Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Researchers Use Tracking Technology To Learn From Ocean Animals

The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2015 02:15 PM
  • Canadian Researchers Use Tracking Technology To Learn From Ocean Animals
HALIFAX — Ocean researcher Nigel Hussey says the hardest part of tagging a giant Greenland shark isn't dealing with the carnivore -- it's keeping his hands in sub-zero Arctic water while he does the work.
 
Hussey tags animals from the high Arctic down to the tropics as part of his research with the Nova Scotia-based Ocean Tracking Network, which connects scientists to the movements and behaviours of animals around the world.
 
The latest issue of the academic journal Science features a paper by Hussey and his fellow researchers on advances in the field of aquatic animal telemetry -- where scientists tag an animal with an electronic device to monitor its actions from a distance.
 
Hussey says improvements in tracking technology mean scientists can go beyond observing an animal's location. He says researchers can now use "animals as oceanographers."
 
"You can actually use the animals to monitor their own environments," said Hussey, a research associate at the University of Windsor.
 
Rather than having to go out on a ship and drop down equipment to measure ocean qualities such as temperature and salinity, scientists can put sensors on sea creatures and download the data from back on land.
 
Next year, Hussey plans to use receivers on narwhals and several hundred tagged Greenland halibut to observe interactions between the two species.
 
"Basically your narwhal becomes your monitor of sustainable fisheries. He's swimming around, giving you detections on where your fish are," he said.
 
The tracking devices are not reserved for larger fish and mammals. Hussey says tags have become small enough to be implanted into a fish weighing only a few grams, and can be used on species including lobsters and jellyfish.
 
One advantage to using tracking for ocean research, Hussey says, is that the animals have access to places humans cannot reach by boat. Animals also spend more time on the job.
 
"These animals don't just go out like me and you for an eight-hour working day. These animals can monitor 24 hours a day, 365 days a year," he said.
 
The Ocean Tracking Network, based at Dalhousie University in Halifax, facilitates tracking in oceans around the world and includes more than 400 researchers from 20 countries.
 
The network centralizes ocean data so scientists can learn from each other's research, Hussey said, which allows them to tackle broader questions on how the environment shapes animal behaviour.
 
"These are obviously key questions that we want to ask when we're thinking about current climate change and predictions for the future as species start to redistribute themselves," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants

Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants
Brandie Bloor, 39, pleaded guilty in provincial court Thursday to fraud over $5,000 and identity theft but will have to wait until late June for Judge Len Marchand to hand down his sentence.

Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants

Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction

Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction
ARMSTRONG, B.C. — A llama that went on the lam before it could be auctioned off has a new home after his antics stopped traffic on a highway in Armstrong, B.C.

Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction

Crown Tells Jury In Trial Of Alleged B.C. Terrorists Not To Pity Accused Couple

Crown lawyer Peter Eccles said a life of hardship for John Nuttall and Amanda Korody — as recovering heroin addicts living on welfare — doesn't make them any less guilty of planning a terrorist act.

Crown Tells Jury In Trial Of Alleged B.C. Terrorists Not To Pity Accused Couple

El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season

El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season
VANCOUVER — Experts are blaming El Nino for speeding up nature's clock and forcing firefighters to deploy weeks ahead of normal to battle wildfires across rural Western Canada.

El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season

Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite

Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite
Police say they responded to a call late Tuesday night about a 21-year-old man who was rushed to hospital from his campsite near the Prophet River First Nation.

Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite

Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails

Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails
Tim Duncan says a ministerial assistant in Todd Stone's Victoria office ordered him to trash the material last November, but when he hesitated the assistant deleted them himself, saying, "you don't have to worry about it anymore."

Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails