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Sharks - nature's perfect solution
to an underwater life.
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They've been swimming in the oceans
for over 400 million years...
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00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:16,920
..and, as top predators,
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00:00:16,920 --> 00:00:19,800
play a vital role
in keeping our seas healthy
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and productive.
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But they're coming under
increasing pressure,
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millions are hunted and killed
every year.
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Never have sharks needed friends
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more than they do today.
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For three weeks, I've been
in the Bahamas for Blue Planet Live.
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Watching,
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monitoring,
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and diving with one of the richest
shark populations on the planet.
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I want to reveal why sharks
are thriving here
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and find out if there are lessons
to be learned
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from these crystal clear waters
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that could help secure their future
elsewhere around the world.
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Our blue planet is home to more than
a thousand species of shark...
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..and their cousins, the rays.
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They come in a myriad of shapes...
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..and sizes...
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..and are found across
all of our oceans...
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..from the tropics...
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..to the Arctic...
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..and into the deep abyss.
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There are a few places where
the number and diversity of sharks
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is unparalleled.
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The Bahamas is one of them,
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earning it the title of
shark diving capital of the world.
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700 islands are scattered
over 84,000 square miles of ocean.
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This location is unique -
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perched on the edge of deep water,
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where the seabed plunges
to a depth of 4,000 metres.
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The meeting of shallow water
and deep, open ocean
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leads to a profusion of life.
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In winter, the resident
Caribbean reef sharks
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and bull sharks
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are joined by visitors,
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bolstering the shark
and ray population to 78 species.
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In 2011, the Bahamas were declared
a shark sanctuary,
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making it illegal to fish for
or kill any species of shark.
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These protected waters offer me
a unique chance
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to get close to
these amazing top predators...
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..and to see first-hand
what it takes
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to have a healthy, thriving
population of sharks.
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Within seconds of coming down here,
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I'm greeted with
one of the most dazzling displays
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you'll ever see underwater.
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There's probably two or three
different sort of shark
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at this location,
but the dominant kind
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is going to be
the Caribbean reef shark.
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And I can already see at least 20
of them here in the water around us.
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I guess the first question that
people would ask would be,
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isn't it dangerous, isn't it risky
to be surrounded
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by this many apex predators?
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And I have to say,
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I feel just as comfortable
being in here,
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surrounded by all these
extraordinary animals,
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as I would do going for a walk
with a pack of poodles.
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These animals are so good
at sensing their environment,
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they know what's prey
in the water around them,
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and it's not us.
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They may well swim in close
but at the last second,
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they just bank away.
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They could not be less interested,
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and the statistics about sharks
prove that's true.
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Around the world, you're more likely
to be killed taking a selfie
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than you are to be killed
by a shark.
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In fact, statistically speaking,
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the chance of being killed by a cow,
a deer or even a vending machine
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is higher than the risk posed
by one of these.
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Sadly, this abundance of sharks
is not typical
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across all of our oceans.
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This is not a sight that you get to
see just anywhere.
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So, around the world,
we human beings are taking
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at least 100 million sharks
from the world's oceans
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every single year.
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In some places, sharks have
declined by over 90%.
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And in the time it'll take
for you to watch this programme,
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over 11,500 will be killed.
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It's a number that simply
cannot be sustained.
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If it carries on like this,
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then our children will not
have the opportunity
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to dive in seas like this,
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surrounded by these
stunning predators.
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The Bahamas isn't the only place
to offer protection to sharks.
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00:07:02,840 --> 00:07:07,360
Today, a total of 17 sanctuaries
have been created around the world,
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covering over
7.5 million square miles.
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But this still amounts
to only 5% of our oceans.
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Sharks need more help,
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and if we don't give it to them,
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much of the life in our oceans
will suffer.
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As apex predators,
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they remove
any sick or injured animals,
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keeping fish stocks healthy.
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Animals below them in the food chain
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are kept in check.
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And removing sharks would unbalance
whole ecosystems.
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Over 3 billion people depend on
the ocean for their livelihoods.
