Save Our Seas Blogs

29 January 2010

Feeling Stressed?

Drawing Blood from a mature male Caribbean reef shark.

Drawing Blood from a mature male Caribbean reef shark.

Small scale longline surveys are the predominant method for investigating shark populations, and when longlines are implemented on a much larger scale, are responsible for the widespread commercial harvest of sharks all over the world. Any capture event, including longline capture, unleashes series of physiological and physical disturbances, the issue is that very little is know about how this physiological stress impacts the behaviour of an animal post release, or if indeed the animal survives.

This year’s project took a two stage approach to begin to investigate the effects of longline capture on the Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi).  Firstly, blood samples were taken from sharks that were captured during our longline surveys, using hook timers to accurately determine the amount of time the shark had been on the line.  Blood was taken from the shark and portable blood analysers were used to quantify various blood chemistry parameters which in turn indicate the level of physiological stress the shark was under for a given duration of hooking.  Secondly, a subset of fifteen sharks were equipped with acoustic transmitters which emit an ultrasonic series of pings every 45 seconds which can be detected by an array of underwater hydrophones.  These transmitters had a three-dimensional accelerometer incorporated into the tag which measured the activity level of the shark every 20 seconds post release, the data for which was in turn transmitted and stored on the seabed hydrophones.  The hydrophone array itself consisted of 32 receivers covering approximately 14 square kilometres of seabed in prime reef shark habitat.  The use of these transmitters allowed us to quantify the activity level, depth association and movement patterns of the Caribbean reef sharks post release and begin to understand how capture events might impact their behaviour.

Comments (0)

17 October 2009

We’re Back!

So its been a really really long time since I last posted – what can I say things have been busy!  There has been so much going on that keeping the blog up has fallen by the wayside a little bit.  I will endeavor to keep things a little more current and update you all on the huge backlog of happening over the last five months including our work on tonic immobility in the lemon shark, the stress of longline capture in the Caribbean reef shark and how that effects behavior and survivorship, the abundance and distribution of sub-adult tiger sharks.  There has be a lot going on!

The first update I wanted to fill you in on is the presentation of our work at the annual American Elasmobranch Society in Portland Oregon in July of this year.  The CEI Shark Research and Conservation Program produced a poster presentation on the first year of SOSF funded research based on the validation of Baited Remote Underwater Video Surveys (BRUVS) and a more conservation based alternative to more traditional longline surveys.  The poster is a preliminary analysis of the results with a full manuscript to be submitted by the end of this year.  In addition, I presented on on the seasonal abundance, demographics and habitat use of Caribbean reef sharks.   Both the poster and presentation are attached to this post so happy reading if you are interested!

Comments (0)

Powered by WordPress

HOME

SITEMAP

ABOUT US

FUNDING & GRANTS

CONTACT US

NEWS ROOM

PUBLICATIONS

FOOTAGE ARCHIVE

INTRANET