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Author: Andrew Thaler

Marine science and conservation. Deep-sea ecology. Population genetics. Underwater robots. Open-source instrumentation. The deep sea is Earth's last great wilderness.

Watch Blue Pints Episode 6: Science Online Oceans and Hacking the Ocean

Posted on April 30, 2013October 27, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Uncategorized

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QByplUnSNLY

The Incredible Shrinking Cups: Farewell from the World’s Deepest Pig

Posted on April 29, 2013April 4, 2013 By Andrew Thaler 2 Comments on The Incredible Shrinking Cups: Farewell from the World’s Deepest Pig
Science

It’s the final cup in our series. Posting these images has been a fun way to reminisce about our adventures in the Cayman Abyss and hopefully give you a small glimpse into the more whimsical side of deep-sea research. To finish of the series, here is my favorite cup: That’ll do, pig, that’ll do.  

The Incredible Shrinking Cups: on the absence of giant tube worms

Posted on April 26, 2013April 5, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Science

It’s true! There are no giant tube worms (Riftia pachyptila) at the Mid-Cayman Spreading Center (but there are smaller tube worms). What all this about?

The Incredible Shrinking Cup: Majestic Vents

Posted on April 24, 2013April 4, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Science

We visited some truly majestic hydrothermal vents. What’s all this about, anyway?

The Incredible Shrinking Cups: Geology is pretty cool, too

Posted on April 22, 2013April 4, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Science

There’s some seriously cool geology down at the world’s deepest known hydrothermal vents. What’s this all about?

The Incredible Shrinking Cups: Into the Cayman Abyss

Posted on April 18, 2013April 4, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Science

We’re going into the Cayman Abyss! What’s this all about?

Five more marine organisms that put their superhero counterparts to shame

Posted on April 17, 2013January 27, 2015 By Andrew Thaler
Popular Culture, Science

Evolution is the most creative force on the planet. Everywhere we look, we find species with novel and phenomenal adaptations that put their comic book brethren to shame. In no ecosystem is this more apparent than in the vast and unfathomable ocean. Marine species, especially those in the deep sea, have evolved to survive in a environment that is completely alien to us. Several months ago, I unveiled “Five organisms with real super powers that rival their comic book counterparts“, but that was just the beginning. Without further adieu, I give you 5 more marine organisms that put their superhero counterparts to shame (and one bonus critter).

The blind shrimp with super senses

Rimicaris exoculata – http://eol.org/data_objects/13231836

In the deep sea, eyes are not among the most useful sense organs. While many deep-sea species have extremely reduced eyes, some have abandoned these organs entirely. Rimicaris exoculata is a shrimp endemic to deep-sea hydrothermal vents in the mid-Atlantic that is completely eyeless. Its carapace is smooth, without even a hint of reduced, vestigial eyes. This, unfortunately, is a problem because Rimicaris exoculata is a farmer. The blind shrimp grows bacteria in its gill chamber, bacteria that can convert the chemical-rich hydrothermal vent fluid into food for the shrimp.

For lack of a more descriptive adjective, hydrothermal vents are hot. Some can exceed 400°C. Rimicaris exoculata needs to get close to this hot vent fluid to feed its crop of bacteria, but not so close as to become a hydrothermal hors d’oeuvre. And so, the blind shrimp evolved a completely new light-sensitive organ mounted on the top of its carapace–the rhodopsin-rich dorsal eyespot.

The dorsal eyespot of Rimicaris exoculata doesn’t “see” in the normal sense, there is still almost no light in the deep sea. Rather, this shrimp is adapted to detect the black body radiation emitted by the hydrothermal vent. For Rimicaris exoculata, the deep sea glows with the light of super-heated hydrothermal fluid, allowing it to both find food for its bacterial crop and avoid getting cooked itself.

It should be no surprise that Rimicaris exoculata is undoubtedly the favorite deep sea organism of another blind champion with super senses–Daredevil.

Read More “Five more marine organisms that put their superhero counterparts to shame” »

The Incredible Shrinking Cups: Just checking out some vents.

Posted on April 16, 2013April 4, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
Science

Isis checking out the Beebe Vent Field. Or Piccard, if you drive on the right side of the road. Whats this all about?

Sea Leveler Update: one week of #sealevelrise

Posted on April 13, 2013October 28, 2013 By Andrew Thaler

Now that most of the bugs are out of the system, here is what a one week readout looks like on the Sea Leveler. A few observations: The Sea Leveler is driven by twitter’s own search API, which is not perfect. The rapid dramatic drops are due to twitter updating its search parameters to exclude … Read More “Sea Leveler Update: one week of #sealevelrise” »

Arduino Project Log: Building the Sea Leveler Part 1 – Hardware

Posted on April 13, 2013April 13, 2013 By Andrew Thaler
The Open CTD Project

headshot-thalerSMALL

The Sea Leveler.
The Sea Leveler.

Two weeks ago, I announced my latest Hacking the Ocean project, an open-source, Arduino-powered water level meter that monitors the frequency of tweets containing the hashtag #sealevelrise. Since launch, the Sea Leveler has had some bugs and received some good press.  Now that I’ve had some time to monitor its performance and work the bugs out of its code, it is finally time for the promised “how to build the Sea Leveler” post.

This project was much more involved than my Arduino build and significantly more rewarding. The Sea Leveler was a challenge on multiple fronts, from learning to make the Arduino talk to twitter to physically modifying the water level meter. As I noted in my first project log, I have very little programming experience, and the major goal of this build was to level up my C++ skills. I’m very happy with the results, both technical and aesthetic.

For simplicity, I’m going to break this into two posts, one for hardware and one for software.

Read More “Arduino Project Log: Building the Sea Leveler Part 1 – Hardware” »

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