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It's essential we protect sharks
for our sake
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as well as theirs.
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And a vital step towards this
is combatting the reputation of fear
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that many sharks still hold.
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I always had a passion
for the ocean.
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I fell in love with scuba diving.
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I fell in love with everything.
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It was a calling, I think.
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Cristina Zenato left her homeland
of Italy over 20 years ago,
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heading for the Bahamas.
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Ever since, she's become
an advocate for sharks.
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And two decades of diving
at one site,
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off the island of Grand Bahama,
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has convinced her that these animals
are a long way from being
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mindless killers.
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Cristina is known locally
as the Shark Dancer...
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..and this is her stage.
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I love that there is a busy silence.
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It is the most peaceful
and calming moment of my day.
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My babies are Caribbean reef sharks.
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I love watching their behaviours
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and their interactions.
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They appear to me as different
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as any other human being
that I encounter.
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Some of them are more dominant.
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Some of them are shy.
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And some seemingly seek out
a closer encounter with Cristina.
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The first time that shark
settled in my lap...
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..and every time,
she settles in my lap,
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and I feel her weight over my legs,
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that is the most amazing feeling...
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..and there's nothing, to this day,
that beats that.
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You can feel everything
about the shark.
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You can feel that it's a living,
breathing creature
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that is aware of her surroundings,
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that is aware
of what I am doing to her,
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that is aware of my touch.
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And the suit might actually have
a nice feeling to their skin.
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These sharks are 8ft long.
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I could never force an animal
of that size
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to do anything or to sit anywhere.
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It's their decision to come in,
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it's their decision to stay,
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it's their decision to go.
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There is a total disconnect
from humans to sharks.
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We can swim in the ocean with sharks
in a way that you could never
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walk around on the snow
with a polar bear following you.
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We have to make that connection
with the sharks,
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understanding they
are way, way less dangerous
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than many creatures out there.
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Cristina's unique relationship
with sharks
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allows her to do something
quite extraordinary.
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She can take out fishing hooks
that are caught in their mouths.
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Over the years,
she's removed more than 300 hooks.
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We must change our ways,
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because we need to protect
the oceans
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and we need to protect the sharks.
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And when you reach that message,
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then you have a victory.
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A greater understanding
of these misunderstood creatures
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can undoubtedly help sharks.
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And with such a diverse and healthy
population on its doorstep...
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..the Bahamas has long been at the
forefront of global shark research.
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The Bimini Biological Field Station,
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or Shark Lab,
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has been increasing our knowledge
of sharks and rays
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for the last 29 years.
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Heading this institute is
Matt Smukall,
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who's had a passion for
the marine world
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for as long as he can remember.
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MATT: My first memories were
snorkelling in the Florida Keys.
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Growing up, I always had an affinity
and a connection with, you know,
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spending pretty much every weekend
and all summer in the ocean.
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My favourite group of animals are
the sharks.
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That's what originally brought me
to the Shark Lab,
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that's what makes me enjoy
waking up every day
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and doing this job.
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The Bimini Shark Lab
started in 1990.
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Right now at the Shark Lab,
we're studying everything from
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southern stingrays to bull sharks,
tiger sharks,
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lemon sharks, hammerheads,
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but we take it from
a very ecosystem-driven model,
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where we want to understand
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everything that's going on
around Bimini
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and how that's impacting
these big sharks.
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One of the biggest and most
impressive species,
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and the focus for a number
of Shark Lab studies,
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can be found a stone's throw
from the heart of a busy marina.
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These are bull sharks...
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..drawn in by the scraps
discarded from fishing boats.
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They spend much of their lives
in murky estuaries...
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..so this clear water gives me
a unique opportunity
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to see them up close,
and Matt a chance to learn more
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about this little understood
species of shark.
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I'm here on the bottom
of the harbour
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and, as you can probably see,
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I'm absolutely surrounded
by bull sharks.
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This is an opportunist
that has a very wide array
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of different kinds of prey,
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so they'll feed on fish, on rays,
on birds at the surface,
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on dolphins, they'll even bite
through the shells of turtles.
