Date: 18/05/2022 15:54:15
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1884695
Subject: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

New research shows these gentle giants are often on a collision course with large ocean vessels


Whale sharks are the largest fish on Earth.

Whale sharks, the largest fish on Earth, have been mysteriously vanishing from the ocean without a trace over the last 75 years—and marine scientists couldn’t figure out why. When they die, the bodies of these massive, endangered sharks, which are typically 18 to 32 feet long and weigh about 15 tons, sink to the seafloor, so researchers can’t easily do a post-mortem.

Now, new research suggests that cargo ships and other large vessels are likely responsible for killing these gentle giants, contributing to a worldwide population decline of around 50 percent in the last 75 years. A new study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that colliding with large ships “may be a greater cause of death for the world’s largest fish … than anyone previously realized,” Freya Womersley and David Sims, marine ecologists at the University of Southampton and study co-authors, write for the Conversation.

To probe the sharks’ unexplained disappearances, the researchers compared the satellite-tracked movements of 348 whale sharks with maps of global shipping routes in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans from 2005 to 2019. They found a lot of similarities: 92 percent of sharks’ horizontal space and nearly 50 percent of their vertical space overlapped with large vessel traffic, putting them on a potential collision course with ships that are larger than 300 gross tons.

Sharks were most at risk while spending time near the water’s surface (where they regularly feast on zooplankton), the researchers found. The most dangerous places for whale sharks to swim, according to the data, are the Gulf of Mexico, the Arabian Gulf and the Red Sea, where some of the world’s busiest ports are located.

The overlapping territories are problematic because sharks swim horizontally at speeds that are up to 10 times slower than vessels, the researchers note in the paper. And, when the sharks do notice an oncoming ship, their reaction time is slow and minimal until the vessel gets very close. Sharks that get hit by fast-moving ships stand little chance of surviving.

Though scientists don’t know how many whale sharks have died as a result of run-ins with cargo ships, they did see some harrowing anecdotes in the data: Trackers showed some whale sharks swimming along normally, then slowly sinking to the seafloor. Writing for the Conversation, Womersley and Sims described this as “the smoking gun for a lethal ship strike.”

After accounting for technical failures, they also found that 24 percent of the satellite tracker tags attached to the sharks stopped working in busy shipping areas, which the researchers believe indicates that the whales died after being struck by vessels.

And cargo ships aren’t just killing whale sharks, they’re also harming as many as 75 other marine species, from dolphins to manatees to penguins. So while it’s handy to be able to order a product that’s made on the other side of the world and have it arrive in a matter of days, the growing ocean shipping industry—which expanded from 1,771 vessels in 1995 to more than 94,000 in 2020, according to the researchers—is leading to huge, unintended consequences for marine wildlife.

“Shipping is a serious problem for giants of the sea,” Robert Harcourt, a marine ecologist at Australia’s Macquarie University who was not affiliated with the study, told Vox’s Benji Jones. “We have an economy that’s derived from moving things around the world in a way that’s not taking into account the cost to the environment.”

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/cargo-ships-are-killing-whale-sharks-180980101/

Reply Quote

Date: 18/05/2022 16:03:06
From: Bubblecar
ID: 1884697
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

More stuff to regret.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/05/2022 16:14:10
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1884703
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

Bubblecar said:


More stuff to regret.

Yes our way of life is so destructive to other living creatures.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/05/2022 16:40:38
From: roughbarked
ID: 1884718
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

PermeateFree said:


Bubblecar said:

More stuff to regret.

Yes our way of life is so destructive to other living creatures.

Thing is, we seem to want it this way.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/05/2022 16:52:11
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1884727
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

roughbarked said:


PermeateFree said:

Bubblecar said:

More stuff to regret.

Yes our way of life is so destructive to other living creatures.

Thing is, we seem to want it this way.

We have rarely given much consideration for other life forms if we wanted something. And so now it is the way we live and I doubt if it will change much, as we have sold our soul to the rewards of money and the economy.

