Danielle Meitiv's Barefoot Blog

Writing and life… without shoes


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Wonderful Waterful Wednesday: Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea

We’re Going Down!

Happy Wednesday! For this week’s wonderful, waterful post, we’ll dive to the deepest realms of the ocean to check out the amazing, bizarre, and sometimes downright creepy-looking creatures that live there. In water 3000+ feet deep, where no sunlight penetrates, fish, squid, shrimp and jellyfish make their own light to help them seek out prey, avoid predators, and find mates.

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How do they do it? These denizens of the dark create light, called bioluminescence or “living light”, through a chemical reaction. It’s similar to what happens when you break the inner tube of a glowstick: luciferin, a pigment, reacts with oxygen to produce light. The same process used by fireflies.

Most deep-sea creatures give off – and can only see – blue-green light, which travels through water better than other wavelengths (colors) of light. However, there is one family of fish, the Malacoseids or Loosejaws, that produces red light. These fish can use their light to hunt, without being seen by predators or prey!

The Better to Eat You With…

And what’s with those crazy jaws?!? While they may seemed designed to give nightmares, there is an ecological reason for those toothsome grins. Food is scarce down there. With so few prey, it takes a lot of time and energy to find a meal – once they get their jaws around something, they’re not letting go.

For more on the deep sea, check out some earlier posts, here and here, and one on climate change and the deep sea here.

These photos come from a 2002 NOAA* expedition: “Islands in the Stream 2002: Exploring Underwater Oases,” available on the NOAA Ocean Explorer website. “Ocean Explorer is an educational Internet offering for all who wish to learn about, discover, and virtually explore the ocean realm.” Check it out!

Here’s another cool resource about the deep-sea: the Deep-sea Creatures Database at Sea and Sky.

We Take Requests

This week’s waterful post goes out by request to Lisa E. Arlt, a lovely person and talented writer whom I had the pleasure of chatting with this past weekend. As Lisa reminded me, once a writer, always a writer, no matter what life throws your way. Check out her writing and travels (she’s a former foreign service officer) here.

Have an idea for a Wonderful Waterful post? Let me know in the comments section below!

Cool science calendars

One of these can be yours. Just comment or link to Brave Blue Words!

Science Swag Giveaway – last chance to enter!

For the rest of the week (through April 1st), leave a comment and get entered into a drawing for one of the fab science calendars that I picked up at the AAAS conference last month. (You can check out my posts on the conference here and here). Each comment = an entry, so feel free to check out some older posts and comment on those too. Following this blog via Facebook will also get you an entry. Linking to this site from yours will get you TWO entires per link. Act now – the giveaway ends April 1st!

Danielle Meitiv is an oceanographer by training, an advocate for all things marine and a writer of science fiction and non-fiction. Danielle is also a huge fan and sales affiliate of Holly Lisle’s online courses: How to Think Sideways: Career Survival School for Writers, and How to Revise Your Novel. Follow @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, and on Facebook: Brave Blue Words, and Danielle Meitiv.


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Science and the Media, or How Science Advanced at AAAS 2011: Part I

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Most science conferences are like little in-group parties, where people who know each other’s work intimately get together to discuss their latest results, and query each other about what to do next. Don’t get me wrong – I love them. You meet interesting people, learn A LOT, and come home with new ideas, and great T-shirts or shoulder bags.  Since I am a generalist by nature, I’ve attending lots of different kinds of conferences: the Geological Society of America, the American Physics Society, the European Geophysical Union, the Estuarine Research Federation, and the Coastal Society, to name a few.

The AAAS Annual Meeting, which I attended for the first time this year, was completely different. The raison d’etre of “triple-A-S” is right there in its name: the American Association for the Advancement of Science.  I didn’t really get what that meant until now. Instead of technical talks, where experts talk to their peers about the incremental advances in their area of science, this meeting was all about the big picture. Panels of speakers addressed different aspects of a single topic, speaking broadly about what was known, where the gaps and questions were, and what they’d like to see happen next. Scientists from different fields sat in on each others’ sessions, offering all sorts of interesting and cross-disciplinary questions and comments. The meeting wasn’t only for and about scientists, either. A number of panels focused on the communication of science, and the relevant of science to society. It was amazing. There was also a two-day Family Science Fair, which my son and nephews loved.  I picked up all sorts of great science swag, including posters, bumper stickers, calendars and buttons, which I will start giving away next week.