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Now, all the sharks that I'm seeing
around me at the moment
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are females, I haven't seen
a single male.
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And they're quite big in the belly.
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Why the warm waters
of the Bahamas attract
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these large, slightly rotund females
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has long been a mystery.
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One Matt and his team from Shark Lab
are hoping to solve.
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But to do that, they first have
to catch one.
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To go ahead and catch, say,
a big female bull shark,
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what we'll do is drop a baited hook,
throw it right in,
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and they pretty quickly will
normally take the hook.
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All right. On, on, on.
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Hooking the bull shark
is the easy part.
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As soon as they start running around
with the balls and the rope,
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this is a bit of a dance between
the person bringing it in
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and the shark.
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We have to be very careful
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cos they are not expecting to be
caught and handled by humans.
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In order to help, number one,
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for human safety
but also for shark safety,
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we'll put a tail rope on.
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That helps to secure the shark
to the boat.
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Quick! Quick!
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INDISTINCT CHATTER
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With the shark safely harnessed
and calm,
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the team can take the measurements
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and assess the shark's condition.
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And one of the most crucial jobs
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is to find out
her reproductive state...
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..using a very familiar method.
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Ultrasound.
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I think there's something
right there.
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You can see it moving
slightly there.
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That looks like the pup.
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Over 50% of the females that
we catch are actually pregnant.
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They have paired uterus,
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so we check both sides.
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And we're going to try to count
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00:18:06,560 --> 00:18:08,080
the number of pups that we can see,
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the size of pups in both sides,
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to get a better understanding
of her offspring litter.
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After ten months, bull sharks
give birth to up to 13 pups.
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These fully-formed pint-size sharks
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are then left to fend
for themselves.
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Now that we've confirmed
she's pregnant,
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we're going to go ahead
and let her go on her way.
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Give her a push.
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All right, nice job.
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At the end of the procedure,
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it's great to be able
to give that shark a push.
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We're blessed here
with beautiful, clear water
252
00:18:46,280 --> 00:18:48,240
and we can always observe the shark,
253
00:18:48,240 --> 00:18:50,880
basically follow her to make sure
that she's swimming strong
254
00:18:50,880 --> 00:18:52,640
and that she's doing well.
255
00:18:54,080 --> 00:18:56,760
And it's not just
the visiting bull sharks
256
00:18:56,760 --> 00:18:58,720
who are carrying
the next generation.
257
00:19:03,480 --> 00:19:05,800
Many other species
found in the Bahamas
258
00:19:05,800 --> 00:19:07,400
are also pregnant.
259
00:19:13,080 --> 00:19:16,880
It's thought that the warm waters
and rich feeding grounds here
260
00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:20,840
help raise the shark's metabolism
and speed up gestation.
261
00:19:30,880 --> 00:19:33,320
MATT: We know a lot about sharks
but there's so much more
262
00:19:33,320 --> 00:19:35,120
that we still need to understand.
263
00:19:35,120 --> 00:19:38,760
We still don't even know some of
the basic reproductive biology,
264
00:19:38,760 --> 00:19:40,400
some of their life history things,
265
00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:42,880
and these are all very important
for conservation.
266
00:19:42,880 --> 00:19:45,400
This is what's really
going to help us manage
267
00:19:45,400 --> 00:19:47,000
the next generation of sharks.
268
00:19:49,520 --> 00:19:52,080
And it's managing
this next generation
269
00:19:52,080 --> 00:19:55,080
and the habitats that are
essential to their survival
270
00:19:55,080 --> 00:19:58,960
that's vital to maintaining
a healthy population of sharks.
271
00:20:14,640 --> 00:20:19,040
This tangled mass of roots
is the mangroves.
272
00:20:19,040 --> 00:20:21,560
It's an environment that
changes constantly
273
00:20:21,560 --> 00:20:23,520
with the tides throughout the day.
