ROFFS™ Fishy Times Newsletter – 56th Edition – Updated Videos on New ROFFS™ YouTube Page, Poaching Vessels in New Zealand, Fukushima & Storm Surge vs. Storm Tide NEWS
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Sea Shepherd Intercepts Two Poaching Vessels That Evaded New Zealand Navy, In Australian Waters Article courtesy: seashepherdglobal.org | 2/2/2015
Today at approximately 1130 AEDT, the Sea Shepherd ship, Sam Simon, intercepted the toothfish poaching vessels, the Yongding and the Kunlun; two of the three vessels that fled from the New Zealand Navy last month, after they were found fishing illegally in waters west of the Ross Sea.
The two vessels were intercepted by the Sam Simon at 66°39′ South 63°43′ East, inside Australian waters with prohibited fishing gear on their decks. The region is managed by Australia in accordance with its international obligations as a Member of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
Both the Yongding and the Kunlun haveInterpol Purple Notices issued for them, and are on the CCAMLR black list of Illegal, Unregulated, Unreported (IUU) fishing boats. Both vessels were flying the Equatorial Guinea flag at the time they were located.

Fukushima Radioactivity Monitoring in the North Pacific Ocean Article courtesy: Fisheries and Oceans Scientist Dr. John Smith | www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca
A paper published in December 2014 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) details the arrival and concentration of radioactive isotopes from the Fukushima nuclear reactor in the North Pacific Ocean. This paper, by Fisheries and Oceans scientist Dr. John Smith, documents the first and only systematic study of its kind validating ocean circulation models while tracking the eastward movement of radioactive isotopes.
On March 11, 2011, a massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake triggered a tsunami off the coast of Japan, severely damaging the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plants resulting in the discharge of a radioactive plume into the atmosphere and ocean. The radioactive material that entered the ocean moved eastward towards North America via the Kuroshio and North Pacific current systems.

Difference Between Storm Surge and Storm Tide Article courtesy: oceanservice.noaa.gov Storm surge is the rise in seawater level caused solely by a storm; storm tide is the observed seawater level during a storm.

PLEASE CLICK HERE to read more on the difference between storm surge and storm tide on our website now… If you do not want to wait for our next Fishy Times newsletter, please visit us in the meantime to get all your fishing news on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and on the web. Safe and successful fishing until next time! As always, please send comments & feedback on Fishy Times newsletter content directly to us at [email protected].
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