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Underwater: Sound Effect, Episode 89

By National Park Service [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons bit.ly/2hxWrya
Underwater view in Biscayne National Park, Florida

This week on Sound Effect, we share stories that take place underwater.

A Meal Fit For An Otter

At the Seattle Aquarium, sea otters get a diet that would make any seafood junkie jealous. Not only do they dine on restaurant grade salmon, crab, shrimp and other seafood, but they get fed up to nine times per day.  

Remarkable Rescue

The MS Prinsendam was a Holland America cruise ship that left the Northwest in the fall of 1980. There were 324 passengers aboard, and 200 crew members. And they were on the adventure of a lifetime: A trip across the Pacific Ocean that would eventually take them to Japan. The Prinsendam never made it. It sank in the Gulf of Alaska. But amazingly, every single person aboard survived, in what is considered the largest high seas rescue in maritime history.

Water Protector

Tracy Rector is a mixed race indigenous woman, a descendant of the Seminole and Choctaw Nations, and a filmmaker. And she decided to use her films to explore the connection between native peoples in the Northwest and the environment. Here in the Northwest, an essential part of that is water. Rector’s upcoming feature film, Clearwater, is a documentary about that important connection. Making the film involved researching tribal stories and legends about water.  It also meant spending hours by the water with native fishers, divers, and boat builders.

World Octopus Wrestling Championships

In the early 1960s, thousands of people turned out on the shores of Titlow Beach near the Tacoma Narrows for the World Octopus Wrestling Championships. It even attracted the likes of Jacques Cousteau. Gary Keffler was one of the event organizers and talked about what it was like doing an event like this.

Counting Underwater Life With DNA

The traditional way of counting life beneath the sea for scientists is not all that different than it would be if the average person was going to do it. You see a fish; you count a fish. But recently scientists have found a way to count and identify sea life by extracting DNA from the sea or ocean water, and the results have shown the traces of hundreds and thousands of creatures not visible to the naked eye.

Seawolf

Colin McDaniel is an English teacher at Federal Way High School, but he wasn’t always fond of school. Colin and his friend Adam weren’t popular or good at sports. Those early teen years were an awkward and insecure time for both of them. But that all changed with one magical boat: Seawolf.

Sound Effect is your weekly tour of ideas, inspired by the place we live. The show is hosted by knkx's Jennifer Wing.