274
00:20:23,520 --> 00:20:27,880
And provides the perfect spot
for baby marine animals
275
00:20:27,880 --> 00:20:29,320
to hide out in.
276
00:20:31,160 --> 00:20:34,560
{\an8}I'm joining Clemency White
from Bimini Shark Lab
277
00:20:34,560 --> 00:20:37,760
{\an8}to see how these mangroves
are key to the success of sharks
278
00:20:37,760 --> 00:20:39,120
{\an8}in the Bahamas.
279
00:20:42,720 --> 00:20:44,480
Whoa! Look at that!
280
00:20:45,560 --> 00:20:47,600
Yep, they're all waiting for us.
281
00:20:47,600 --> 00:20:49,000
Baby sharks!
282
00:20:50,360 --> 00:20:52,680
That's absolutely incredible.
283
00:20:57,960 --> 00:21:00,000
These are lemon sharks.
284
00:21:00,000 --> 00:21:03,160
And they've been studied by Clemency
and her fellow researchers
285
00:21:03,160 --> 00:21:04,640
for over 30 years.
286
00:21:07,200 --> 00:21:08,960
It looks like they want to be fed.
287
00:21:08,960 --> 00:21:11,120
Yeah, we actually have
a little bit of squid
288
00:21:11,120 --> 00:21:12,720
if you want to give it a go.
289
00:21:12,720 --> 00:21:14,760
I...I would genuinely love to.
290
00:21:17,480 --> 00:21:20,240
So, Clemency, how old are the sharks
we're looking at here?
291
00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:22,600
Most of these sharks are
in their first few years of life.
292
00:21:22,600 --> 00:21:25,040
So the majority of them will be
maybe two or three years old.
293
00:21:25,040 --> 00:21:26,760
And some of those larger sharks
you can see
294
00:21:26,760 --> 00:21:28,360
are maybe four or five.
295
00:21:28,360 --> 00:21:29,560
So this is a refuge.
296
00:21:29,560 --> 00:21:31,840
This is an area that's pretty much
only accessible
297
00:21:31,840 --> 00:21:33,360
to these guys at high tide.
298
00:21:33,360 --> 00:21:35,840
So that small, narrow walkway
that we walked in,
299
00:21:35,840 --> 00:21:37,280
bigger sharks can't use that.
300
00:21:37,280 --> 00:21:39,360
What sort of things
are they taking shelter from?
301
00:21:39,360 --> 00:21:41,760
The biggest predator of juvenile
lemon sharks is actually
302
00:21:41,760 --> 00:21:43,800
lemon sharks themselves,
adult lemon sharks.
303
00:21:43,800 --> 00:21:46,400
So they're cannibalistic?
Yes, they are cannibalistic.
304
00:21:46,400 --> 00:21:49,680
And also other large sharks,
so maybe bull sharks,
305
00:21:49,680 --> 00:21:52,440
other species like that.
306
00:21:52,440 --> 00:21:54,880
So this genuinely is a nursery,
307
00:21:54,880 --> 00:21:58,080
it's a place where the youngsters
are safe from other...
308
00:21:58,080 --> 00:22:00,600
Oh! That went right between my legs.
309
00:22:00,600 --> 00:22:04,120
Yeah. I should be wearing a
cricket box or something. Um...
310
00:22:04,120 --> 00:22:05,240
Are you OK?
311
00:22:05,240 --> 00:22:07,160
THEY LAUGH
312
00:22:05,240 --> 00:22:07,160
No!
313
00:22:07,160 --> 00:22:09,200
Seriously, they're all making
a beeline
314
00:22:09,200 --> 00:22:11,960
straight between my legs.
315
00:22:11,960 --> 00:22:13,560
This would be a disaster if
316
00:22:13,560 --> 00:22:15,440
all the things I've done in my life
317
00:22:15,440 --> 00:22:18,040
and I was to get savaged
in the goolies by a baby shark.
318
00:22:18,040 --> 00:22:19,760
Well, they must like you.
319
00:22:21,440 --> 00:22:23,120
That one there's a decent size.
