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Jérôme OLLIER

Via @Seasaver - Massive whale shark transported to Karachi fish harbor for sa... - 0 views

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    Massive whale shark transported to Karachi fish harbor for sale.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @Seasaver - Endangered Whale Shark Fins Found in Singapore Airlines Shipment to HK ... - 0 views

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    Endangered Whale Shark Fins Found in Singapore Airlines Shipment to HK.
Jérôme OLLIER

The mysterious beast of Ningaloo Reef: revealing the secrets of whale sharks - @CSIROnews - 0 views

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    Whale sharks are the largest fish in the sea but much of their behaviour is still unknown. In a world-first, we'll be attempting to hit the marine jackpot and determine how old whale sharks are using DNA samples. We're also placing trackers on them to discover where in the ocean they travel and how deep below the surface they go from one of their favourite hangouts - Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia.
Jérôme OLLIER

Research reveals secret to whale shark hotspots - @UniOfYork - 0 views

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    A study has uncovered the secret to why endangered whale sharks gather on mass at just a handful of locations around the world.
Jérôme OLLIER

Stable Isotope Analysis of Dermis and the Foraging Behavior of Whale Sharks at Ningaloo... - 0 views

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    Stable isotope analysis of dermis was used to examine foraging behavior of whale sharks at Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia. Values of δ13C and δ15N in dermis were compared to those obtained from likely species of local prey. The δ13C values of zooplankton and nektonic taxa at Ningaloo ranged from −18.9‰ to −16.5‰ reflecting the different carbon sources (from pelagic to more inshore and benthic) entering the food web. Isotopic values also varied depending on the diet-to-tissue discrimination factor applied in the analysis. When data was corrected using factors derived from slow turnover, structural cartilage in fins, whale sharks showed a greater reliance on pelagic food webs, whereas analyses using raw data suggested a greater dietary component from benthic and inshore habitats. Variability in δ15N values (6.9‰ to 10.8‰) implied different patterns of foraging among whale sharks, likely indicating movement among foraging localities that occur at Ningaloo Reef and along the Western Australian coast. There was evidence of enrichment in 15N occurring with increasing size in males and females, a pattern that could have been due to changes in growth rate and trophic level with age and/or an ontogenetic shift in feeding grounds. Given the variability potentially induced in stable isotope values by differences in rates of turnover of tissues and the use of diet-to-tissue discrimination factors, future studies would benefit from a multi-technique approach using different tissues to identify the diet of whale sharks.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @Seasaver - 781 whale sharks rescued, freed in Gujarat coast since 2004 - @daijiwor... - 0 views

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    781 whale sharks rescued, freed in Gujarat coast since 2004.
Jérôme OLLIER

Sharp increase in Ningaloo whale shark injuries might be due to boat encounters - @Eure... - 0 views

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    Sharp increase in Ningaloo whale shark injuries might be due to boat encounters.
Jérôme OLLIER

First Insights Into the Horizontal Movements of Whale Sharks (Rhincodon typus) in the N... - 0 views

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    Whale sharks off the western coast of India have suffered high levels of fishing pressure in the past, and today continue to be caught in small-scale fisheries as by-catch. Additionally, coastlines in this region host very large and growing human populations that are undergoing rapid development. This exacerbates ongoing anthropogenic threats to this species such as pollution, habitat loss, and ship traffic. For these reasons, there is an urgent need for data on movement patterns of whale sharks in this region of the Indian Ocean. Here, we address this issue by providing the first data on the horizontal movements of whale sharks tagged in the northern Arabian Sea off the western coast of the Indian state of Gujarat. From 2011 to 2017, eight individuals, ranging from 5.4 to 8 m were tagged and monitored using satellite telemetry. Tag retention varied from 1 to 137 days, with the sharks traveling distances of 34 - ∼2,230 km. Six of the eight individuals remained close to their tagging locations, although two sharks displayed wide ranging movements into the Arabian Sea, following frontal zones between water masses of different sea surface temperatures. We explore the relationship between the movement patterns of these whale sharks and the physical and biological processes of the region.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @Seasaver - Mozambique sharks, manta rays population decline spurs conservation eff... - 0 views

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    Mozambique sharks, manta rays population decline spurs conservation efforts.
Jérôme OLLIER