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Date: 18/05/2022 17:04:52
From: roughbarked
ID: 1884730
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

PermeateFree said:


roughbarked said:

PermeateFree said:

Yes our way of life is so destructive to other living creatures.

Thing is, we seem to want it this way.

We have rarely given much consideration for other life forms if we wanted something. And so now it is the way we live and I doubt if it will change much, as we have sold our soul to the rewards of money and the economy.

Yes, it doesn’t look good for the rest of our fellow travellers on spaceship earth. Whic of course will only bring about our own undoing.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/05/2022 19:05:25
From: Ogmog
ID: 1884789
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

roughbarked said:


PermeateFree said:

roughbarked said:

Thing is, we seem to want it this way.

We have rarely given much consideration for other life forms if we wanted something. And so now it is the way we live and I doubt if it will change much, as we have sold our soul to the rewards of money and the economy.

Yes, it doesn’t look good for the rest of our fellow travellers on spaceship earth. Whic of course will only bring about our own undoing.

ever see whata speedboat propeller does to the gentle manatee?

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 04:31:04
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1884915
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

Need a shark repellent.

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 06:24:11
From: roughbarked
ID: 1884923
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

mollwollfumble said:


Need a shark repellent.

We could do with less imporrt and export of plastic rubbish. It would probably take quite a few container ships off the seas.

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 13:04:07
From: Ogmog
ID: 1885012
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

mollwollfumble said:


Need a shark repellent.

Re-Thinking Solutions

When I first heard about the damage done to the gentle ““Sea Cows” decades ago
I said; “Why don’t they simply design a Cage/Guard to cover the sharp propellers?”

I was laughed down and told; “NO! it would slow down the recreational speed boats” …30 years on, they’ve been widely, if not universally, accepted

As I see it, it’s a matter of CARING for our Fellow Inhabitants of The Watery Planet Over Profit

Can they reduce the harm done by the unintended IMPACT by lining the hulls with a soft material
that would push the shallow swimming species aside rather than inflicting deadly damage?

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 13:08:12
From: Bogsnorkler
ID: 1885014
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

Ogmog said:


mollwollfumble said:

Need a shark repellent.

Re-Thinking Solutions

When I first heard about the damage done to the gentle ““Sea Cows” decades ago
I said; “Why don’t they simply design a Cage/Guard to cover the sharp propellers?”

I was laughed down and told; “NO! it would slow down the recreational speed boats” …30 years on, they’ve been widely, if not universally, accepted

As I see it, it’s a matter of CARING for our Fellow Inhabitants of The Watery Planet Over Profit

Can they reduce the harm done by the unintended IMPACT by lining the hulls with a soft material
that would push the shallow swimming species aside rather than inflicting deadly damage?

first prop guard was in 1938.

https://www.propellersafety.com/history-of-prop-guards/

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 13:10:10
From: Ogmog
ID: 1885016
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

where there’s a will there’s a way

Propeller Guard Design Trade Offs

Reply Quote

Date: 19/05/2022 13:14:18
From: Ogmog
ID: 1885017
Subject: re: Cargo Ships Are Killing Whale Sharks

Bogsnorkler said:


Ogmog said:

mollwollfumble said:

Need a shark repellent.

Re-Thinking Solutions

When I first heard about the damage done to the gentle ““Sea Cows” decades ago
I said; “Why don’t they simply design a Cage/Guard to cover the sharp propellers?”

I was laughed down and told; “NO! it would slow down the recreational speed boats” …30 years on, they’ve been widely, if not universally, accepted

As I see it, it’s a matter of CARING for our Fellow Inhabitants of The Watery Planet Over Profit

Can they reduce the harm done by the unintended IMPACT by lining the hulls with a soft material
that would push the shallow swimming species aside rather than inflicting deadly damage?

first prop guard was in 1938.

https://www.propellersafety.com/history-of-prop-guards/

how sad

then it was just a case of not GaS? /-:

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