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Jérôme OLLIER

Shark outrage after endangered dead whale shark photographed in Malaysian fish market - Perth Now - 0 views

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    Shark outrage after endangered dead whale shark photographed in Malaysian fish market.
Jérôme OLLIER

WA divers asked to upload manta ray snaps for science - @UQ_News - 0 views

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    A University of Queensland scientist is calling for volunteer divers to photograph the underside of manta rays in waters off the Western Australian coastline and upload them to Facebook as part of a research project.
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    A University of Queensland scientist is calling for volunteer divers to photograph the underside of manta rays in waters off the Western Australian coastline and upload them to Facebook as part of a research project.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @MBARI_News - A Gathering of Giants - @tonywu @biographic - 0 views

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    A photographer slips into the ocean to swim amoung hundreds of sperm whales - witnessing a rarely seen social spectacle.
Jérôme OLLIER

Via @SimonPierce - No Place Like Home? High Residency and Predictable Seasonal Movement of Whale Sharks Off Tanzania - @FrontMarineSci - 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

Regional Movements of Reef Manta Rays (Mobula alfredi) in Seychelles Waters - @FrontMarineSci - 0 views

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    The decline in numbers of reef manta rays (Mobula alfredi) throughout their range has highlighted the need for improved information on their spatial ecology in order to design effective conservation strategies for vulnerable populations. To understand their patterns of movement in Seychelles, we used three techniques-archival pop-up satellite tags, acoustic tags, and photo-identification-and focussed on the aggregation at D'Arros Island and St. Joseph Atoll within the Amirantes Group. M. alfredi were photographed within six of the seven Island Groups of Seychelles, with 64% of individuals being resighted at least once between July 2006 and December 2019 over timeframes of 1-3,462 days (9.5 years; median = 1,018 days). Only three individuals from D'Arros Island were resighted at a second aggregation site located more than 200 km away at St. François Atoll during photo-identification surveys. Satellite-tracked M. alfredi (n = 5 tracks; maximum 180 days) remained within the boundary of the Seychelles Exclusive Economic Zone, where they spent the majority of their time (87%) in the upper 50 m of the water column in close proximity to the Amirantes Bank. The inclusion of acoustic tagging data in the models of estimated satellite-track paths significantly reduced the errors associated with the geolocation positions derived from archived light level data. The insights gained into the patterns of horizontal and vertical movements of M. alfredi using this multi-technique approach highlight the significance of D'Arros Island and St. Joseph Atoll, and the wider Amirantes Group, to M. alfredi in Seychelles, and will benefit future conservation efforts for this species within Seychelles and the broader Western Indian Ocean.
Vicky Matthews

Super Services and Customer Care - 1 views

Building a home is truly a very daunting process. One of the processes we need to go through is the soil testing. It is not only a requirement in getting a building approval but it can also greatly...

started by Vicky Matthews on 03 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Jérôme OLLIER

A Maldives Beach Awash in Bioluminescent Phytoplankton Looks Like an Ocean of Stars - Colossal - 0 views

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    A Maldives Beach Awash in Bioluminescent Phytoplankton Looks Like an Ocean of Stars.
Jérôme OLLIER

Photos: Disco creatures of the deep - @YahooNews - 0 views

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    Photos: Disco creatures of the deep.
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