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[photo] A victim of shark finning (33) The practice of shark finning involves catching sharks, slicing off their fins, and then simply throwing away the wounded sharks, leaving them to drown or be eaten alive by other animals. Therefore, the Greenland shark with its poisonous skin has the ultimate d...

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Online Access:http://cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16250coll9/id/326
id ftbellevueunivdc:oai:cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org:p16250coll9/326
record_format openpolar
spelling ftbellevueunivdc:oai:cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org:p16250coll9/326 2023-05-15T16:29:31+02:00 Page 23 http://cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16250coll9/id/326 unknown http://cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16250coll9/id/326 ftbellevueunivdc 2020-01-02T12:29:32Z [photo] A victim of shark finning (33) The practice of shark finning involves catching sharks, slicing off their fins, and then simply throwing away the wounded sharks, leaving them to drown or be eaten alive by other animals. Therefore, the Greenland shark with its poisonous skin has the ultimate defense against the horrible act. Additionally, it is in the same family as the dog fish shark so it has very small fins: an almost non-existent dorsal fin and very short pectoral fins. It is thought that it has developed this anatomy because of lack of use. So its location and its difference in anatomy have aided it in avoiding this act of human cruelty. (6) Yet the tiger shark has not been so lucky, because its habitat puts it into close proximity of people, and because of its fast-moving nature, it’s dorsal and pectoral fins are much larger. Having those larger fins is a key factor in its predation methods, but they also make it a key target for shark fishermen. In a 1993 study from the University of Hawaii to determine population numbers, a team of biologists set out to tag 420 tiger sharks of which only 50 returned to the island waters during the one year study.(31) 23 | P a g e Other/Unknown Material Greenland Bellevue University: Digital Archive Collection Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Bellevue University: Digital Archive Collection
op_collection_id ftbellevueunivdc
language unknown
description [photo] A victim of shark finning (33) The practice of shark finning involves catching sharks, slicing off their fins, and then simply throwing away the wounded sharks, leaving them to drown or be eaten alive by other animals. Therefore, the Greenland shark with its poisonous skin has the ultimate defense against the horrible act. Additionally, it is in the same family as the dog fish shark so it has very small fins: an almost non-existent dorsal fin and very short pectoral fins. It is thought that it has developed this anatomy because of lack of use. So its location and its difference in anatomy have aided it in avoiding this act of human cruelty. (6) Yet the tiger shark has not been so lucky, because its habitat puts it into close proximity of people, and because of its fast-moving nature, it’s dorsal and pectoral fins are much larger. Having those larger fins is a key factor in its predation methods, but they also make it a key target for shark fishermen. In a 1993 study from the University of Hawaii to determine population numbers, a team of biologists set out to tag 420 tiger sharks of which only 50 returned to the island waters during the one year study.(31) 23 | P a g e
title Page 23
spellingShingle Page 23
title_short Page 23
title_full Page 23
title_fullStr Page 23
title_full_unstemmed Page 23
title_sort page 23
url http://cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16250coll9/id/326
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_relation http://cdm16250.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16250coll9/id/326
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