NAUUP – AQUAICBAS
Aquatic Activities UPArchive for April 4, 2008
Up and underwater: UW Rugby Competition Starts in Switzerland

Switzerland has started an underwater rugby competition with dozens of teams signed up for the new sport.
Underwater rugby in Switzerland /Europics
The Swiss Underwater Sports Union says it’s been flooded with requests from people wanting to learn the game.
It is now organising introduction days for newcomers. Underwater rugby is a six-a-side game for both men and women who are equipped with flippers, a snorkel and goggles.
The ball is filled with salt water and weighs 13lbs, and the aim of each team is to place it in the basket of the opposing team on the ground of the swimming pool. Players have to come to the surface to breathe.
Jan Maisenbacher of the Swiss Underwater Sports Union says: “Underwater rugby is the only three-dimensional sport.”
The game was first developed in Germany to help train divers and has become the new hit sport on the continent this year.
YouTube – Underwater Rugby
The Fierce Humboldt Squid: Video By QUEST
environment and nature in Northern California.
A mysterious sea creature up to 7 feet long, with 10 arms, a sharp beak and a ravenous appetite, has invaded ocean waters off Northern California. Packs of fierce Humboldt Squid attack nearly everything they see, from fish to scuba divers. Marine biologists are working to discover why they’ve headed north from their traditional homes off South America.
QUEST is a production of KQED. Major funding is provided by the National Science Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Foundation, and The Amgen Foundation. Additional support is provided by the William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation, Ann S. Bowers – The Robert Noyce Trust, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, and the Vadasz Family Foundation.
New Dry Suit From Poseidon

Maintaining body temperature is important when diving. Even relatively warm water may cause mild hypothermia during extended dives. Research performed by the US Navy clearly shows that a reduction of the body temperature by 0.5-1.0 0C causes a reduction of the mental capacity by 10-20% !
The obvious solution is isolation from the surrounding water by using a dry suit and various layers of under garments depending on temperature conditions. Today’s dry suits are often bulky and heavy compared to wet suits and require special training why divers in warm water often hesitate to use them.
The new Flexisuit from Poseidon combines the flexibility, weight and manoeuvrability of a wet suit with the insulation of the dry suit.
It is manufactured using a specially developed neoprene combining high strength, stretch and temperature insulation with comfort.
The result is a suit with a slim design thus reducing the air movement, can take one or more layers of undergarments and provide the flexibility of a wet suit… Flexisuit Features On the back, forearms and over the knees the material is reinforced with Kevlar to withstand wear and tear.
The suit has a front zip to enable the diver to open and close without assistance.
The sealing in neck and wrists are made of a special soft, stretchy neoprene. Flexisuit does not come with heavy rubber boots common on ordinary dry suits.
Instead the suit is equipped with Kevlar reinforced socks with a thin and strong sole. This provides for an unmatched mobility when swimming and fits all fins.
Sizing Flexisuit is available in sizes from XS to XXXL and can also be specially adjusted to nearly all body forms or sizes by special order.
We can also change sealing to latex if requested. A range of accessories are available to fit the Flexisuit such as a rock boot, a hood and several types of gloves, all as innovative as the suit itself.
Diver Testimonials ”I have never before used a dry suit being this comfortable” says Stian Olsvik, a rescue diver from the Fire Department in Ålesund, Norway. “The manoeuvrability over as well as under the surface match any wetsuit and the suit feels warmer compared to almost all dry suits I have ever used”.
About Poseidon Poseidon was founded by divers, for divers. When Ingvar Elfström launched the worlds first single hose regulator back in 1958 it became an instant sensation. Since then its engineers have continuously strived to make the best of the best. Used by many military and commercial divers all over the world, Poseidon equipment has set standards.
To learn more visit: Poseidon Source: Poseidon Diving Systems
WHAT IS NITROGEN NARCOSIS AND WHY IS IT DANGEROUS?
| By: Barry Coleman 2007-04-17 |
| Nitrogen narcosis is a dangerous condition that can affect scuba divers, especially when diving deeper than 30 meters or a nitrogen partial pressure of 3.2 bar. At depths of 90 metres or nitrogen partial pressure of 8 bar nitrogen narcosis leads to hallucinations and unconsciousness.
