My Watery Self: Memoirs of a Marine Scientist
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Stephen Spotte
Stephen Spotte, a marine scientist born and raised in West Virginia, is the author of 23 books including seven works of fiction and two memoirs. Spotte has also published more than 80 papers on marine biology, ocean chemistry and engineering, and aquaculture. His field research has encompassed the Canadian Arctic, Bering Sea, West Indies, Indo-West Pacific, Central America, and the Amazon basin of Ecuador and Brazil. ANIMAL WRONGS is his fifth novel. He lives in Longboat Key, Florida.
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My Watery Self - Stephen Spotte
Introduction
STEPHEN SPOTTE, PHD, PROBABLY BEST considered a marine scientist, can certainly be portrayed as a renaissance man extraordinaire. He continues to perform brilliantly in many different fields. As Ella Fitzgerald sang, Things may come, and things may go, but this is one thing you ought to know: T’aint what you do it’s the way that you do it.
Perhaps he should be characterized by his questioning of why and how. For those readers who know Steve or his scientific works and would like to know more about him, My Watery Self is that opportunity.
Most of his many accomplishments, both peer-reviewed and popular scientific as well as fictional, are published prolifically in a variety of sole-authored books. Lists occur at the end of this introduction. All are well written and packed with material useful for presenting lectures. I know, because I included much of his explained information for maintaining fishes and invertebrates in both his early (1970, 1973) and later (1992) tomes in some of my own lectures and research. His complete taxonomic, biological, and public health presentation on the many species of small South American catfishes, some of which enter the urethras of people while urinating in the streams, makes for memorable discussion on vertebrate parasites
of humans. Whatever he writes about, he sneaks in a wonderful phrase to explain any feature.
In his scientific life, he seems to jump from one topic or field to another. This life has been guided by his interests (aquaculture, aquarium technology, husbandry and disease of captive marine mammals and fishes, marine environmental physiology, and coral reef ecology) and marine and freshwater field experiences in his travels to Brazil (Rondônia, Roraima, Amazonas); Canadian lower arctic (Hudson’s Bay); Alaska (Bering Sea); Canadian Maritime Provinces; Ecuador; California; Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington, British Columbia); México (both coasts); Florida Keys and northern Gulf of Mexico; New England; Central America (Atlantic coast); British, French, and Dutch West Indies; US and British Virgin Islands; Philippines (South China Sea, Sulu Sea); and wow! South Pacific (Cook Islands, French Polynesia, Solomon Islands). He even holds a US Merchant Marine officer’s license.
He started publishing in the scientific literature by providing technical information necessary to maintain fledgling public aquaria, including that involving husbandry and health of marine mammals. Not only did he conduct research, but he curated the Aquarium of Niagara Falls, Niagara Falls, New York, and New York Aquarium, Wildlife Conservation Society, Brooklyn, New York; served as Executive Director of the Mystic Aquarium, Mystic, Connecticut; and Vice President of Aquarium Systems, Inc., Mentor, Ohio.
He got the itch to study biodiversity and symbiosis of tropical organisms in the wild, so he became Director and Principal Investigator of the Turks and Caicos Islands Coral Reef Ecology Program funded through the Oakleigh L. Thorne Foundation in New York City. During his trips, he ran the Foundation to survey the area, working hard every day and keeping his employees in line.
He is well known for being hardnosed about productivity and maintaining safety of the scuba divers. There was considerable deep diving and underwater photographing, and Steve became a world authority on commensal shrimp before moving on to his next adventure. Actually, at the same time he became Director of Research, Sea Research Foundation, Noank, Connecticut, and Research Scientist, Marine Sciences & Technology Center, The University of Connecticut at Avery Point, Groton, Connecticut. Since 2001 he has been Adjunct Scientist, Mote Marine Laboratory, Sarasota, Florida. While in Florida, he decided to create a home garden but encountered some difficulties. So what did he do? He shared his acquired knowledge in a book (Coastal Florida Gardening: A Botanical Perspective).
Because of his widespread knowledge about constructing public aquaria and maintaining living displays, he has used his business acumen in consulting. He provided information for well-known public aquariums in ten states as well as for ventures in four countries abroad. His efforts have also had a significant positive impact on entertainment displays. For a few months, Steve visited Mississippi’s Gulf coast to design a system for Donald Trump’s envisioned dolphinarium. Although plans fell through, I was fortunate enough to share lunches, laughs, and ideas during those trips.
Much of Steve’s success results from considerable effort. He does not waste time; he is always productive writing, investigating, inventing, or appreciating. Born in 1942, he grew up in a coal mining camp in southern West Virginia, learning life from close associations with people and activities there and aboard boats, in jungles, on beaches, in aquaculture facilities, in the research laboratories, and behind his typewriter or computer.
I first met Steve early in his career when he curated aquariums. Later, when I presented a scientific talk in Groton, I finally got the opportunity to visit him at his home. He asked where I would like to eat. In a joking fashion I said, Mystic Pizza
because I had enjoyed the 1988 movie starring Annabeth Gish. He said, Grab your coat,
and, to my astonishment, we walked around the corner to where there existed an actual Mystic Pizza; Steve personally knew all the employees in that quaint little restaurant with its entrance to the kitchen on the opposite side as it occurred in the movie.