320
00:22:23,120 --> 00:22:26,360
Yeah, so they'll be pretty loyal to
the mangrove that they were born in
321
00:22:26,360 --> 00:22:29,040
until they're about 13 years old,
when they sexually mature.
322
00:22:29,040 --> 00:22:31,480
Then they'll also come back to give
birth here as adults.
323
00:22:31,480 --> 00:22:33,080
So they really rely on
those mangroves
324
00:22:33,080 --> 00:22:34,480
for their entire life cycle.
325
00:22:34,480 --> 00:22:37,280
What are the main threats
to mangroves in the Bahamas?
326
00:22:37,280 --> 00:22:39,400
So, a lot of places, even in Bimini,
327
00:22:39,400 --> 00:22:42,760
we see the mangroves are being
removed to facilitate bigger hotels,
328
00:22:42,760 --> 00:22:45,200
bigger resorts,
and that in itself means
329
00:22:45,200 --> 00:22:47,320
that these pups will still be born
in the same place,
330
00:22:47,320 --> 00:22:49,080
they'll still be using
the same areas,
331
00:22:49,080 --> 00:22:51,840
but they won't have that
same security from the larger fish.
332
00:22:51,840 --> 00:22:55,720
So, lose the mangroves and
you lose the lemon sharks? Yep.
333
00:22:59,120 --> 00:23:02,600
It may not look like any other
nursery you've seen before,
334
00:23:02,600 --> 00:23:05,400
but you can see how vital
this environment is
335
00:23:05,400 --> 00:23:09,640
to these rather wonderful and
surprisingly cute animals. Mm-hm.
336
00:23:17,840 --> 00:23:21,680
All over the world,
baby sharks and rays seek refuge
337
00:23:21,680 --> 00:23:24,400
in mangroves, seagrass
and estuaries.
338
00:23:30,920 --> 00:23:32,720
Throughout their lives,
339
00:23:32,720 --> 00:23:35,680
sharks need a whole variety
of ocean habitats...
340
00:23:37,880 --> 00:23:40,160
..and protecting these is essential
341
00:23:40,160 --> 00:23:42,600
if shark numbers are to bounce back.
342
00:23:55,000 --> 00:23:58,440
Most sharks take many years
to reach sexual maturity.
343
00:24:00,160 --> 00:24:04,360
Female great white sharks
need a whopping 33 years
344
00:24:04,360 --> 00:24:06,240
before they can breed.
345
00:24:07,880 --> 00:24:12,040
This, combined with their tendency
to produce just a few offspring,
346
00:24:12,040 --> 00:24:16,400
means that shark populations are
extremely vulnerable to overfishing.
347
00:24:40,200 --> 00:24:44,400
Right now, sharks are being killed
at a staggering rate.
348
00:24:54,520 --> 00:24:56,600
They're deliberately caught
for food.
349
00:24:58,680 --> 00:25:01,880
And accidentally caught in nets
or long lines
350
00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:03,640
set for other species.
351
00:25:09,800 --> 00:25:13,680
They're also harvested
in their millions for their fins,
352
00:25:13,680 --> 00:25:17,400
to make shark fin soup -
353
00:25:17,400 --> 00:25:23,240
a delicacy that's seen shark fins
sell for $650 a kilo...
354
00:25:29,120 --> 00:25:32,360
..fuelling a cruel, wasteful trade,
355
00:25:32,360 --> 00:25:35,960
which sees the rest of the shark
being thrown back into the sea...
356
00:25:37,600 --> 00:25:39,280
..often still alive.
357
00:25:43,560 --> 00:25:47,000
A third of all shark species are now
threated with extinction.
358
00:25:48,960 --> 00:25:52,640
And this is being driven
by human activities.
359
00:26:08,200 --> 00:26:10,240
But all is not yet lost.
360
00:26:11,240 --> 00:26:12,880
There is hope.
361
00:26:12,880 --> 00:26:15,400
And it comes from the fact
that these sharks
362
00:26:15,400 --> 00:26:18,920
can be worth more alive than dead.
