan, Driftwood, and Derelicts in the comments below. And, of as always, if you enjoy Southern Fried Science, consider contributing to my Patreon campaign to help us keep the servers humming.

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Related

Tags: Antarctica automation Bering Sea biogeography brexit carbon climate change deep sea fart ice Louisiana mammoth tusks MPAs nitrogen public lab Rick MacPherson robots sandwich seismic surveys sharks sustainable Tangier

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