January
7, 2019 by michelle Wheeler, Particle
Is it to
regulate their body temperature? Conserve energy? Find food?
Tiger sharks at Ningaloo
Reef are thought to search the seafloor for prey as
they dive down and scan
for silhouettes as they swim up to the surface.
But could
there be other reasons why the sharks continuously move up and down through
the water column?
That's
what UWA student Sammy Andrzejaczek is hoping to find out for her Ph.D. research.
Sammy
captured 24 tiger sharks at
Ningaloo Reef and attached tracking devices to them for up to 48 hours.
Best
described as Fitbits
for sharks, the devices recorded activity rates and other
data 20 times a second.
"I
can even look at each individual tail beat," Sammy says.
"It
helps us understand why they move the way they do, how environmental change might
impact their movements and how removal of prey species from the water column
may affect their movement."
Caught On
Camera
The tags
also contained video cameras, so
Sammy could see the habitats the sharks moved through and the animals they
encountered.
She
watched how the sharks reacted to prey and how the prey reacted to the sharks.
Spoiler
alert: Tiger sharks can be pretty lazy—Sammy says something as simple as a
turtle noticing a shark and turning away could cause the shark not to bother
hunting the turtle down.
"It's
all the interactions that are happening on a daily basis that we don't actually
usually see," Sammy says.
"Because
if you put a human in the water, it's not a natural system any more."
"We
get the daily life of a tiger shark without having to distract it from its
normal routine."
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