363
00:26:34,280 --> 00:26:37,160
I'm heading 12 miles north
of Grand Bahama
364
00:26:37,160 --> 00:26:39,360
to a site of global importance.
365
00:26:50,520 --> 00:26:54,440
This could well be the best
shark dive in the whole world.
366
00:26:56,080 --> 00:27:00,240
And what happens here is key
to securing the future of sharks
367
00:27:00,240 --> 00:27:02,000
right across the world.
368
00:27:04,600 --> 00:27:08,840
Whoa! Great hammerhead! Amazing.
369
00:27:08,840 --> 00:27:13,680
Look at that. Powering straight in.
370
00:27:13,680 --> 00:27:15,600
That is just extraordinary.
371
00:27:17,440 --> 00:27:20,880
Drawn to
the warm, productive waters,
372
00:27:20,880 --> 00:27:24,800
this is also the best place
in the world to see tiger sharks.
373
00:27:28,480 --> 00:27:32,400
A tiger shark is unmistakable
in form.
374
00:27:32,400 --> 00:27:35,480
It has the dappling running down
its sides,
375
00:27:35,480 --> 00:27:38,880
which gives it its tiger name.
376
00:27:40,280 --> 00:27:43,160
They'll feed on just about anything
they can find in the water.
377
00:27:44,320 --> 00:27:49,240
And with those teeth, they can even
go through the shell of a turtle.
378
00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:54,160
This is absolutely dazzling.
379
00:27:54,160 --> 00:27:56,880
I don't know which way to look!
380
00:27:56,880 --> 00:27:58,840
Tiger sharks, great hammerheads,
381
00:27:58,840 --> 00:28:01,560
lemons, bull sharks, reef sharks.
382
00:28:04,240 --> 00:28:06,360
It's the world's greatest safari,
383
00:28:06,360 --> 00:28:08,680
it just all happens underwater.
384
00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:12,920
Here and throughout the Bahamas,
385
00:28:12,920 --> 00:28:15,600
sharks are drawn in with food
386
00:28:15,600 --> 00:28:18,080
so tourists can reliably
get close to them.
387
00:28:23,200 --> 00:28:26,800
Feeding of sharks
is a hotly debated topic.
388
00:28:26,800 --> 00:28:30,840
there's people who think
that it's a bad idea
389
00:28:30,840 --> 00:28:34,200
and might, potentially,
change the behaviour of sharks,
390
00:28:34,200 --> 00:28:36,640
and I can totally see that,
391
00:28:36,640 --> 00:28:40,440
but there's no doubt that
shark tourism here in the Bahamas
392
00:28:40,440 --> 00:28:42,880
is incredibly important.
393
00:28:44,520 --> 00:28:48,800
Each year, 20,000 people come to
the Bahamas to dive with sharks...
394
00:28:50,120 --> 00:28:53,680
..making it the largest shark diving
industry in the world.
395
00:28:55,160 --> 00:28:57,840
Shark diving here in the Bahamas
396
00:28:57,840 --> 00:29:05,400
is worth an estimated $114 million
every year to the local economy.
397
00:29:07,320 --> 00:29:11,560
Unquestionably, the sharks are worth
more alive than they are dead.
398
00:29:13,360 --> 00:29:15,000
And that's hugely important
399
00:29:15,000 --> 00:29:17,480
for the survival
of these extraordinary animals.
400
00:29:27,960 --> 00:29:30,000
INDISTINCT CHATTER
401
00:29:38,320 --> 00:29:39,880
All across the world,
402
00:29:39,880 --> 00:29:44,440
shark tourism is fast becoming
a thriving industry -
403
00:29:44,440 --> 00:29:46,920
not just for dive operators,
404
00:29:46,920 --> 00:29:49,840
but boat drivers, hotels,
restaurants,
405
00:29:49,840 --> 00:29:53,360
and bringing much-needed income
to shark hot spots
406
00:29:53,360 --> 00:29:55,200
from all over the world.