The exact mechanisms behind nitrogen narcosis are still to be explored, but it has to do with nitrogen gas affecting the nerve transmissions in the body during high pressure. The effects of nitrogen narcosis are similar to the effects of anesthetic gas or alcohol. It can be hard for the effected diver to realize that he or she is developing nitrogen narcosis, since the level of intoxication will increase gradually. The most dangerous aspects of narcosis are the loss of decision-making ability, loss of focus and impaired judgment and coordination. When more serious the diver may start to feel invulnerable, disregarding normal safe diving practices, Although narcosis is most commonly reported below 30 meters, there is no reliable method to predict the severity of the effect on an individual diver. Its effects depend on many factors, with variations between individuals. Excellent cardiovascular health is no protection and poor health is not necessarily a predictor. Cold, stress, heavy work, fatigue, and carbon dioxide retention all increase the risk and severity of nitrogen narcosis. Other effects include vertigo, tingling and numbness of the lips, mouth and fingers, and extreme exhaustion. Affected divers may panic, sometimes remaining on the bottom, too exhausted to ascend. The syndrome may also cause exhilaration, giddiness, extreme anxiety, depression, or paranoia. Though some divers seem to be able to cope with the symptoms and even claim to be less susceptible than others, tests have shown that all divers are affected by nitrogen narcosis. Even though it is possible that some divers can cope better than others because of acclimation, training, or special breathing techniques, the effects remain, that is why Nitrogen narcosis is dangerous. |
Book: "The Art of Underwater Photography" by Andrea Ferrari and Antonella Ferrari (Digital &Film)
The Art of Underwater Photography

Eight highly readable, innovative chapters about motivation, equipment, technique, mindframe, philosophy, artistic and media influences, camera models and brands, underwater housings, strobes, macrophotography, wide-angle images, portraits, topside dive interval photography and many, many other subjects.
Illustrated with a spectacular selection of some of the Ferrari’s best shots of a lifetime plus exceptional image contributions by some of the world’s best professional and gifted amateur (this is a first!) underwater photographers – including Doug Perrine, Charles Hood, John Scarlett, Alex Mustard, Eric Cheng, Tony Wu, Stephen Wong, Takako Uno, Alberto Luca Recchi and many, many others.
‘A Divers Guide to the Art of Underwater Photography’ strives to be completely different from other guides currently on the market, and features scores of spectacular images from some of the world’s most influential professionals and also many extraordinarily gifted amateurs.
Each photograph is extensively captioned illustrating technique, equipment used, location, creative choices and final results.
X-Ray Magazine # 22 for Download: Wrecks, Sharks, Sea Turtles and Nudibrachs on the Spotlight!
- We visit dive destinations at Leje de Santos in Brazil and the picturesque village of Calella on the wild coast of Spain.
- Arnold Weisz investigates effects of the treasure trade. Learn how carbon emissions is changing the acidity of the seas and the effects on sealife.
- South African underwater photographer, Fiona Ayerst, reports on the tragic loss of eight Tiger sharks, three of them poached in protected waters.
- Andrey Bizyukin translates an interview with explorer Anatoly Sagalevich who touched bottom at the North Pole.
- Cedric Verdier discusses diver safety and rescue in very remote areas.
- Get a report on Moscow’s Golden Dolphin dive show, an inside perspective of IAHD’s education for disable divers,
- Shawna Meyer’s close encounter with Humboldt squid, and tips from Kurt Amsler on shooting wrecks.
- We interview fine art and commercial photographer, Howard Schatz, about his latest book, H2O.
A Fishy Sixth Sense/ O "Sexto Sentido dos Peixes"
The environments in which the many fish species have evolved are very diverse, ranging from the shoreline to the deep-sea depths, from fresh-water streams to tropical lakes. Because of the great variety of these habitats, the senses of these different species have consequently evolved quite ifferently, exhibiting a great diversity, with many senses not yet understood or even identified. There are thus still many mysteries regarding the behaviour of aquatic creatures.
For example, how do eels find their way across the Atlantic ocean?
Why is it so very difficult to swim up to a fish from behind without being detected?
And even bank-side freshwater fishermen, for example, know that the vibrations from footsteps can be detected by fish.
But what sense or senses are being used by the fish in such cases?
Beluga whale snaps at photographer/Fotógrafo testado por uma beluga durante sessão fotográfica
<!– Remove following
“It grabbed hold of my arm and my leg with its mouth. It locked on tight,” said Mr Burton, .
“I think the beluga was testing me. It wasn’t actually trying to bite me. I was a bit nervous, but at least it wasn’t a great white.”
