Yahoo - AFP, Robert Macpherson,July 2, 2015
Washington
(AFP) - Somewhere in the North Atlantic right now, a longfin mako shark -- a
cousin of the storied great white -- is cruising around, oblivious to the
yellow satellite tag on its dorsal fin.
In
mid-July, that electronic gizmo should pop off, float to the surface and
instantly transmit a wealth of data to eagerly awaiting marine scientists in
Cuba and the United States.
How the
mako became one of the first sharks ever to be satellite-tagged in Cuban waters
is the subject of an hour-long documentary that is a highlight of Discovery
Channel's cult summer series Shark Week.
"Tiburones:
Sharks of Cuba" marks the first time that TV cameras have recorded
American and Cuban scientists working side by side to explore the mysteries of
shark behavior, habitats and migration.
It also
comes as Cuba and the United States renew full diplomatic ties, more than five
decades after Fidel Castro's communist revolution.
"The
Caribbean has, I think, 20 percent of the world's biodiversity of sharks and
Cuba is the heart of that," the show's director Ian Shive told AFP by
telephone from Los Angeles.
What's
more, a half-century of isolation and limited development mean Cuba's coral
waters have largely escaped the kind of negative environmental impact seen
elsewhere in the region, Shive said.
"The
oceans surrounding Cuba are like time capsules," he said. "You can go
back and look at the Caribbean as it was 50 years ago."
Inspiring
the project was a shark of legend -- El Monstruo, or The Monster, a great white
caught by fishermen off the Cuban village of Cojimar, east of Havana, 70 years
ago.
Biggest
ever
Reputedly
21 feet long (6.4 meters) long and weighing in at 7,000 pounds (3,175
kilograms), it remain perhaps the biggest great white ever captured anywhere in
the world.
"All
the fishermen and their families came down. They were excited because they had
never seen such a big animal in Cojimar," fisherman Osvaldo Carnero, a
young boy at the time, told the filmmakers.
Tagging a
similar big shark was one of the goals of the 15-day expedition in February
that brought together shark experts from Cuba's Center for Coastal Ecosystems
Research and Florida's Mote Marine Laboratory as well as Shive's camera crew.
They found
initial success along Cuba's south coast in a pristine coral reef system known
as the Gardens of the Queen, once visited by Christopher Columbus and now one
of the Caribbean's biggest marine parks.
There they
successfully tagged two large silky sharks with help from veteran Cuban diver
Noel Lopez Fernandez, who wrangled them underwater with his bare hands and then
rubbed their bellies to sedate them.
Surprising
data has already been received from the silkys, Robert Hueter, Mote's associate
vice president for research, told AFP in a telephone interview from Sarasota,
Florida.
Not only do
they prefer to stay near the reef, the satellite tags -- which measure sea
depth as well as location -- revealed that the sharks can dive as far down as
2,000 feet (610 meters), much deeper than assumed for the species, Hueter said.
From the
Gardens of the Queen, the scientists set off for Cojimar and struck it lucky by
snagging the longfin mako, with top shark cinematographer Andy Casagrande
underwater capturing video of the rarely seen oceanic creature.
Only the
second
It is only
the second longfin mako to be sat-tagged, Hueter said. The first, in 2012,
roamed from the Gulf of Mexico and around Florida before turning up in the
Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, on the US East Coast.
Hueter is
hoping for the so-called "pop-up" satellite tag, worth about $4,000,
to come off the shark and commence its data dump sometime in mid-July.
"Everyone's
eager to get that data," said Shive, who recalled the two years it took to
get US permission to go to Cuba and for Havana to green-light the first-ever
satellite tagging of its sharks.
Hueter is
hopeful that better relations between Washington and Havana will facilitate
more joint projects between Florida-based scientists and their Cuban
counterparts just 90 miles away.
"In
some ways (the February expedition) was the culmination of a lot of work, and
in other ways it was the starting point for what will hopefully be a new age of
cooperation between the United States and Cuba," he said.
"Tiburones:
Sharks of Cuba" premieres Tuesday in the United States. Discovery Channel,
which launches its 28th annual Shark Week on Sunday, plans to air the show in
other countries in the coming months.

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