In principle, there are two ways to equip sharks with acoustic tags: you can either attach the tags externally or internally. For both methods there are good examples to be found in the scientific literature. If done internally, you would usually catch the fish for surgical tag implantation. An alternative method can be feeding acoustic transmitters to sharks.
Stomach tagging can be an interesting option and it allows you to, for example, monitor the stomach temperature of the animal in addition to obtaining presence-absence data. However, the indigestible tag will eventually be regurgitated, most likely via stomach eversion, and therefore tracking time is limited. In order to feed a tag to a shark, all you need is the tag wrapped in bait and a site where you know you can attract the sharks close enough to a feeder. There’s no better place than the Shark Reef Marine Reserve in Fiji to test the feasibility of stomach tagging and to estimate tag retention time. And so we did. The superb photograph on the right (taken by Klaus Jost) gives you an idea of how it looks when you hand-feed a tag to a good-sized bull shark in Fiji.
18 June 2009
11 June 2009
10 June 2009
The End of the Line
The End of the Line. It’s being compared to Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth and it deals with the overfishing of our oceans. There’s several excerpts and trailers on the above mentioned webpage. Check it out, go to the movies and tell everybody to see it! It’s important! It really is! Also, you might want toclaim your piece of ocean.
8 June 2009
World Oceans Day
The concept for World Oceans Day was proposed in 1992 by the Government of Canada at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and it had been unofficially celebrated every year since then. Official designation by the U.N. is a significant step in conserving and protecting our world’s ocean. The 2009 theme is: “one ocean, one climate, one future”. Check out The Ocean Project website for more information.




