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Friday, December 27, 2013

Sharks on Twitter: Australian Scientists Use Transmitters On Sharks To Warn Bathers


Followers get tweets containing details of shark’s size,
breed and approximate location






Scientists in Western Australia are using Twitter to warn surfers and swimmers when sharks are nearing shore.


At least 320 sharks, including Great Whites, have been equipped with transmitters that update a Twitter feed  with information about their movements up and down the coast.
When a tagged shark comes within about one kilometre of a beach it triggers an alert, which is converted into a message on the Surf Life Saving WA Twitter feed (@SLSWA).

The tweet contains details of the shark’s size, breed and approximate location.
Chris Peck, from SLSWA, told Sky News that the system is far quicker than traditional warnings on local radio and in newspapers.
He said: “You might not have got some of that information until the following day in which case the hazard has long gone and the information might not be relevant.

”Now it's instant information and really people don't have an excuse to say we're not getting the information, it's about whether you are searching for it and finding it."

According to the Australia Shark Attack File, there have been five shark attacks in Western Australia in the past year, including one fatality. Chris Boyd, 35, was killed by a Great White while surfing in November. 
However, environmental groups have not welcomed the scheme. Ross Weir, from the group Western Australians for Shark Conservation (WASC), said: ”This is a simple knee-jerk reaction, based on zero science.
“It's not going to have any positive benefit for beach goers and their safety and it’s certainly going to have a decimating effect on any great white sharks or other endangered shark species.”

The government in Western Australia has recently launched a controversial scheme which will see professional fishermen hunt and kill any large sharks that go near popular beaches, with one kilometre “kill zones” set up around the busiest stretches of shoreline.

Conservationists have said they will consider direct action to disrupt any culling of sharks.


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