1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:07,000 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff, 2 00:00:07,040 --> 00:00:10,640 Speaker 1: Lauren Bogabam. Here we humans in general, not us on 3 00:00:10,680 --> 00:00:13,960 Speaker 1: this podcast, but kill a hundred million sharks every year. 4 00:00:14,880 --> 00:00:17,440 Speaker 1: First starters. Some people eat sharks, so they kill them 5 00:00:17,480 --> 00:00:20,799 Speaker 1: on purpose. For that reason, However, the big shark killing 6 00:00:20,840 --> 00:00:24,600 Speaker 1: culprit is accidental by catch. By catch is the collateral 7 00:00:24,680 --> 00:00:28,160 Speaker 1: damage of the large scale commercial fishing industry. It works 8 00:00:28,200 --> 00:00:31,280 Speaker 1: like this. Say you're in charge of a commercial shrimping boat, 9 00:00:31,320 --> 00:00:33,159 Speaker 1: and it's outfitted with all the gear you need to 10 00:00:33,200 --> 00:00:35,839 Speaker 1: catch shrimp, including a trawling net the size of a 11 00:00:35,880 --> 00:00:38,840 Speaker 1: sports field, which sinks to the seafloor and bumps along 12 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:41,800 Speaker 1: the bottom, picking up whatever is down there. When it's 13 00:00:41,840 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 1: hauled back in. Some of what's in the net is shrimp, 14 00:00:44,760 --> 00:00:48,320 Speaker 1: but it also contains sharks, sea turtles, seals, dolphins, raise 15 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:53,360 Speaker 1: countless animals of all descriptions. Some of these needlessly die 16 00:00:53,440 --> 00:00:56,200 Speaker 1: before they can be thrown back overboard. Some are hauled 17 00:00:56,240 --> 00:00:58,840 Speaker 1: in to port and their bodies disposed of later. The 18 00:00:58,880 --> 00:01:01,360 Speaker 1: same goes for bated long lines and gill nets, which 19 00:01:01,480 --> 00:01:04,640 Speaker 1: entangle everything that swims into them. The result is that 20 00:01:04,680 --> 00:01:07,080 Speaker 1: as many as two billion pounds that's almost one metric 21 00:01:07,120 --> 00:01:09,480 Speaker 1: ton of marine life is killed and wasted by the 22 00:01:09,480 --> 00:01:12,800 Speaker 1: fishing industry every year, which puts the whole a hundred 23 00:01:12,840 --> 00:01:16,360 Speaker 1: million sharks thing into perspective. But there may be hope, 24 00:01:16,560 --> 00:01:19,280 Speaker 1: at least for the sharks. A cheap, simple fix for 25 00:01:19,319 --> 00:01:22,320 Speaker 1: a big problem like this is rarely forthcoming, but according 26 00:01:22,360 --> 00:01:24,399 Speaker 1: to a study published in a twenty eighteen issue of 27 00:01:24,400 --> 00:01:27,160 Speaker 1: the journal Fisheries Research, the answer to the shark bycatch 28 00:01:27,240 --> 00:01:31,959 Speaker 1: problem might be magnets. Sharks are Alasmo bronx. That is, 29 00:01:32,040 --> 00:01:34,680 Speaker 1: they belong to a group of cartilaginous fishes that also 30 00:01:34,720 --> 00:01:38,360 Speaker 1: includes raisin skates, and they have special sensory organs around 31 00:01:38,360 --> 00:01:41,920 Speaker 1: their nostrils called ampulae of Lorenzini that look like little 32 00:01:41,920 --> 00:01:45,440 Speaker 1: craters all over the sharks snout. Behind these little pores 33 00:01:45,480 --> 00:01:48,800 Speaker 1: are sacks of jelly that can sense electromagnetic fields. They 34 00:01:48,840 --> 00:01:51,760 Speaker 1: help sharks hunt by letting them sense the bioelectricity of 35 00:01:51,800 --> 00:01:55,280 Speaker 1: their praise heartbeat, and scientists think might also help