نتایج جستجو برای: sharks

تعداد نتایج: 2511  

Journal: :Vision Research 2001
Robert E Hueter Christopher J Murphy Monica Howland Jacob G Sivak Joanne R Paul-Murphy Howard C Howland

Optical measurements of the refractive state of the eyes of various shark species typically have depicted sharks as hyperopic (far-sighted) with little evidence of accommodation (i.e. the ability to change focus for visualizing objects at different distances from the eye). In this study, we used infrared video retinoscopy to measure the refractive state in juvenile lemon sharks (Negaprion brevi...

2013
Alison V. Towner Les G. Underhill Oliver J. D. Jewell Malcolm J. Smale

The seasonal occurrence of white sharks visiting Gansbaai, South Africa was investigated from 2007 to 2011 using sightings from white shark cage diving boats. Generalized linear models were used to investigate the number of great white sharks sighted per trip in relation to sex, month, sea surface temperature and Multivariate El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Indices (MEI). Water conditions a...

2012
Danillo Pinhal Mahmood S. Shivji Pedro G. Nachtigall Demian D. Chapman Cesar Martins

Obtaining accurate species-specific landings data is an essential step toward achieving sustainable shark fisheries. Globally distributed sharpnose sharks (genus Rhizoprionodon) exhibit life-history characteristics (rapid growth, early maturity, annual reproduction) that suggests that they could be fished in a sustainable manner assuming an investment in monitoring, assessment and careful manag...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2004
Yannis P Papastamatiou Christopher G Lowe

Changes in gastric pH of leopard sharks Triakis semifasciata were quantified as an indicator of feeding frequency and ration size. Continuous in situ measurements of gastric pH were made in captive adult leopard sharks using an autonomous pH/temperature probe for periods ranging from 5-16 days. Instrumented sharks were fed meals of squid at different ration sizes. Gastric fluid samples were als...

2007
R. Karl Laroche Alison A. Kock Lawrence M. Dill W. Herman Oosthuizen

Ecotourism operations which provide food to large predators have the potential to negatively affect their target species, by conditioning them to associate humans with food, or by generally altering their behavioural patterns. This latter effect could have potentially detrimental consequences for the ecosystem inhabited by the predator, because any behavioural changes could affect the species w...

2015
Christoph A. Rohner Anthony J. Richardson Clare E.M. Prebble Andrea D. Marshall Michael B. Bennett Scarla J. Weeks Geremy Cliff Sabine P. Wintner Simon J. Pierce

Whale sharks Rhincodon typus are globally threatened, but a lack of biological and demographic information hampers an accurate assessment of their vulnerability to further decline or capacity to recover. We used laser photogrammetry at two aggregation sites to obtain more accurate size estimates of free-swimming whale sharks compared to visual estimates, allowing improved estimates of biologica...

2012
Jonathan M. Werry Shing Y. Lee Charles J. Lemckert Nicholas M. Otway

BACKGROUND Despite accelerated global population declines due to targeted and illegal fishing pressure for many top-level shark species, the impacts of coastal habitat modification have been largely overlooked. We present the first direct comparison of the use of natural versus artificial habitats for the bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas, an IUCN 'Near-threatened' species--one of the few truly e...

2017
Timothy D. White Aaron B. Carlisle David A. Kroodsma Barbara A. Block Renato Casagrandi Giulio A. De Leo Marino Gatto Fiorenza Micheli Douglas J. McCauley

Article history: Received 27 August 2016 Received in revised form 22 November 2016 Accepted 13 January 2017 Available online xxxx Large marine protected areas (MPAs) have recently been established throughout the world at an unprecedented pace, yet the value of these reserves formobile species conservation remains unclear. Reef shark populations continue to decline even within some of the larges...

Journal: :Ecology 2009
Yannis P Papastamatiou Christopher G Lowe Jennifer E Caselle Alan M Friedlander

The effects of habitat on the ecology, movements, and foraging strategies of marine apex predators are largely unknown. We used acoustic telemetry to quantify the movement patterns of blacktip reef sharks (Carcharhinus melanopterus) at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, in the Pacific Ocean. Sharks had relatively small home ranges over a timescale of days to weeks (0.55 +/- 0.24 km2) and s...

2015
Luciana C. Ferreira Michele Thums Jessica J. Meeuwig Gabriel M. S. Vianna John Stevens Rory McAuley Mark G. Meekan

Tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) are apex predators occurring in most tropical and warm temperate marine ecosystems, but we know relatively little of their patterns of residency and movement over large spatial and temporal scales. We deployed satellite tags on eleven tiger sharks off the north-western coast of Western Australia and used the Brownian Bridge kernel method to calculate home ranges...

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