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Researchers at the University of Delaware have attached sensors to sharks to track ocean conditions. Aaron Carlisle joins the AccuWeather Network to discuss how sharks can help forecast hurricanes.
Transcript
00:00This is Aaron, our exclusive AccuWeather I-PATH, which not a whole lot of strengthening over the next couple of days, but then boom, we are talking about a major Category 3 hurricane.
00:10And you know, data is so critical to hurricane forecasting, not only in the atmosphere, but in the oceans.
00:18And with that, listen to this.
00:21Scientists have a new partner, sharks.
00:25How about that to help predict hurricanes?
00:27And researchers at the University of Delaware, I think they're the blue hens, yeah, the blue hens, are attaching sensors to sharks to track ocean conditions that could shape the next big storm.
00:42Joining us is Aaron Carlisle, assistant professor of marine biology.
00:48So sorry for that whole long introduction.
00:50You're just like sitting there and being like, can they ask me the questions already?
00:52Can we get past my name, please?
00:54Yeah.
00:54All right.
00:55So why use sharks to help predict hurricanes and how are you doing it?
01:00So thank you for having me.
01:02But like, yeah, like you said, it's all about data and we need more data.
01:05And so you saw that map of the hurricane and how it's moving up towards the east coast of the U.S.
01:10And there's those kind of potential range of movement patterns, that kind of gray shaded area.
01:15And the idea is that we need data from that whole area and particularly what's going on underneath the surface.
01:20So our idea is that we're going to use sharks basically carrying these ocean sensing tags that will basically record what's going on in the ocean wherever they're swimming.
01:30So utilizing the shark's natural behavior as they swim up and down through the water column, recording the ocean heat content, things like that.
01:39And when it comes to the surface, they transmit real time data.
01:42And so we can get those data in real time and those get incorporated in those models that then help inform those predictions like you just saw.
01:48And hopefully that'll end up narrowing those projected route of those of those hurricane maps.
01:54I think everybody's wondering about this next question.
01:57At least I was.
01:58I was.
01:59We talked about the size of the sensors we're going to talk about, but how do you attach it to them?
02:05And how do you stay away from getting hurt and hurting the sharks actually, too?
02:10Yeah, absolutely.
02:11Carefully is the answer for everyone, for us and for the animals.
02:14So we want the animals to be happy and healthy, right?
02:16Otherwise, they don't give us good data and these tags cost money.
02:20And so we do it like we catch and tag any sharks.
02:23We basically go out.
02:23We look for them.
02:24We put out chum.
02:25They get attracted to the boat and we basically just catch them, secure them next to the boat.
02:29And once you actually put a tail rope around them and string them out next to the side of the boat, they are very docile.
02:34And then we just get our team kind of jumps into action like a pit crew and we secure the tag to the tip of the dorsal fin.
02:41And the idea is that that tag will stay on for several months, probably before it falls off.
02:45And then the shark should swim off on its merry way.
02:48Only a marine biologist would say that a shark is very docile.
02:51Docile, yeah.
02:51All right.
02:51What are the early results?
02:53And how could this help improve storm forecast?
02:57So we're still in kind of the early days.
02:59We're just getting some of these first generation of tags out and collecting data.
03:03And every time we put a tag out, we're learning more about how to improve it.
03:06So this is still in the discovery stage and the method development stage to a large extent.
03:10We're getting good data.
03:12We're getting profiles.
03:13We're getting the kinds of data we want.
03:15Now it's just tweaking the tags, their design, how they're programmed to operate more efficiently, given how dynamic sharks are compared to most other marine species.
03:24They just go all over the place.
03:25Their vertical movements are really dynamic and kind of chaotic.
03:27And so basically we've shown that it works, and it's basically now we're trying to improve it where we can operationalize it and use this as a tool for ocean observing around the world, really, not just the U.S.
03:40And how many sharks now are you tracking, and what's the goal, and is anyone else out there doing something similar?
03:47Sure, there's plenty of people doing tagging, absolutely.
03:51And so the only difference between what we're doing is the kinds of tags we're putting on, which are focused and designed to really collect high-quality oceanographic data.
04:01And so right now we have a handful of sharks swimming around.
04:04We've tagged a few blue sharks and a few short-fin mako sharks.
04:08And they're currently swimming around.
04:10We get data.
04:10We're getting positions intermittently over time.
04:12And so right now we don't have a lot of data coming in because, again, those tweaking everything, getting it to work well.
04:19But the idea is over the next year or two we're going to start scaling up these deployments where we get a broader distribution of animals.
04:26So in that map, kind of thinking about the map you're looking at, you can imagine if there is a fleet of sharks swimming around in front of that hurricane,
04:31they're going to be sending data that then you can use to understand and predict where that hurricane is going to go and how strong it's going to be.
04:38Fascinating.
04:39I'm absolutely blown away.
04:40Aaron Carl, our assistant professor of marine biology at the University of Delaware.
04:44Thank you so much for joining us this morning.
04:47My pleasure.
04:47Anytime.

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