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WATER WORLD
Australian sharks to be tracked at any time
by Staff Writers
Melbourne, Australia (XNA) Jan 27, 2015


File image.

The exact location of 40 Australian sharks will soon be known at any time of the day. In an Australian first, scientists will be given greater access than ever before due to the shark tagging and research operations of OCEARCH Ocean Research.

Tiger sharks tagging expeditions will be carried out in Western Australia and Queensland, with 20 sharks to be tagged with SPOT tags, which allow monitoring of the animals 24 hours a day.

While it is believed the technology has been used on Australian juvenile sharks in the past, this technology is understood to have never been tested on mature adults.

In an exciting development for amateur marine biologists, the tracking data will be freely available online to the public.

The research is carried out by local scientists with the OCEARCH vessel and its crew in Australia to provide the capacity to catch the sharks.

Scientists from Japan, Argentina and the United States will join Australian researchers from Western Australia, Queensland and Tasmania.

Researching conservation and behavior, the scientists hope to learn more about the creature to help increase safety for swimmers and surfers.

The OCEARCH expedition was a "great opportunity" to advance shark research, according to James Cook University's Dr. Adam Barnett.

"We have the chance to tag more tiger sharks with OCEARCH satellite technology over a period of a few weeks than our team has in the past 14 years in Queensland waters," Dr. Barnett told Fairfax Media on Wednesday.


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The coverage of living corals on Australia's Great Barrier Reef could decline to less than 10 percent if ocean warming continues, according to a new study that explores the short- and long-term consequences of environmental changes to the reef. Environmental change has caused the loss of more than half the world's reef building corals. Coral cover, a measure of the percentage of the seaflo ... read more


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