Research
shows warmer waters and increased CO2 levels can make it more difficult for
sharks to catch prey
Tom Bawden Environment Editor
Thursday
12 November 2015
Rising
ocean temperatures caused by global warming could make sharks significantly
smaller and less aggressive, according to new research carried out by
Australian marine biologists.
Researchers
from the University of Adelaide have discovered that warmer waters and the
increasing concentration of carbon dioxide that result from climate change can
stunt the growth of Port Jackson sharks by making it harder for them to catch
prey and also more difficult to break it down into energy. Rising levels of C02
– known as ocean acidification – reduced the sharks’ ability to smell its prey,
a key weapon in its ability to hunt.
This
increased the time they took to find food and in some cases the researchers
found the sharks didn’t even bother to try, leading them to become
“considerably smaller”, according to the study published in the journal
Scientific Reports.
At
the same time, the warmer water and longer hunting times used up more of the
sharks’ energy, leaving them less with which to metabolise the food they did catch.
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