Over the next few weeks I will report on some of these great sessions in depth, including:

  • Science Without Borders and Media Unbounded: What Comes Next
  • Adapting to a Clear and Present Danger: Climate Change and Ocean Ecosystems (I may have to dedicate two blog posts to this session, which included fabulous talks on coral reefs and ocean acidification by James Brady of MBARI, and Nancy Knowlton of the Smithsonian).
  • 2050: Will There Be Fish in the Ocean?
  • Comparing National Responses to Climate Change: Networks of Debate and Contention (focusing on the differences between how climate change is viewed in the US and India – the two countries where I do my climate change work).

First up: science and the media.

Media Unbounded

“Science Without Borders and Media Unbounded: What Comes Next,” focused on the impact of the Internet on media, and featured a panel of journalists who focus on science and environmental reporting: Tom Rosenstiel, Director of the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, Elizabeth Shogren, reporter for National Public Radio (NPR), and Seth Borenstein, reporter for the Associated Press (AP). Kerry Emanuel, a researcher in the Program of Atmospheres, Oceans, and Climate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) responded to their presentations.

Tom Rosenstiel gave a fascinating overview. The world of media is both shrinking and expanding. The editorial aspects are expanding: there is more commentary and discussion than ever. The reportorial component – where people actually go out to discover and confirm things – is shrinking. As more people get their news online, the print newspaper is fading, but publishers are not: most people still get their news from a handful of trusted sources like the New York Times, Washington Post, and others. However, since they’re not paying for it, newspaper budgets and pressrooms are shrinking. There are more readers, but fewer reporters.  This has led to the loss of specialized beats, like the environment, particularly in local papers. This also means that reporters don’t get into stories in-depth, instead sticking to breaking the news. There are fewer interviews, less follow-up. What has this done to our public square? Perhaps the world we’re exposed to is smaller, our common knowledge pool is shrinking. As readers (and listeners) we’re spending less time learning about the larger world and more time on our particular interests.

Elizabeth Shogren spoke about how the Internet has made her job easier and more interesting. She can spend more time getting the interesting stories (because that is still a priority at NPR), and can do more with them. In addition to a radio report, she can – and is expected – to present a whole multi-media story, complete with online images, and videos. She can include information that didn’t make it into the recording, and give listeners resources for more information. She noted that the Internet makes information more accessible, and has the potential to make governing more transparent. Now, even if she can’t be on Capitol Hill at 1:00 AM to follow the debate on an important bill, she can get all the information – videos and transcripts – online. In theory, this takes away one of the tactics that lawmakers have used to ‘hide’ debates they didn’t want the public to pay attention to – but only if people take advantage of the information that is out there.

The Differences Between Researchers and Reporters

Seth Borenstein spoke about the incredible access that the Internet gives him to scientific data, allowing him to dig through the databases and reports about climate change that researchers routinely put up on their websites or on government and other shared sites. (I took note of these, and you can expect to here more about specific findings and studies in future posts). He used this access to disprove a recent claim of climate change deniers:  that January’s temperature were colder than usual and therefore ‘proved’ that global warming wasn’t happening. Instead, he discovered that for the past 311 months – every month since February 1985 – temperatures have been warmer than the long-term average for that month. He followed with a statement that had all the scientists in the room groaning in disbelief. He said that IF January 2011 had been warmer, THAT would have been a story that his editor would have wanted to hear, but the fact that every month for nearly 26 YEARS had been warmer was not a story!  The facts weren’t interesting – only the controversy.  And this from a reporter who truly gets, and likes reporting on science and climate change.  Is it any wonder that so many scientists are reluctant to speak to the media?

Kerry Emanuel took up this issue in his comments. He opened with a quote from Oscar Wilde to express how many scientists see the media: “In old days men had the rack. Now they have the press.” He noted the dichotomy in the modern media (and one that journalists rarely acknowledge): the media as the fourth estate, with high ideals vs. media as a business. Scientists sometimes get tripped up by this tension. They often assume (perhaps naively) that they and the reporter have the same objective: to get to the truth. Even if languages are different, the end result is usually good. However, that is not always the case – sometimes the journalist just wants to sell the story. Sometimes journalists bend the story into something they think will sell. This makes scientists wary – they have to determine where the journalist coming from. (Shogren’s response was that scientists need to do their homework, and learn more about the journalist who is approaching them. If they don’t like the kind of things he or she writes, the researcher doesn’t have to talk).

Global Warming Deniers: Who’s To Blame?

