|
First Blue shark attack ever in British waters -
|
Sep. 4th, 2008 @ 09:12 am
|
|---|
|
Jabberjaw
|
Aug. 31st, 2008 @ 02:20 pm
|
|---|
|
This is my new pillow, his name is Jabberjaw. It is a 4 foot long pillow i got from Bass Pro Shops!!
 |
|
Shark sub -
|
Aug. 5th, 2008 @ 03:12 pm
|
|---|
|
I Sooooooo want one of these -

It was developed by a researcher to study sharks without disturbing them, but I doubt it fooled the sharks for a second. Sharks can see the electromagnetic fields around a living animal, and they would know this is a fake.
Still, it would be great fun at the beach. |
|
New Report on Sharks from Oceana
|
Jul. 30th, 2008 @ 06:15 pm
|
|---|
|
Predators as Prey: Why Healthy Oceans Need Sharks
Short overview of why sharks are important (with examples), the pressures they're under and what needs to be done to help - about ten pages of text with giant margins and pictures, so hopefully it will hold people's attention spans long enough to teach them something.:P
Share it with friends, family, and anyone who needs to understand why sharks need protecting!Current Mood:  hopeful
|
|
Thoughts on Shark Week?
|
Jul. 30th, 2008 @ 08:04 am
|
|---|
|
What's everyone think of the programming so far this year?Current Mood:  curious
|
| » (No Subject) |
Shark Avoids Suffocation by Turning Off Electricity Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News
July 29, 2008 -- Lack of oxygen can do in most creatures, but a new study has found epaulette sharks have evolved a clever solution for avoiding suffocation -- they shut down their body's electrical activity and even go temporarily blind until they can properly "breathe" oxygen again through their gills.
( read more )
source: http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/07/29/shark-oxygen-deprivation.html
Jul. 30th, 2008 @ 06:52 am
|
| » Fwd: TAHITIAN JOURNAL Kiss the Great White Shark Good-bye |
TAHITIAN JOURNAL Kiss the Great White Shark Good-bye
by Ila France Porcher
Tahiti is right in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, one of the most isolated islands in the world. The dolphins here are increasing in numbers, and all of them are perfect. None have new scars inflicted by shark's teeth anymore, because the oceanic sharks are almost gone. If they are so depleted here, they must be even more depleted elsewhere too.
When a commodity becomes scarce, it becomes very valuable, as is seen with ivory, tiger parts, shark fins and so forth.
As the white shark goes down to extinction, its jaws, teeth, and other parts, will become so rare that collectors will try to get one. Princes in white marble palaces in obscure parts of the world, with a taste to display the biggest tiger skin, the most interesting gorilla hand, the biggest elephant tusks, the most curled rams horns, and so forth, will hear of a new treasure, the jaws of the famous sea monster, soon to disappear. And he'll send out his minions to get one.
Illegal wildlife smuggling is estimated to bring in five billion US dollars annually, roughly a quarter of the global wildlife trade.
I used to be idealistic about humankind changing, but power comes down through money, and the big corporations who are profiting by the destruction of the environment have not changed.
At least, not enough.
There is no excuse: the recently publicized oceanic ecological crisis has been reported for years, by the United Nations, Worldwatch Institute, which monitors world-wide conditions, and others.
All ecological systems are in some sort of crisis, other factors affecting the planetary biosphere, including many that were unforeseen, have appeared.
Examples are: the emergence of new diseases, the failure of antibiotics, and the potential of the ocean currents to change quickly and bring on a sudden climatic crisis. In addition, resources are at their limit--wood, water, metals, forests, soil--and the manufacture of materials has polluted the land, air, groundwater, ocean and living systems. Then there is the hole in the ozone layer, and the catastrophic rate of extinction.
Anyone reading this message has 500 chemicals in their bodies that didn't exist a hundred years ago. (Its easy to look over the literature to check out the details).
We thought that science, that pure method of finding out the truth, would solve all problems. But now it basically serves the consumer dollar, and it has not become the dominant mode of thinking of those in power, in spite of the promise it held once, in spite of the many pleasures and toys with which it has pampered us, particularly, for the last hundred years.
Predicting the future is a tricky matter, but can be done to a degree, always remembering that imponderables can change the order of events, delay, or speed things up. All one has to do is closely follow the trends of the past, and extrapolate them through the present and into the future. As extinctions have been accelerating in the past, for example, we can expect them to continue into the future. As people were worried about over-packaging thirty years ago, now we have a problem with materials running short, yet things are more hyperpackaged than ever.
Science has so far failed to find any life anywhere else, or even another remotely habitable place. Nothing but zillions of light-years of unimaginable cold and dark surround us, yet look what we're doing with the Eden we had.
