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Monthly Archives: June 2012
Another Round on the Neuse
Late last summer, I embarked with an intrepid crew of Duke grad students to track bull sharks in the Neuse River. We came up empty-handed that time, but a year later I found myself going back for another crack at … Continue reading
Posted in cownose rays, dolphins, dorkiness, grad school, North Carolina, photography, research, sharks
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Declining Predators eat Mediterranean Jellies
It wasn’t my intention to keep picking on the Mediterranean, but this paper was just too damn interesting. In the Mediterranean, like many other marine environments worldwide, numbers of jellyfish and ctenophores (those really colorful comb jellies, actually not related … Continue reading
Posted in conservation, ecology, gut contents, methods, research blogging
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How Italy Ate Up All Its Sharks
As dramatically imperfect as U.S. fisheries management can be, I still stand by my stance that we have the best-managed fisheries in the world. Fishermen gripe about it being too restrictive and quick to change, conservationists complain about it being … Continue reading
Posted in conservation, fisheries management, NOAA, research blogging, sharks
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