Google – AFP, 16 April 2013
![]() |
Image taken
on June 20, 2009 shows a Blue Corner shark off the coast of
the Pacific island
nation of Palau (Pew Environment Group/AFP/File, Todd
Essick)
|
SYDNEY —
The moon and water temperature affect the diving behaviour of sharks,
researchers reported Tuesday, in a discovery that could help prevent fishermen
from catching the marine predators inadvertently.
A team from
the University of Western Australia's Oceans Institute and the government-run
Australian Institute of Marine Science spent nearly three years monitoring grey
reef sharks off Palau in the Pacific.
They tagged
39 sharks -- common on coral reefs throughout the Indo-Pacific region -- and
used acoustic telemetry to follow them, finding they stayed in deep water on
full moon nights but rose to the shallows with the new moon.
Similar
patterns have previously been recorded in species such as swordfish, yellowfin
and big eye tuna, suggesting the reef shark behaviour was related to feeding.
![]() |
Image taken
on June 20, 2009 by the
Pew Environment Group shows a Blue
Corner shark off the
coast of Palau
(Pew Environment Group/AFP/File,
Todd Essick) |
"We
also found that the diving behaviour of grey reef sharks was related to water
temperature," said lead researcher Gabriel Vianna.
The sharks,
mostly adult females, dived to an average depth of 35 metres (114 feet) in
winter when deeper water was colder and 60 metres in spring when temperatures
warmed up.
In summer,
when the warmer layer of surface water expanded, the sharks tended to move in a
broader range of depths.
The authors
said that because sharks were cold-blooded, they may prefer warmer waters to
conserve energy.
The
research, published in the science journal PLOS ONE, also found that the time
of day could affect how deeply sharks dive.
"We
were surprised to see sharks going progressively deeper during the morning and
the exact inverse pattern in the afternoon, gradually rising towards the
surface," Vianna said.
"This
matches how light changes on the reef during the day. To our knowledge, this is
the first time such patterns have been observed in detail for reef
sharks."
Vianna said
the research had conservation implications with their diving behaviour
potentially helping prevent sharks being inadvertently caught by fisherman at
different times of the day.
"In
places such as Palau, which relies heavily on marine tourism and where sharks
are a major tourist attraction, the fishing of a few dozen sharks from popular
dive sites could have a very negative impact on the national economy," she
said.


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