Atomic bombs and whale sharks: How to calculate age of world's largest
fish
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[April 09, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have
figured out how to calculate the age of whale sharks - Earth's largest
fish - with some guidance from the radioactive fallout spawned by Cold
War-era atomic bomb testing.
By measuring levels of carbon-14, a naturally occurring radioactive
element that also is a by-product of nuclear explosions, the researchers
determined that distinct bands present inside the shark's cartilaginous
vertebrae are formed annually, like a tree's growth rings.
It was already known that these bands existed and increased in number as
a shark aged. But it was unclear whether new rings appeared yearly or
every six months.
The researchers compared carbon-14 levels in the rings to data on
fluctuations in its global presence during the busy years of atmospheric
nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s.
"These elevated levels of carbon-14 first saturated the atmosphere, then
oceans and moved through food webs into animals, producing elevated
levels in structures such as the vertebrae of whale sharks," said marine
ecologist Joyce Ong of Rutgers University in New Jersey, lead author of
the study published this week in the journal Frontiers in Marine
Science.
Scientists now will be able to calculate a whale shark's age after its
death - one ring equals one year. But just as importantly the study
established that these endangered marine giants possess a very slow
growth rate.
"For the management of any marine species, knowledge of growth rate is
critical as it determines the resilience of populations to threats such
as fishing. Fast-growing species have fast rates of replacement and can
withstand relatively high losses, whereas slow-growing species have low
rates of replacement and are much less resilient," said marine biologist
and study co-author Mark Meekan of the Australian Institute of Marine
Science in Perth.
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Visitors watch a whale shark at the Whale Shark Aquarium of
Chimelong Ocean Kingdom in Zhuhai, China September 4, 2018.
REUTERS/Bobby Yip
Whale sharks are filter feeders, swimming great distances through
the world's tropical oceans to find enough plankton to sustain
themselves. They have a brownish-grayish color on the back and sides
with white spots, with a white underside.
The researchers tested carbon-14 levels in long-dead whale sharks
whose remains were stored in laboratories. The oldest one tested,
stored in Pakistan, had lived 50 years.
"We thought that it was possible that they could reach ages of as
much as 100 years, but we weren't really sure as we had no validated
data on age," Meekan said. "We still can't say for certain if these
sharks live to be 100 years old, but it now seems much more likely
given that our largest shark was 50 years old at 10 meters (33 feet)
in length and it is well documented that these sharks can get almost
double this size, to around 18 meters (59 feet) in length."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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