Medical and Hospital News  
GPS NEWS
Shark Tracking Reveals Impressive Feats Of Navigation

This is a blacktip reef shark. Credit: Copyright Yannis Papastamatiou
by Staff Writers
London UK (SPX) Mar 04, 2011
Some shark species are able to navigate to specific locations up to 50km away, a new study published in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Animal Ecology has found. Re-analysing tracking data from tagged sharks, ecologists found that while some species such as blacktip reef sharks swim in a pattern known as a "random walk", others such as tiger sharks can at times hunt for prey or mates by using "directed walks", accurately navigating long distances across open ocean, often at night.

To maximise lifetime fitness, animals should optimise search patterns for finding food, mates and safety. In new and unfamiliar locations, animals use different types of random walk. However, many animals occupy large home ranges where they will develop mental maps of the locations of resources and use directed walks (movements to known goals) to move between these locations. Few studies have quantified directed walks in animals.

A team of US ecologists re-analysed tracking data from three species - tiger sharks, thresher sharks and blacktip reef sharks. Working out whether or not sharks were using random or directed walks was difficult, as the researchers had no way of knowing where the animal wanted to go. But the researchers were able to tell the difference between a random walk and directed walk by looking at the shape of the sharks' movements at different spatial scales.

They compared the overall distance the sharks had moved to those estimated by random walk models, mathematical equations that predicts how far an animal will move if it is moving randomly at these different scales.

They found that although blacktips swam randomly within their small home ranges, both tiger and thresher sharks used directed walks at times. They also found that adult thresher sharks swam with more directed walks than juveniles, and that tiger sharks used highly directed walks to swim to specific locations as far as 50km away.

According to lead author Yannis Papastamatiou of the Florida Museum of Natural History: "Our research shows that, at times, tiger sharks and thresher sharks don't swim randomly but swim to specific locations. Simply put, they know where they are going."

"We were surprised at the difference between juvenile and adult thresher sharks. Adult thresher sharks swam using more directed walks and could do this over greater distances than juveniles. We are not sure why this is, but we believe it shows that adults have learned to navigate more effectively than juveniles, or have developed better mental maps of the area they live in," Papastamatiou says.

The data show that tiger sharks not only know where they are going but can find their way to a feature at least 6-8 km ahead of them, although how they do this remains a mystery.

Papastamatiou says: "Many people could walk to a known destination 6-8km away, but imagine doing it in deep water and at night. As anyone who dives knows, finding your way around underwater without a compass is very difficult, but this is what we found tiger sharks could do."

Sharks have impressive sensory abilities. They have good hearing, vision and smell, can detect certain chemicals at very low concentrations and low frequency sounds at least several hundred hundred metres away. An increasing amount of evidence also suggests they may navigate by using the Earth's magnetic field.

As well as having developed a method for determining whether or not sharks are using directed walks, the results will ultimately help improve predictions of how changes in habitat or fishing will affect shark populations.

Yannis Papastamatiou (2011), 'Scales of orientation, directed walks, and movement path structure in sharks', doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2011.01815.x, is published in the Journal of Animal Ecology on 2 March 2011.







Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
British Ecological Society
GPS Applications, Technology and Suppliers



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


GPS NEWS
Beijing to trial mobile tracking system: report
Beijing (AFP) March 3, 2011
A system designed to track the location of millions of mobile phone users is to be tested in Beijing, sparking concerns over privacy, state media reported Thursday. The information platform will enable authorities to check on the location of China Mobile's more than 17 million users in the capital, the Global Times newspaper said, citing the Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commissio ... read more







GPS NEWS
Haiti carnival turns dark as it returns after quake

Libya's neighbours await new refugee influx

Bleak future for Christchurch as population flees

No bodies in New Zealand quake cathedral

GPS NEWS
Shark Tracking Reveals Impressive Feats Of Navigation

Beijing to trial mobile tracking system: report

ZST Digital Networks Signs Agreement To Develop City-Wide GPS Platform

Retail Mobile Systems Easily Tricked

GPS NEWS
California Islands Give Up Evidence Of Early Seafaring

Investigating The Function Of Junk DNA In Human Genes

Study: Brain is a 'self-building toolkit'

Remains of Ice Age child found in Alaska

GPS NEWS
Research Shows How Bacteria Communicate With Each Other

New Group Of Algae Discovered

UF Pine Island Pollen Study Leads To Revision Of State's Ancient Geography

What Is Good For You Is Bad For Infectious Bacteria

GPS NEWS
Using Artificial, Cell-Like Honey Pots' To Entrap Deadly Viruses

Floating Spores Kill Malaria Mosquito Larvae

Three more swine flu deaths in Hong Kong: officials

Seaweed defense offers clues against malaria

GPS NEWS
China richest man says work key to easing poverty

Graft: a perennial problem for China's leaders

Rights groups slam China Jasmine 'repression'

China to raise minimum income tax threshold

GPS NEWS
South Korea charges alleged Somali pirates

Madagascar navy rescues pirate-seized vessel

US to continue anti-piracy efforts: military chief

Somali pirates heading to Asia: US

GPS NEWS
Reining in prices is China's 'top priority': Wen

China's huge labour pool shows signs of drying up

China wants green growth in next five years

Data fuels China, India inflation worries


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement