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I have lived in Southeast Alaska my whole adult life, and never even heard of blue mud shrimp until I got an email from Karen Johnson, a naturalist in Sitka and member of the local Fish & Game Advisory Committee.
On Labor Day, we were out at Starrigavan Beach in Sitka at a minus tide digging for blue mud shrimp. Johnson brought along a pump made from plastic pipe, sort of an oversize version of something you might use to pump the bilge in your skiff.
The isopod is called Orthione griffenis, or O. griffenis, and it finds its way up under the carapace of adult blue mud shrimp — and only blue mud shrimp. Although it’s a parasite, Chapman says O. griffenis is far from microscopic.
The isopod eventually kills its host shrimp, and soon the remaining shrimp can’t find each other to reproduce, rendering a blue mud shrimp population extinct. This is already happening in coastal areas of California, Oregon and Washington. And now O. griffenis is in Alaska, in what could be the largest infestation yet discovered.
Tammy Davis is the invasive species coordinator for the Alaska Department of Fish & Game in Juneau. Like many of us, she hadn’t been concerned about blue mud shrimp until she met John Chapman. But now she’s concerned.
In this case, the garden is the intertidal zone, which Chapman considers to be as full of life as an ocean reef, except upside-down. Blue mud shrimp play a critical role in this environment, most of the time invisible to us, unless you’ve got a shovel.
Johnson stood in a hole about 3 feet wide, and over a foot deep. In her hand, she had our quarry, a blue mud shrimp. This one was a juvenile, maybe 2 inches long. No parasite is present, but Johnson popped it into a specimen bottle. Johnson said she would be mailing the specimen, along with several others, to Chapman.
John Chapman and his research team don’t just want to study the isopod O. griffenis. They want to understand the mechanism of its arrival in North America in ballast water aboard ships from Asia, and how it travels long distances in its larval stage between intermediate hosts, to finally find blue mud shrimp in Ketchikan and Sitka.
In an industrial espionage case wedged somewhere between the worlds of James Bond and Austin Powers, National Oilwell Varco LP (NOV) has won its legal battle against Mud King Products Inc.
Houston’s Mud King will pay NOV nearly $400,000 in a case involving the theft of NOV’s blueprints by the third-party parts supplier. NOV had sought nearly $7 million in damages.
"We are happy to see the bankruptcy court made Mud King pay for wrongfully bribing an NOV employee and stealing NOV"s trade secrets, although we"re disappointed that Mud King"s press release to the public failed to fully explain what happened in their bankruptcy," said NOV attorney John Zavitsanos.
Mud King attorney Suzanne Lehman Johnson said the company vigorously denied that the mud pump part drawings from the 1960s and 70s at issue were trade secrets.
Johnson said Mud King, a 30-person shop, technically lost against NOV, a massive company with tens of thousands of employees–but it was a pyrrhic victory.
Mud King was accused in a September 2012 lawsuit of stealing drawings of NOV’s mud pumps by paying off an NOV employee. Mud King eventually stalled the civil lawsuit by filing for federal bankruptcy protection, NOV argued.
In August, NOV said it received an anonymous letter from an “outraged Mud King employee” who alerted the company that NOV’s proprietary engineering mud pump blueprints were being stolen, according to a civil suit filed in Harris County District Court.
The large, reciprocating pumps are used to push heavy drilling fluid or mud at high pressures into a drill hole and back up. NOV controls about 70% of the market share for mud pump replacement parts.
A Mud King employee asked his sister-in-law, who worked at NOV, to provide him blueprints by leaving them on his kitchen table in exchange for about $1,000, federal court records show.
“Mud King boasts on its website that it sells mud pumps and mud pump parts that are 100% equivalent to the original equipment manufacturer,” NOV’s suit said. “But telling the truth about Mud King’s dirty tactics would have a negative effect on Mud King’s business.”
NOV also notified the FBI, which led to NOV being allowed to sift through Mud King’s computers. NOV found Mud King had stored hundreds of its drawings. Many of the mud pump drawings in question were developed in the 1960s and 1970s before NOV acquired the companies that made them.
NOV argued Mud King’s bankruptcy was a delaying action, it said it court documents. One of Mud King’s operating reports showed assets of $18.1 million and $3.9 million in liabilities.
Federal Bankruptcy Judge Karen K. Brown ultimately tried the trade secrets case. She ruled that NOV failed to prove some of its claims, including unjust enrichment and violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act but succeeded in showing Mud King had misappropriated some trade secrets and violated the Texas Theft Liability Act.
Brown said NOV’s drawings were stolen for Mud King and that the company undisputedly sold parts it manufactured with the aid of NOV’s trade secrets. Mud King used 23 NOV drawings to improve its own parts, selling 15 of them.
Named Mud King defendants asserted their Fifth Amendment rights and refused to testify. The company admitted it used 23 NOV drawings in its collection to make 81 parts, some of which it sold in 2011-12 for net profits of $64,000, court documents say.
NOV was awarded $74,434.95 for the parts Mud King sold, but was denied more than $2 million in exemplary damages and $4 million for NOV’s estimates of what it would cost to reverse engineer 204 parts for blueprints.