For sharks, children of eternity, another eternity must pass again before they could ever reappear. Alas.
Try to think of something more purely evil than a species, who methodically kills off the other species sharing its planet. (Jesus said, "By their works, you shall know them.")
But we think we're so great, the greatest, the only one (!) made in the image of God.
Ila
Jul. 29th, 2008 @ 07:52 pm
|
| » Shark bites Ryan Seacrest, spits him out - |
|
He said he was "about eight feet out" when he felt something swim by him "I thought it was a stick," he said. "I wasn't sure what had happened." Then, he said, "I saw it swim! He took a bite, and he left." http://www.usmagazine.com/Ryan-Seacrest-I-Was-Bit-by-a-Shark
Jul. 29th, 2008 @ 08:51 am
|
| » Great White Shark Filmed Breaching at Night -- A First |
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/07/080725-sharkville.html (great video!)
Great White Shark Filmed Breaching at Night -- A First
July 25, 2008 Although seals are a common meal for great white sharks, under the cover of darkness, one might expect the marine mammals to catch a break. Dramatic new footage, however, proves great whites sometimes fancy a midnight snack. The video shows a 13-foot (4-meter) shark launching itself from the water to snare a seal at the surface—the first time such "breach feeding" has been documented at night. The footage appears in Sharkville, which will air July 25 at 10 p.m. eastern time on the National Geographic Channel. (National Geographic News and the National Geographic Channel are both a part of the National Geographic Society.) Welcome to "Sharkville" South African marine biologist Ryan Johnson and his team got the shot in a section of South Africa's Mosselbaai (Mossel Bay) dubbed Sharkville, where a large population of great whites lives nearly year-round not far from a popular beach. The sharks don't bother the bay's human bathers. But a colony of some 5,000 seals on a small island just a half mile (800 meters) from shore isn't so lucky. Johnson, founder of the South African Marine Predator Lab, first discovered that Mosselbaai's great whites breach the water's surface to feed at night through a lot of hard work and a bit of luck. In 2005 he'd been following about 165 feet (50 meters) behind a shark fitted with an acoustic tracking tag for 103 straight hours. "It was nighttime, so we didn't expect a lot of action," he remembered. "And 30 meters [100 feet] from us, it erupts from the water with a seal in its mouth and sits there chewing on it," he said. "There was enough moonlight to see this going on." Johnson said the event forced his team to reconsider how the sharks feed. "The seals aren't easy to catch, and to be able to do it at night is a big step up for them," he said. The Great (Photographic) Shark Hunt
Catching a breach-feeding event on film at night was an even more difficult task. Johnson's team fitted a hungry shark—one they'd named Big Mama—with an acoustic "pinger" tag so they could follow her movements from a boat. They then baited Big Mama with a robotic seal decoy that was tough enough to survive her teeth but forgiving enough not to injure her jaws. The system created a realistic chance of a breach-feeding event within sight of the boat. But a big problem remained—how to film the shark's actions in the dark. Because great whites are warm blooded, Big Mama's body was some 9 degrees Fahrenheit (5 degrees Celsius) warmer than the water, which was 63 degrees Fahrenheit (17 degrees Celsius). When Johnson's team was filming, the great white shark showed up clearly on a thermal camera, and image intensifying lenses were used to capture reflected light and create a familiar "night vision" view. Midnight Cravings? When great white sharks hunt from below in daytime hours, they spot their prey by silhouette against the lit background above them. Mosselbaai's seals use the cover of darkness to swim to their hunting waters and back—perhaps to avoid being easy targets for sharks. Their silhouettes, however, might still be visible from below against the moon or the ever-brightening lights from the growing town of Mosselbaai. "The lights from the city are cast down over the island, and maybe that gives the sharks enough visibility to be able to perform these procedures at night," Johnson speculated. Shark scientists Pete Klimley and Scott Davis remotely tracked great white shark movements around Año Nuevo Island, off central California, and were not involved with Johnson's research. "You could speculate forever" on how exactly the sharks might manage their nighttime hunting, said Klimley, a marine animal behavior specialist at the University of California, Davis. "It probably has to do with some moonlight illuminating the prey, or [perhaps] some bioluminescence. Or it may also be that the seal is making a sound and sharks are very sensitive to sound," he said. Klimley and Davis said their research suggested nighttime feeding activity, but they did not directly observe the phenomenon. "I always suspected that the sharks were indeed continuing to forage," Davis said. "Just because we can't see them during the night doesn't mean they aren't feeding." According to Johnson, knowing how the sharks are feeding could help people "make more informed decisions about where and when they hop into the water."