Shogren complained that she though the global warming debate was settled, but was frustrated to hear it coming up again. Disturbingly, she blamed it on the scientists, saying that they (we) hadn’t done a good enough job explaining it to the public!  There was an immediate outcry: the science has gotten stronger, but the media keeps allowing the debate to be re-opened. She said that if there was controversy, they had to report it. Researchers said: there’s no controversy in the facts, but the media keeps giving the stage to fringe groups with vested interests in undermining the facts. Very interesting.

During the Q & A, I asked all the members of the panel how Twitter and blogs had changed the way they do their reporting, if at all. Surprisingly, there were few comments. (Perhaps they thought those venues were about information, not ‘news’).  Rosenstiel said that the Internet gave any expert access to an audience (unspoken, but implied was the critique that it also gives access to the clueless, as well).

Coming up next: Climate change and Ocean Ecosystems.

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Think that I have a clue about oceans and climate? Want more Brave Blue Words? Tune in next week for more on the latest from AAAS. And stay tuned for information about how you can win some of the great science stuff from AAAS!

Can’t wait until then? Follow @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, friend Danielle Meitiv, and like Author Danielle Meitiv on Facebook!

Coral reefs are vulnerable to ocean warming and acidification. Researcher Nancy Knowlton says that there's still time left to save them - but not much.


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Science Without Borders: A Whirlwind Weekend at the 2011 AAAS Meeting

Tomorrow marks the first full day of sessions for the 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. AAAS (“triple A S”) is one of the world’s most influential science organizations, and publisher of the most widel- read research journal, Science. This year, the big AAAS shindig is in downtown Washington, DC, which means that yours truly will be there, covering as much of it as I can, on Facebook, Twitter and right here. The talks go from 8:00 to 6:00pm Friday to Monday, but might not make it through all of them: this is my first attempt at live tweeting/blogging a conference. Wish me luck – and fully-charged laptop batteries.

There are a ridiculous number of sessions to choose from covering everything from cutting-edge physics to brain science, climate change to communication. Since it is impossible to be in more than one place at a time (damn!), the only way to survive a conference like this is to prioritize. If you’ve been following this blog or @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter, you won’t be surprised to hear that my top two priorities will be climate change and ocean issues (followed by science communication).

The AAAS meeting site has a scheduler where you can highlight the sessions I plan to attend, saving me from having to mark up and flip through the program book they give out at registration. (I’ll probably do that anyway, but it’s a start). Here are some of the sessions I’m looking forward to:

  • Climate Change: Altering the Physics, Ecology, and Socioeconomics of Fisheries
  • Science Without Borders and Media Unbounded: What Comes Next?
  • The Science of Comedy: Communicating with Humor
  • Cross-Border Responses to Global Challenges: Can Everybody Win?
  • Science and Policy for Environmental Security in the Asia-Pacific Region
  • Comparing National Responses to Climate Change: Networks of Debate and Contention
  • Communicating Diversity in Science: Implications for Climate Change Denial
  • Adapting to a Clear and Present Danger: Climate Change and Ocean Ecosystems
  • In Hot Water: Rising Public Health Concerns from Changing Ocean Conditions
  • If a Culture of Growth Is Unsustainable, What Should Change?
  • Where Ocean Meets Land: Dynamic Shorelines in a Warming World

And those are just from the first two days…

Many of these sessions will overlap, so while I will no doubt be running from one end of the DC Convention Center to the other regularly, I won’t be able to get to all of them :-( I’ll send regular updates to Facebook and Twitter, so if you’re not already following me in those two venues, get to it! Facebook: Danielle Meitiv, and Author Danielle Meitiv, @Danielle_Meitiv on Twitter.

If you’re attending AAAS, send me a tweet, or a note via Facebook, so we can meet!

Next week I’ll weigh in with a blog post with highlights from the conference. Stay tuned!

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An Ocean of Writing: Brave Blue Words in 2010, 2011 and Beyond

Wanna know what you can expect from Brave Blue Words in 2011?  Read on – and feel free to make comments or suggestions below.

Surf Zone

As in the past, many of my posts will come from the science headlines. I love keeping up on the latest research, and starting this year I’ll even have Science delivered to my door! (A special offer for non-members who register for the AAAS annual meeting before January 27, 2011).