407
00:29:57,960 --> 00:29:59,920
I came from Philadelphia today
408
00:29:59,920 --> 00:30:01,440
to swim with the sharks.
409
00:30:01,440 --> 00:30:03,320
It was just invigorating.
410
00:30:03,320 --> 00:30:05,080
It's a whole 'nother world
down there.
411
00:30:10,200 --> 00:30:13,000
I'm from Argentina.
412
00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:15,920
It was a long trip but it's amazing.
413
00:30:18,320 --> 00:30:21,920
It's estimated that well over
half a million people
414
00:30:21,920 --> 00:30:24,560
come to watch sharks every year.
415
00:30:24,560 --> 00:30:27,160
Not only are sharks gaining
more advocates,
416
00:30:27,160 --> 00:30:30,760
but they now hold
an indisputable monetary value.
417
00:30:34,560 --> 00:30:37,640
And this will certainly help
to secure their future.
418
00:30:44,600 --> 00:30:47,880
Shark conservation is something
that will require human effort
419
00:30:47,880 --> 00:30:49,680
for many years to come.
420
00:30:49,680 --> 00:30:51,560
And right here in the Bahamas,
421
00:30:51,560 --> 00:30:54,320
there's a very special project
that's training up
422
00:30:54,320 --> 00:30:56,960
the next generation
of shark champions.
423
00:31:02,080 --> 00:31:06,120
Marine biologist Jillian Morris
has set up Sharks4Kids.
424
00:31:10,600 --> 00:31:13,000
A charity to show children
across the Bahamas
425
00:31:13,000 --> 00:31:15,520
that sharks are something
to celebrate,
426
00:31:15,520 --> 00:31:16,880
not to fear.
427
00:31:19,200 --> 00:31:23,840
I really believe that the best way
to change the way people see sharks
428
00:31:23,840 --> 00:31:26,000
is to let them get in the water.
429
00:31:30,400 --> 00:31:32,200
We take kids out to see sharks
430
00:31:32,200 --> 00:31:34,240
and a lot of them are very afraid.
431
00:31:34,240 --> 00:31:35,880
They don't want to get off the boat,
432
00:31:35,880 --> 00:31:37,960
they don't want to step off
the beach,
433
00:31:37,960 --> 00:31:40,120
and we get them to put a mask
and a snorkel on,
434
00:31:40,120 --> 00:31:41,920
and we kind of ease them in.
435
00:31:41,920 --> 00:31:43,760
And then they're snorkelling around
436
00:31:43,760 --> 00:31:46,200
and they're seeing the sharks
and the rays up close
437
00:31:46,200 --> 00:31:48,760
and realising they're not
trying to attack them,
438
00:31:48,760 --> 00:31:51,200
that they're actually
really beautiful animals.
439
00:32:03,160 --> 00:32:06,000
It's really incredible to see
students go from being terrified
440
00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:07,560
and not wanting to get in the water,
441
00:32:07,560 --> 00:32:09,600
to we're having to drag them out -
442
00:32:09,600 --> 00:32:11,640
"We've got to go.
It's time to go home."
443
00:32:11,640 --> 00:32:15,040
And to see that transition happen
right in front of you,
444
00:32:15,040 --> 00:32:17,680
very quickly, is really,
really powerful.
445
00:32:20,200 --> 00:32:22,200
The Bahamas is a shark sanctuary,
446
00:32:22,200 --> 00:32:25,520
which is incredible and has set
a standard around the world
447
00:32:25,520 --> 00:32:28,680
for shark conservation,
shark diving, shark science,
448
00:32:28,680 --> 00:32:33,320
and so it's vital to have
the locals involved at all levels,
449
00:32:33,320 --> 00:32:34,640
from kids to adults,
450
00:32:34,640 --> 00:32:37,280
to protect the future
of this sanctuary
451
00:32:37,280 --> 00:32:39,080
and the sharks here in the Bahamas.
452
00:32:49,880 --> 00:32:52,360
While places like the Bahamas
offer protection
453
00:32:52,360 --> 00:32:53,840
when the sharks are here...