Jul. 26th, 2008 @ 01:31 pm
|
| » SHARK WEEK: 30 Icons! |
01] Please comment! 02] Credit ponyboy or iconzicons if taking! 03] No hotlinking or altering, please! 04] Do you know what week it is???

~ Follow the fake LJ-cut for more! ~ ( SHARK WEEK: 30 Icons! )
♥ x-posted!
Jul. 26th, 2008 @ 01:51 am
|
| » Sonja Fordham blogging for Shark Week |
Sonja Fordham, of the Ocean Conservancy and the Shark Alliance, is blogging for two weeks for Discovery Channel's Shark Week, and answering questions from readers!
Read it here: http://blogs.discovery.com/shark_conservation/
Jul. 22nd, 2008 @ 01:31 pm
|
| » Great White at Martha's Vineyard / Humans are Idiots (Cross-posted from my personal LJ) |
This Charles Blair guy is an idiot
I'm hoping that part of the reason this sounds so moronic is because it's from the Boston Herald. Let's just relate the entire thing to Jaws so that people are convinced that there's a maniacal killing machine out there and start hunting it down.
What most people probably don't even realize is how much Peter Benchley himself regrets writing the book version of Jaws because of all the irrational fear it sparked as people subsequently hunted and killed thousands of innocent sharks. I mean, sure, Jaws was a badass movie, but I can't help but lament the cruel fate that it brought to these majestic ocean-dwelling beasts.
It's part of our twisted human nature to destroy that which we fear or which makes us feel in any way inferior. One of the things I love so much about sharks is how humbling they are. No matter how hard we try, the fact remains that they are in their element and have the "home court advantage" and thus remain the most threatening and powerful creature in their element. They are the most terrifying predator that we have left, because we haven't been able to suppress them or control them (they can't even survive in captivity) and no matter how hard we try to diminish the power of that which is greater than us, the fact remains that we are terrified of these prehistoric creatures.
And with good reason. You certainly wouldn't find me swimming out there. But not for the reasons that Jaws portrayed. Although apparently the idiots in charge at Martha's Vineyard have never caught an episode of Discovery Channel's Shark Week to dispel the stupid myths that they learned from a summer blockbuster over 30 years ago.
Jul. 11th, 2008 @ 09:34 am
|
| » Playful shark joins the fun at New Smyrna Beach, Fla - |
Some great shots of a Spinner Shark playing in the surf with people very nearby!

They said twelve people sor have been bitten this year, though it seems none serious enough to keep people out of the water -
Lots more pics here: http://www.wftv.com/slideshow/news/16845628/detail.html
Full article here: http://www.wftv.com/news/16846313/detail.html?rss=orlc&psp=irresistible
Jul. 11th, 2008 @ 09:05 am
|
| » House moves to keep shark fins out of fancy soups |
In a voice vote, the House tightened a 2000 law that bans the practice of shark finning, whereby mainly Pacific Ocean fishermen cut off a shark's fin and throw the dying fish back into the sea. Shark fin soup is a delicacy in some Asian countries.
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080708/congress_oceans.html?.v=1
Jul. 8th, 2008 @ 09:50 pm
|
| » Mmmm, Snack. |
Wait til the end.
Jun. 28th, 2008 @ 11:21 pm
|
| » Forget Jaws, now it's...Brains! |
Great white sharks are typecast, say experts. The creatures are socially sophisticated and, yes, smart
* By Paul Raffaele * Smithsonian magazine, June 2008
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/great-white-sharks.html?gclid=CMzzgtSFhpQCFRIuagode186Vg
Jun. 21st, 2008 @ 03:57 pm
|
| » Quiznos and ESPN deserve some letters... |
Quiznos and ESPN are sponsoring a shark fishing tournament called MADFIN. They need some protest letters to tell them strongly that what they are doing is wrong and goes against Disney's principles (ESPN's parent company.)
http://fleander.blogspot.com/
Here is the letter I sent to ESPN: (500 char max)
"I have become aware that ESPN is carrying the Mad Fin shark fishing tournament; I am totally opposed to shark fishing, as it targets species of shark that are threatened or endangered. Even if the sharks are released—as is claimed in some tournaments—their mouths and internal organs are so damaged that they cannot feed and they drown.
"This tournament is in direct violation of three guiding principles of your parent company, the Disney corporation: conservation, education, and action. As a matter of fact, your participation in and production of this tournament flies in the face of your guiding principles.
"I ask that you drop this competition from your lineup and make a public apology for backing such an unsporting event; if the sharks become extinct, as is becoming more and more of a possibility, no one wins and life on earth itself will be threatened."
Jun. 21st, 2008 @ 01:27 pm
|
|
|
|