Mr Burton, a self-styled extreme photographer from Devon, was taking pictures of Julia Petrik, one of the world’s leading free-divers, with the whales. Every year she and other Russian free-divers gather along the northwest coast to go diving with the belugas, which inhabit the sub-Arctic waters of the White Sea and can grow to 16ft.
“The way Julia moves through the water is just incredible,” said Mr Burton. But while Ms Petrik was offered a free ride on one whale’s back, Mr Burton’s encounter did not go quite so smoothly.
He insisted, however, that despite the “snowing, blizzardy and grey conditions, the black water, the floating chunks of ice” and his brush with a beluga, the experience was all “fairly run of the mill”.
Source: The Times
The Beluga Whale or White Whale (Delphinapterus leucas) is an Arctic and sub-arctic species of cetacean. This marine mammal is commonly referred to simply as the Beluga – the word derives from the Russian beloye meaning white.
The Beluga was first described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1776. It is a member of the Monodontidae taxonomic family alongside the Narwhal. The Irrawaddy Dolphin was also once considered to be in the same family though recent genetic evidence suggests otherwise.
The earliest known genetic ancestor of the Beluga is the now-extinct Denebola brachycephala from the late Miocene period. A single fossil has been found on the Baja California peninsula, indicating that the family once thrived in warmer waters. The fossil record also indicates that in comparatively recent times the Beluga’s range has varied with that of the ice pack – expanded during ice ages and contracting when the ice retreats.
The Red List of Threatened Species gives both Beluga and White Whale as common names, though the former is now more popular. The name Beluga is derived from the Russian word belukha, meaning white. It is sometimes refered to by scientists as the Belukha Whale in order to avoid confusion with the Beluga sturgeon. The whale is also colloquially known as the “Sea Canary” on account of the high-pitched squeaks, squeals and whistles.
This gregarious whale can be up to 5m (16 ft) long, larger than all but the largest dolphins but smaller than most other toothed whales. Males are generally larger than the female – males can weigh 1.5 tons and females about one ton. Newly-born Beluga are about 1.5m long and weigh 80kg. This whale is unmistakable when adult: it is all white and has a dorsal ridge rather than a fin. The head is also unlike that of any other cetacean – its melon is extremely bulbous and even malleable. The beluga is able to change the shape of its melon by blowing air around its sinuses. Again unlike many whales, the vertebrae in the neck are not fused together, allowing the animal flexibility to turn its head laterally.
The absence of the dorsal fin is reflected in the genus name of the species – apterus is the Latin for “finless”. The evolutionary preference for a dorsal ridge in favor of a fin is believed by scientists to be adaptation to under-ice conditions, or possibly as a way of preserving heat.
The body of the Beluga is rotund, particularly when well-fed, and tapers smoothly to both the head and tail. The tail fin grows and becomes increasingly ornately curved as the animal ages. The flippers are broad and short – making them almost square-shaped.
Males become sexually mature at eight years, females at five. Females give birth to a single calf in the spring after a gestation period of fifteen months. Young Belugas are uniformly dark grey in colour. The grey steadily lightens as they grow up – reaching their distinctive pure white colour by the age of seven in females and nine in males. The nursing periods is about two years. The mating process is not properly understood. Mating certainly does occur during the winter or early spring, when the animals are still in their winter grounds or have begun their migration. However, mating does occur at other times too; leaving open the possibility of delayed implantation. Belugas live for up to forty years.
The Beluga moves in Arctic and sub-Arctic waters ranging from 50° N to 80° N. There is also an isolated population which travels in the St. Lawrence River estuary and the Saguenay fjord, around the village of Tadoussac, Quebec. In the spring beluga move to their summer grounds, bays, estuaries and other shallow inlets. These summer sites are detached from one another and a mother will usually return to the same site year after year. As their summer homes become clogged with ice during autumn, beluga move away for winter. Most travel in the direction of the advancing ice-pack and stay close to the edge of it for the winter months. Others stay under the iced area – surviving by finding ice leads and polynyas (patches of open water in the ice) in which they can surface to breathe. Beluga may also find pockets of air trapped under the ice.
The remarkable ability of the beluga to find the thin slithers of open water where the dense ice pack may cover more than 95% of the sea surface is still a source of mystery and great interest to scientists. It is clear that the echo-location capabilities of the Beluga are highly adapted to the peculiar acoustics of the sub-ice sea and it has been suggested that Beluga can sense open water through echo-location.
Get the HQ Desktop Pics