How much rubbish is there at Ningaloo Reef? - @CSIRO - 0 views

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    At 300 kilometres long, Ningaloo Reef is Australia's largest fringing coral reef. It's home to some amazing marine life like frisky whale sharks, nesting turtles and deep-sea fish.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @DrAlistairDove @SaltwaterlifeUK - Mobile app encourages Indian fishers to free ent... - 0 views

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    Mobile app encourages Indian fishers to free entangled whale sharks.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @SimonPierce - No Place Like Home? High Residency and Predictable Seasonal Movement... - 0 views

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    Highly mobile marine megafauna species, while widely distributed and frequently threatened, often aggregate in distinct localized habitats. Implementation of local management initiatives within these hotspots is more achievable than developing effective conservation strategies that encompass their entire distributions. Such measures have the potential for disproportionate population-level benefits but rely on a detailed understanding of spatiotemporal habitat use. To that end, we examined the residency and small-scale habitat use of 51 whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) over 5 years at an aggregation site in Tanzania using passive acoustic telemetry. Whale sharks were highly resident within and across years, with a combined maximum residency index of 0.39. Although fewer sharks were detected from March to September, residency was high throughout the year. Ancillary photographic-identification data showed that individual residency persisted before and after tag attachment. Kernel utilization distributions (KUD) and movement networks both revealed the same spatiotemporal pattern of habitat use, with a small core habitat (50% KUD area for all sharks combined = 12.99 km2) that predictably changed on a seasonal basis. Activity spaces did not differ with time of day, sex, or size of the sharks, indicating a population-level pattern driven by prey availability. The small and predictable core habitat area at this site means that site-based management options to reduce shark injuries and mortality from boat strike and fishing gear entanglement can be spatially targeted for maximum effectiveness and compliance by human users.
Jérôme OLLIER

Asymptotic Growth of Whale Sharks Suggests Sex-Specific Life-History Strategies - @Fron... - 0 views

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    Age and growth data are central to management or conservation strategies for any species. Circumstantial evidence suggests that male whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) grow to asymptotic sizes much smaller than those predicted by age and growth studies and consequently, there may be sex-specific size and growth patterns in the species. We tested this hypothesis by using stereo-video and photo-identification studies to estimate the growth rates of 54 whale sharks that were resighted over a period of up to a decade at Ningaloo Reef. We found that male growth patterns were consistent with an average asymptotic total length (TL) of approximately 8-9 m, a size similar to direct observations of size at maturity at aggregation sites world-wide and much smaller than the sizes predicted by earlier modeling studies. Females were predicted to grow to an average asymptotic length of around 14.5 m. Males had growth coefficients of K = 0.088 year-1, whereas limited resighting data suggested a growth coefficient of K = 0.035 year-1 for females. Other data including re-sightings of an individual male over two decades, records of sex-specific maximum sizes of individuals captured in fisheries and data from juveniles growing in aquaria were also consistent with the suggestion of sex-specific growth profiles for the species. We argue that selection for sex-specific growth patterns could explain many of the otherwise enigmatic patterns in the ecology of this species including the tendency of the species to form aggregations of juvenile males in coastal waters.
Jérôme OLLIER

Turtle nail clippings and shark mating: discoveries from Ningaloo Reef - @CSIRO - 0 views

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    What do turtle nail clippings, diving whale sharks, and 12 million mushroom corals have in common?
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @aims_gov_au - Predation of baitfishes associated with whale sharks at Ningaloo Ree... - 0 views

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    Baitfishes may aggregate around megafauna such as whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) to gain protection from larger predatory fishes. Here, we used videos from deployments of animal-borne cameras on whale sharks and provided by tourism operators at Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia to document large schools of trevally (Carangidae spp.) consuming entire schools of baitfishes (Carangidae spp.) swimming with whale sharks within 2-45 s. These videos showed that small baitfishes are still very vulnerable to predatory fishes when accompanying whale sharks, refuting the hypothesis that whale sharks provide baitfishes shelter from predators. It thus seems more likely that the association between whale sharks and baitfishes may confer other advantages such as reduced costs of locomotion and/or enhanced feeding opportunities for baitfishes rather than protection from predation.
Jérôme OLLIER

World's largest omnivore is a fish - @aims_gov_au - 0 views

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    Marine scientists have discovered that whale sharks eat plants, making the iconic fish the world's largest omnivore.
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