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Swede

(33,262 posts)
Sat Apr 28, 2012, 11:27 AM Apr 2012

Pacific reef sharks have declined by more than 90 percent, new study says

The team of eight scientists examined the results of a decade of underwater surveys across 46 Pacific islands and atolls, and found densities of reef sharks — gray, whitetip and blacktip reef sharks as well as Galapagos and tawny nurse sharks — “increased substantially as human population decreased” and the productivity and temperature of the ocean increased.

“Our results suggest humans now exert a stronger influence on the abundance of reef sharks than either habitat quality or oceanographic factors,” the authors wrote.

Near populated islands such as the main Hawaiian Islands and American Samoa, the study found, there were roughly 26 sharks per square mile. Remote reefs such as the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands or Johnson Atoll, by contrast, boasted 337 sharks per square mile.

“In short, people and sharks don’t mix,” said Marc Nadon, the study’s lead author and a scientist at the University of Hawaii’s Joint Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, in a statement.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/pacific-reef-sharks-have-declined-by-more-than-90-percent-new-study-says/2012/04/27/gIQAlc5FlT_story.html?tid=pm_national_pop

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Pacific reef sharks have declined by more than 90 percent, new study says (Original Post) Swede Apr 2012 OP
sharks can't find anything to eat since people kill everything eventually nt msongs Apr 2012 #1
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