AI Article Synopsis

  • Elasmobranchs, like white sharks, can sense tiny electric fields using specialized organs called ampullae of Lorenzini, which can help in designing shark deterrents for human safety.
  • A study tested the Shark Shield Freedom7™ on 18 white sharks, showing that while the presence of an electric field didn't stop them from approaching a bait, it did impact how they interacted with it.
  • When tested near a seal decoy, the electric field significantly reduced shark breaches and interactions, suggesting that the effectiveness of these deterrents varies based on the sharks' behavior and motivation.

Article Abstract

Elasmobranchs can detect minute electromagnetic fields, <1 nV cm(-1), using their ampullae of Lorenzini. Behavioural responses to electric fields have been investigated in various species, sometimes with the aim to develop shark deterrents to improve human safety. The present study tested the effects of the Shark Shield Freedom7™ electric deterrent on (1) the behaviour of 18 white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) near a static bait, and (2) the rates of attacks on a towed seal decoy. In the first experiment, 116 trials using a static bait were performed at the Neptune Islands, South Australia. The proportion of baits taken during static bait trials was not affected by the electric field. The electric field, however, increased the time it took them to consume the bait, the number of interactions per approach, and decreased the proportion of interactions within two metres of the field source. The effect of the electric field was not uniform across all sharks. In the second experiment, 189 tows using a seal decoy were conducted near Seal Island, South Africa. No breaches and only two surface interactions were observed during the tows when the electric field was activated, compared with 16 breaches and 27 surface interactions without the electric field. The present study suggests that the behavioural response of white sharks and the level of risk reduction resulting from the electric field is contextually specific, and depends on the motivational state of sharks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3642219PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0062730PLOS

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