I’ve also come up with a long list of topics that I am itching to learn and write about. Here’s a partial list of what I have on deck for Brave Blue Words in 2011:

  • Articles on many of the interesting and bizarre critters discovered during the Census of Marine Life, as well as the conclusions that scientists reached about the health of our oceans.
  • An exploration of the many different habitats found in the oceans, from coral reefs to Arctic glaciers, tide pools to the open sea.
  • A series on evolution and geologic time. What lived when, where, and how that changed over time.
  • A look at the evolution of marine creatures, including marine mammals, and marine reptiles, the real monsters of the deep!
  • How the Earth itself has changed over time. Where and how continents moved, and what impacts those movements had on  evolution and climate.
  • Critical environmental threats to the health of the oceans, including the many different aspects and impacts of climate change.
  • Updates on important ocean-related legislation, and what you can do to help make them in law.
  • Guest posts from other fabulous ocean blogs.
  • Profiles on ocean scientists and activists, including interviews.
  • In-depth looks at how ocean science is done, including field trips with scientists, and visits to local labs, ships, and other research platforms.
  • Posts about the latest research as it’s presented at important science conferences. I’ll start with the AAAS conference in February right here in Washington, D.C.

2010 Redux

So, that’s what I’m planning for the future. But what about the past? Surely, there’s a lot I can learn from my own record of successes and mistakes. So here it is, the year-end summary for Brave Blue Words compliments of WordPress:

  • A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 7,400 times in 2010. That’s about 18 full 747s!
  • In 2010, you wrote 17 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 44 posts. You uploaded 34 pictures, taking up a total of 9mb. That’s about 3 pictures per month.
  • Your busiest day of the year was January 5th with 127 views. The most popular post that day was Relations between India and China: Thawing over melting Himalayas?.

New Year’s is the time for resolutions, right? Well, right off the bat, there is a number in there that I want to increase. And no, it’s not the number of visitors.

Wait. Why not? Surely any blogger worth her storage space would aim for more readers, right? Sure, I’d like hoards of folks to read this blog, but what can I do about it? It’s not something I have direct control over. And resolutions are all about what I can do to make things better here at Brave Blue Words.

Sure, I can work to ensure that I have great content. I can also do all kinds of things to drive more traffic to my site, networking my tuchas off, and connecting to potential readers via Facebook, and Twitter. (I’ve given up on MySpace – it’s just too damned slow!) But I can only build the site, and hope they will come. So, what’s the magic number? What number do I have direct control over?

The number of posts I write. Look back at the numbers. Over the 52 weeks of 2010, I wrote only 17 posts. Contrast that with 2009, when I wrote 27. Since I started in July 2009, that means that in my first year, I posted at least once a week.

What happened in 2010? Sure, I could quote time constraints, family or job-related events that distracted me. We all have those – but they weren’t responsible for a single missed post. No, it was bigger than that. In 2010, I was faced with the greatest challenge a writer can imagine, the thing we all fear. Yes, it’s true. The #1 threat, the bogeyman beneath all writer’s beds, the ghoul in each and everyone of our closets. I faced it, and succumbed to it’s evil allure.

What was it? Simply the fear that what I was writing didn’t matter. That nobody cared about what I had to say, that my lonely voice, shouted into the incredible chaos that is the global Internet, was not loud enough, not important enough, not worthy enough to be heard. No, I didn’t actually think those words (well,not often). But the fear was there and I let it still my hands and silence my voice.

What’s a Writer to Do?
No, that’s not a cue for all you out there to post encouraging comments, or pat me on the back (although good books or chocolate won’t be turned down). If I’m going to make it as a writer, I have to learn to do that for myself. Or as a very dear friend said to me, when I was working for the NYC Parks Dept in my very first job out of college: I’m going to have to learn to post my own A’s on my own refrigerator.

Writing is a solitary activity. Feedback, when it comes (if it comes) is often far removed from the act itself. By years, in the case of a novel. The motivation to write, whether it’s a blog post or a novel, has to come from within. I have to generate the drive day in and day out. Not only is that the secret to consistency, it’s also the magic ingredient in good writing. When I find the things that excite me, the subject that I think are so cool that I can’t keep quiet about them, I’ll write about them.

But what if I don’t? OK, that was a trick question: anyone who knows me would laugh at that suggestion. The world is just so awesome, the oceans so amazing, the whole scientific endeavor so incredible, that I often find it hard to limit myself to just the 500-1,000 words I aim for in my posts. So I’ll write.

And if you like what you see?  Come on back – there will be lots more where that came from in 2011. Have a suggestion for a blog post? Leave ti in the comments below!

Want more? You can connect to me and Brave Blue Words on Facebook and Twitter.

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