Showing posts with label sharks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharks. Show all posts

2011-12-15

The Physics Behind Great White Shark Attacks

How Great White Sharks Hide in Plain Water | Motherboard

A group led by UM assistant professor Dr. Neil Hammerschlag studied the techniques employed by the great whites in their hunting of Cape fur seals in False Bay, South Africa. The study helps confirm a notion, long held by surfers whose silhouettes look somewhat like a seal’s, that great whites always stalk their prey from below. While that in itself isn’t surprising, Hammerschlag’s research, published in Marine Biology Research, showed that the sharks camouflage themselves by taking advantage of water’s light-scattering properties. In low light conditions, when sunlight is hitting the water at a sharp angle, light does not penetrate deep into the water, and what light does is heavily distorted, essentially hiding the shark in otherwise clear water.

New Study Illustrates the Physics Behind Great White Shark Attacks on Seals | The Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami

Scientists use basic principles of underwater optics, physics to understand predator-prey interactions


Sharks typically search, stalk and strike their prey from below. The vast majority of predatory strikes by sharks and Cape fur seals occur against small groups of young-of-the-year seals. Predatory activity by sharks is most intense within two hours of sunrise and quickly decreases as light penetration in the water column increases.

“Stealth and ambush are key elements in the white shark's predatory strategy,” said Hammerschlag.

Cape fur seals also have unique techniques to detect, avoid, outmaneuver and in some cases injure the white shark in order to avoid predation by sharks.

According to the authors, if a seal is not disabled during the shark’s initial shark, the small seal can use its highly maneuverable body to leap away from the shark’s jaws to evade a second strike.

Taylor & Francis Online :: Marine predator–prey contests: Ambush and speed versus vigilance and agility - Marine Biology Research - Volume 8, Issue 1

Differences in relative strengths and weaknesses between predators and prey under tactical contexts result in complex and dynamic contests between them. These contests are often brief and difficult to observe in marine systems. Here, we employ basic principles of underwater optics and physics to provide a conceptual understanding of mechanisms underlying predator–prey interactions between white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) and Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus) that have been previously described at Seal Island in False Bay, South Africa.



2009-01-06

Sharklet's Antibacterial Surfaces

clipped from www.medgadget.com

Sharklet Technology Bets on Antibacterial Topographies

Sharklet Technologies, LLC, an Alachua, Fla. firm, says that they have figured out a new way to control infections on artificial surfaces. After extensively studying shark's skin, the company says its proprietary Sharklet™ surface technology can control the growth of microorganisms and bacteria including Staph aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and E. coli. The most interesting thing about the Sharklet™ is that the antibacterial properties of the surface come not from the chemicals but rather from the shape and microscopic pattern alone.
clipped from medicaldesign.com

Medical Design

Shark skin shows how to keeps surfaces clean

The six panels come from a 21-day study that monitored the growth of Staphylococcus aureus on a smooth surface (left column of Dow Corning Silastic T-2 elastomer) and a Sharklet surface. Top row shows bacterial growth after seven days, the middle row after 14, and bottom row after 21. The bacteria have been highlighted with color.


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clipped from www.sharklet.com

Sharklet Technologies
Sharklet Technologies is a biotechnology company that develops and brings to market surface technologies that are designed to inhibit or enhance microorganism growth to make the world a healthier, environmentally safer and better place.

SharkletTM
Surface Technology



clipped from www.sharklet.com

The engineered topograpy approach to designing surfaces evaluates the effects on bioadhesion of systematically altering the following surface properties (depicted in the image below):

clipped from www.sharklet.com
Market Opportunities for Sharklet™

Sharklet Technologies believes that the Sharklet™ surface technology is a versatile solution for the complex problem of hospital acquired infections.

Hygienic Surfaces

Medical Devices

Marine Applications

In addition to the healthcare sector, SharkletTM holds great potential to provide the maritime industries with an environmentally-friendly alternative to metal-based antifouling paints.

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Related:
Sharklet Technology Bets on Antibacterial Topographies - Medgadget - www.medgadget.com
Shark skin shows how to keeps surfaces clean | Jun 2008
Sharklet Technologies

2007-11-18

Mediterranean Sea dangerous place for sharks and rays

Habitat degradation, recreational fisheries, and other human disturbances as significant threats to the sharks and rays of the Mediterranean.

National Geographic


The newly published World Conservation Union (IUCN) report identifies the waters between Europe and Africa as having the highest percentage of threatened sharks and rays in the world.

clipped from www.iucn.org
IUCN -The World Conservation Union

Shortfin Mako © Jeremy Stafford-DeitschMediterranean Sea: most dangerous place on Earth for sharks and rays

17 November 2007

More than 40% of shark and ray species in the Mediterranean are threatened with extinction, according to a new report from the World Conservation Union (IUCN).

clipped from www.iucn.org
Mediterranean Sea: most dangerous place on Earth for sharks and rays

Malaga, Spain, 16 November, 2007 (IUCN) – The first complete IUCN Red List assessment of the status of all Mediterranean sharks and rays has revealed that 42% of the species are threatened with extinction. Overfishing, including bycatch (non-target species caught incidentally), is the main cause of decline, according to the research.


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“From devil rays to angel sharks, Mediterranean populations of these vulnerable species are in serious trouble,” said Claudine Gibson, Programme Officer for the IUCN Shark Specialist Group and co-author of the report. “Our analyses reveal the Mediterranean Sea as one of the world’s most dangerous places on Earth for sharks and rays. Bottom dwelling species appear to be at greatest risk in this region, due mainly to intense fishing of the seabed.”


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