the 36 00:01:55,400 --> 00:01:59,160 Speaker 1: migrate using the Earth's magnetic field. The research team behind 37 00:01:59,240 --> 00:02:03,400 Speaker 1: the aforementioned Setti hypothesized that incorporating magnets into fish traps 38 00:02:03,600 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 1: might alert Alasmo bronx to their presence and reduce overall 39 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: sharks by catch. Because bony fishes, which are often what 40 00:02:10,360 --> 00:02:13,320 Speaker 1: fishing outfits are looking to catch, have low sensitivity to 41 00:02:13,400 --> 00:02:16,640 Speaker 1: electromagnetic fields, they figured that even if it worked to 42 00:02:16,680 --> 00:02:19,440 Speaker 1: keep sharks steering clear of the traps, it wouldn't lower 43 00:02:19,480 --> 00:02:23,720 Speaker 1: the catch rates of desirable fish. To test their hypothesis, 44 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:26,160 Speaker 1: the research team monitored a thousand fish traps off the 45 00:02:26,160 --> 00:02:28,600 Speaker 1: coast of Sydney, New South Wales, all of which were 46 00:02:28,600 --> 00:02:31,639 Speaker 1: baited to catch Australian snapper, a segment of the industry 47 00:02:31,680 --> 00:02:34,360 Speaker 1: that accidentally catches sharks about ten percent of the time. 48 00:02:35,200 --> 00:02:37,280 Speaker 1: One third of the traps were set with cheap magnets 49 00:02:37,280 --> 00:02:40,440 Speaker 1: around the entrances, worth about twenty two American dollars or 50 00:02:40,560 --> 00:02:43,639 Speaker 1: thirty dollars Australian. Another third of the traps were set 51 00:02:43,639 --> 00:02:46,320 Speaker 1: with metal bars at the entrance to provide a physical barrier, 52 00:02:46,560 --> 00:02:50,000 Speaker 1: and the last third were left alone as controls. In 53 00:02:50,040 --> 00:02:52,560 Speaker 1: a press release, co author Rees Richards of the School 54 00:02:52,600 --> 00:02:56,440 Speaker 1: of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle said developing 55 00:02:56,480 --> 00:02:59,280 Speaker 1: ways to reduce by catch as a priority for many fisheries. 56 00:02:59,600 --> 00:03:02,160 Speaker 1: We found the traps with magnets had roughly thirty percent 57 00:03:02,320 --> 00:03:05,560 Speaker 1: less likelihood of catching sharks and rays compared to traps without. 58 00:03:06,160 --> 00:03:09,680 Speaker 1: In addition, those traps with magnets would catch roughly more 59 00:03:09,720 --> 00:03:12,600 Speaker 1: targeted fish, which is a rare win win for fisheries. 60 00:03:13,600 --> 00:03:15,560 Speaker 1: Wind winds are great, but we've got a long way 61 00:03:15,600 --> 00:03:17,040 Speaker 1: to go before we make a dent in that a 62 00:03:17,080 --> 00:03:20,280 Speaker 1: hundred million sharks per year. The magnets seem to work 63 00:03:20,280 --> 00:03:22,680 Speaker 1: well for traps, but magnets won't work on long lines. 64 00:03:22,840 --> 00:03:25,400 Speaker 1: The lines are fitted with metal hooks, so magnets would 65 00:03:25,400 --> 00:03:28,840 Speaker 1: tangle the gear. More research is needed, but as fans 66 00:03:28,880 --> 00:03:31,799 Speaker 1: of these fascinating finned creatures were glad to see one 67 00:03:31,840 --> 00:03:39,840 Speaker 1: possible solution. Today's episode was written by Jesslin Shields and 68 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:42,200 Speaker 1: produced by Tyler Clang. For more on this and lots 69 00:03:42,200 --> 00:03:44,680 Speaker 1: of other not so fishy topics, visit our home planet, 70 00:03:44,840 --> 00:03:57,360 Speaker 1: how stuff Works dot com