pedestrian pace while cruising the surface, but underwater the whale shark soars like an eagle." hspace=2 src="/images/404/404.jpg" align=left vspace=2 border=2>BEIJING, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- The world's largest shark may move at a
pedestrian pace while cruising the surface, but underwater the whale shark soars like an eagle.
"It is like the way a bird dives, then soars, using its momentum and
gravity to conserve as much energy as possible. It flies like a bird - but in this case, a bird as large as a bus!" said researcher Rory Wilson of Swansea University in Wales.
Such
behavior has never been observed in a fish before, he added.
Wilson worked with Brad Norman of Australia's Murdoch University to track whale sharks in the Indian Ocean, off Ningaloo, on Australia's western coast. The team equipped several whale sharks with an electronic device that records in minute detail - eight times a second - the giant creature's every action, including speed, depth, pitch, roll and heading, along with every beat of the fish's tail.
"For the first time, we have an
insight into what it is that these magnificent creatures get up to when they are out of sight of humans - and it isn't what we expected," said Norman, who received a Rolex Award in 2006 for his project employing "citizen scientists" worldwide to help study and protect whale sharks through an online global photo ID library.
The devices were attached in late May to eight sharks up to 26 feet (8 meters) long off Ningaloo. The devices are designed to release from the sharks and can be recovered by tracking them. The recovered data documented every move of the giant fish over several hours.
Eventually, the devices could reveal how and where whale sharks feed and breed, enabling those localities to protect the giant fish from human impacts such as
hunting or pollution.
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