|
|
|
20 January 2008 Whale sharks thriving in Australia [Keyword: whale shark ]
Whale sharks, which grow to weigh as much as two or three adult elephants, are thriving in waters off Western Australia, a new study of underwater images suggests.
Up to 65 feet long (20 meters), the whale shark, Rhincodon typus, is the world's largest living fish species — and also the largest shark.
Though hefty, this shark is known as the "gentle giant" for its non-predatory behavior.
Rather than tearing through meaty flesh of prey like many sharks, this fish, with its broad, flattened head and tiny teeth inside a giant mouth, eats tiny zooplankton, sieving them through a fine mesh of gill-rakers.
Relatively little is known about the health and migratory behaviors of whale sharks, which live in tropical and warm seas, including the western Atlantic and southern Pacific.
The new research combines computer-assisted photographic identification with data collected by ecotourists, among others, and suggests whale shark populations in Ningaloo, Western Australia, are healthy, although research at other locations, such as South Africa and Thailand, has reported declines in population size.
Swimming with sharks West Australian marine scientist Brad Norman of ECOCEAN, a marine conservation organization, and Murdoch University in Australia began the study in 1995.
Swimming alongside each whale shark in the Ningaloo Reef, the researchers photographed or video-taped the white lines and spots along the flanks of the animal. Like a human fingerprint, the patterns of speckles and stripes on the skins of whale sharks are thought to be unique to each individual.
To make sense of the images, Norman teamed up with ECOCEAN computer programmer Jason Holmberg and astronomer Zaven Arzoumanian of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., who adapted software originally used with the Hubble space telescope.
The pattern-recognition software developed by Holmberg and Arzoumanian allowed the group to positively identify individual whale sharks.
Based on 5,100 underwater images of 355 whale sharks contributed by hundreds of researchers, divers and ecotourists, Norman, Holmberg and Arzoumanian obtained almost 10 times more data than any previous study.
“To study whale sharks in a meaningful way, we really had to rethink how we collect data and how we analyze it,” Holmberg said.
“The results surpassed our expectations, allowing hundreds of individuals to contribute and providing the necessary data to obtain a closer look at the population’s health.”
Reef management Ningaloo Reef is one of the best locations to find whale sharks, especially between April and June.
The researchers found that more whale sharks are returning to the northern area of Ningaloo Marine Park from season to season, suggesting the population is growing.
They found that about two-thirds of the sharks were repeat visitors, while one-third were sighted only once during the study period.
As a rare and highly migratory fish, whale sharks are a big draw for Ningaloo’s ecotourism industry, where tourists pay to get close views and even swim with the sharks.
In spite of their gargantuan size, whale sharks are fairly docile; the main risk to humans comes from getting in the way of their very large and powerful tails.
The authors say their study, published in the Ecological Society of America’s January issue of the journal Ecological Applications, suggests that the management guidelines for whale shark ecotourism at Ningaloo appear to be on target.
Source: msnbc.msn.com
|
Similiar
Stories in the earthdive news database:
 |
16 January 2008: NZ can't halt whalers
A claim similar to that taken under Australian law to try and halt the slaughter of whales in the Southern Ocean cannot be taken here, New Zealand's International Whaling Commissioner Sir Geoffrey Palmer says. |
 |
15 January 2008: Ghost Whales
South Korea has put a price on the head of the rare and almost extinct Eastern Pacific gray whale. They're offering 5 million won (about $5,300) for photos of the whale, and twice that for any whales that happen to be accidentally caught by fishermen. |
 |
12 January 2008: Greenpeace Finds Japan's Whalers
A Greenpeace ship on Saturday confronted a Japanese whaling fleet that had initially planned to hunt protected humpbacks, the environmentalists said — setting off the latest round of cat-and-mouse in a sometimes dangerous feature of the hunting debate. |
 |
11 January 2008: Divers 'don't want to be shark bait'
Spear fishermen say plans to lure great white sharks with a burley trail off the Kapiti coast in New Zealand will turn divers into shark bait.
A shark expert hopes to attract the great whites alongside a boat today and attach electronic monitoring tags. |
 |
11 January 2008: Australia presses Japan over whale hunt
Australia has stepped up pressure on Japan to end its controversial whale hunt in the southern ocean, dispatching a surveillance vessel that will gather evidence for a possible legal challenge to the cull. |
 |
10 January 2008: Global project maps whale sharks
Despite its name, the whale shark is actually the world's biggest fish and not a whale at all. It is a peaceful, inquisitive animal that feeds by sweeping up small ocean life in its huge gills. |
 |
02 January 2008: Software Tracks Whale Sharks
Facial recognition software holds great promise, but the jury is still out on how effective it is now. The software, which compares patterns from an electronic image of a face to a database of images, hasn’t proved particularly good at picking criminals out of a crowd, for instance. |
 |
27 December 2007: Shark tracking to aid marine park design
A Charles Darwin University researcher with expertise in tracking marine animals has set up a study off the Western Australian coast to map the movements of reef sharks. Dr Iain Field spent three weeks at the Rowley Shoals off the Kimberley coast tagging sharks and setting up receivers at coral reefs.
|
 |
23 December 2007: Japan drops humpback whale hunt
A controversial Japanese mission to hunt humpback whales in the Antarctic has been temporarily abandoned, a top government official says.
|
|
|
| Previous
Year | Jan
| Feb |
Mar | Apr
| May |
Jun | Jul
| Aug |
Sep | Oct
| Nov |
Dec | Current |
| Get this as an RSS Feed |
Subscribe to this feed
You can subscribe to this RSS feed in a number of ways, including the following:
- Drag the orange RSS button into your News Reader
- Drag the URL of the RSS feed into your News Reader
- Cut and paste the URL of the RSS feed into your News Reader
|
|
|
|