Lots of things have happened in Fiji since my last blog entry in September last year and I apologise for not keeping you updated. I was busy finishing a manuscript reporting the results from interviewing the locals living along the rivers. In the meanwhile, the paper has been accepted for publication by Environmental Conservation and will soon be available. Needless to say that we were happy learning that locals see and sometimes catch sharks in all the major rivers in Fiji. On the other hand, we were a bit surprised that nobody could tell us what species of shark they catch further upriver in low salinity/fresh water (there were some reports of hammerhead sharks, tiger sharks and other species from the river mouths). The names they used to describe the sharks were “baby shark” or “small shark”. So we set out to learn more about sharks in Fijian rivers and went fishing in the Navua River which is the one closest to the Shark Reef Marine Reserve. From acoustic monitoring we know that some of the large bull sharks we see (and tagged) at the Shark Reef Marine Reserve regularly show up at the mouth of the Navua River and we suppose that some of the large female bull sharks we see on Shark Reef give birth at the end of the year in this particular river. It would therefore be no surprise to find juvenile bull sharks in the Navua River. (more…)
9 February 2010
Fishing for sharks in Fijian rivers
16 April 2009
Maimed blue shark shatters beauty of deep-sea dive
Morne Hardenberg, representing the Save Our Seas Shark Centre, in Kalk Bay South Africa, was initially enjoying his second diving exp