Steve is certainly never afraid to expose his weaknesses. He does this in My Watery Self, as he did in The Smoking Horse. More important, he shows his strong love of life, including music, literature, science, and history. He always digs to the depths of any of those foundations, which necessitates a firm knowledge of the participants
of each field on a first name basis acquired in the field, workplace, bar, or neighborhood.
Most scientists do not write memoirs, especially ones that might make the reader wonder, with all the associated wild
experiences with alcohol and chemicals, how the biographer ever became a bonafide professional scientist. This book follows The Smoking Horse, with a spectrum of thrills. Young potential scientists today must get involved with marine science through a good education rather than random experiences. I know; I entered the field slowly, being spurred into action by reading Cannery Row, experiencing adventures in a small fishing community similar to those of Steve, seeing absurd but captivating behaviors of renowned scientists at meetings, observing many unexpected animals and behaviors, and enjoying my honeymoon searching marked snails with my wife on the unpopulated-at-the-time beach of North Key Largo, Steve’s country.
In the introduction to his book, Coastal Florida Gardening: A Botanical Perspective, Steve notes, We buy books for two reasons: to entertain us and to increase our knowledge of the world. I found out a long time ago that if I learned one useful thing from a book it had been worth the price.
In the case of My Watery Self, with its many wonderful short stories, the entire book fulfills both reasons, providing several very useful things and plenty of laughs.
For instance, did you know that silvery-colored fishes contain crystals of guanine that reflect and refract light? Well, if that refraction shows that the intensity of horizontal light reflected back from the fish is the same as the background light, the fish would be invisible. With that knowledge Steve learned to stalk and spear large striped bass.
In Key Largo, Steve frequented Sarge’s on Friday evening for his uncrowded establishment with all-you-can-eat fried grouper and French fries for $1.25 and draft beer for half price. When the tarpon started jumping and smacking water with their sides, Steve described it as From sea level, you couldn’t get any closer to heaven.
You will find out how Sarge got rid of patrons after receiving an exceptional newspaper review that attracted way too many unwanted customers.
How would you transfer a heavy, stranded pygmy sperm whale and her calf from the beach to an exhibit at the New York Aquarium at Coney Island? Stephen Spotte knows. Moreover, he knows how to use cunning psychological methods to keep from getting mugged on his nightly treks to the Aquarium to feed the calf. Hold on to appreciate the development and adventures of a real marine biologist.
— Robin M. Overstreet, PhD
Professor Emeritus, Department of Coastal Sciences
University of Southern Mississippi
Ocean Springs, MS
PUBLICATIONS BY STEPHEN SPOTTE
Scientific books written by Stephen Spotte for academic readers include Tarpon Biology [In progress]; Free-ranging Cats: Biology, Ecology, Management. Wiley-Blackwell (2014); Societies of Wolves and Free-ranging Dogs. Cambridge University Press (2012); Coastal Florida Gardening: A Botanical Perspective. CreateSpace.com (2009); Bluegills: Biology and Behavior. American Fisheries Society (2007); Zoos in Postmodernism: Signs and Simulation. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, (2006, cultural theory); Candiru: Life and Legend of the Bloodsucking Catfishes. Creative Arts Books (2002); Captive Seawater Fishes: Science and Technology. John Wiley & Sons (1992); Sterilization of Marine Mammal Pool Waters: Theoretical and Health Considerations. Technical Bulletin Number 1797, USDA (1991); Artificial Seawaters: Formulas and Methods. Jones & Bartlett (Bidwell and Spotte, 1985); Seawater Aquariums: The Captive Environment. John Wiley & Sons (1979); and Fish and Invertebrate Culture: Water Management in Closed Systems. John Wiley & Sons (1970, 1979, Russian edition 1983).
He also wrote scientific books for the general public, including Marine Aquarium Keeping: The Science, Animals, and Art. John Wiley & Sons (1973, 1993, September 1973 Main Selection, Natural Sciences Book Club, a division of Book-of-the-Month Club; Chinese edition 1977) and Secrets of the Deep. Charles Scribner’s Sons (1976, December 1976 Alternate Selection, Natural Science Book Club, a division of Book-of-the-Month Club).
In addition, he has published a variety of fiction and creative nonfiction books, including Cantor’s Theorem and Other Stories (2013); Brother’s Ghost: A Novella. Northwestern University Press (2011); The Smoking Horse: A Memoir in Pieces. SUNY Press (2010, creative nonfiction); Home is the Sailor, Under the Sea: Mermaid Stories. Creative Arts Book Company (2000); An Optimist in Hell: Stories. Creative Arts Book Company (1998).
Redhorse Blues
ON AN AFTERNOON IN EARLY autumn just after school started, I was killing time standing on the bank of Huff Creek a couple of hundred feet from our house. I must have been twelve or thirteen. The day was warm. I’d just climbed down from the school bus and walked home, depressed over the thought of another year of classes. Back then in 1955, I was