454
00:32:55,600 --> 00:32:58,640
..once beyond the invisible boundary
of the sanctuary,
455
00:32:58,640 --> 00:33:00,920
sharks are immediately vulnerable.
456
00:33:04,880 --> 00:33:08,200
Knowing where they go in
this vast, featureless landscape
457
00:33:08,200 --> 00:33:11,320
is essential if we're to offer
them protection.
458
00:33:14,840 --> 00:33:17,240
A few miles off the coast of Andros,
459
00:33:17,240 --> 00:33:19,480
the endless blue is interrupted...
460
00:33:22,320 --> 00:33:24,080
..by a naval buoy.
461
00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:34,480
This lone beacon is a big draw
for passing travellers...
462
00:33:37,600 --> 00:33:40,400
..providing shelter
for schools of fish...
463
00:33:42,600 --> 00:33:44,520
..which attract the hunters.
464
00:33:46,240 --> 00:33:49,120
Top of the food chain out here
are these -
465
00:33:49,120 --> 00:33:50,720
silky sharks.
466
00:33:53,400 --> 00:33:56,400
They get their name from
the silky sheen of their skin.
467
00:34:01,240 --> 00:34:04,080
So little is known
about the migrations
468
00:34:04,080 --> 00:34:06,080
of these open ocean drifters.
469
00:34:10,400 --> 00:34:12,520
When shark biologist
Tristan Guttridge
470
00:34:12,520 --> 00:34:15,480
heard rumours of this location,
471
00:34:15,480 --> 00:34:19,360
it was an opportunity for him
to try and uncover these secrets,
472
00:34:19,360 --> 00:34:22,680
which might just help protect
these threatened sharks.
473
00:34:27,960 --> 00:34:30,400
There's nothing that gives me
more energy
474
00:34:30,400 --> 00:34:32,800
than being in the water with sharks.
475
00:34:37,640 --> 00:34:41,320
These silky sharks, they're a
completely different type of animal.
476
00:34:43,920 --> 00:34:46,280
There's just something about them
that, you know,
477
00:34:46,280 --> 00:34:48,480
brings them closer
and draws them in to you.
478
00:34:51,840 --> 00:34:55,280
They have this curious,
bold personality
479
00:34:55,280 --> 00:34:57,480
and it is a bit intoxicating.
480
00:34:57,480 --> 00:34:58,640
And I love it.
481
00:35:00,280 --> 00:35:04,200
But this inquisitiveness
is this shark's Achilles heel.
482
00:35:05,520 --> 00:35:08,120
Silkies are in trouble globally.
483
00:35:08,120 --> 00:35:12,280
And, in fact, silky sharks are the
second-highest caught shark species
484
00:35:12,280 --> 00:35:13,520
in the world.
485
00:35:15,680 --> 00:35:19,000
Industrial fishing often
uses floating objects,
486
00:35:19,000 --> 00:35:20,840
working just like the naval buoy,
487
00:35:20,840 --> 00:35:23,200
to attract an aggregate fish
like tuna
488
00:35:23,200 --> 00:35:24,560
in the open ocean.
489
00:35:27,840 --> 00:35:29,840
But they don't just attract tuna.
490
00:35:32,120 --> 00:35:35,120
Every year, hundreds of thousands
of silky sharks
491
00:35:35,120 --> 00:35:36,680
get accidentally caught.
492
00:35:38,200 --> 00:35:42,640
I see the evidence of the pressures
that these animals are under
493
00:35:42,640 --> 00:35:44,080
from the hooks in the mouths
494
00:35:44,080 --> 00:35:46,400
and the leader wire
that's coming out of it,
495
00:35:46,400 --> 00:35:49,480
you can see these sharks
are...they're in trouble.
496
00:35:49,480 --> 00:35:52,400
They've got a lot to deal with
out in the open ocean.
497
00:35:54,800 --> 00:35:56,640
Tristan wants to catch a shark
498
00:35:56,640 --> 00:35:58,760
in order to attach a tracker,
499
00:35:58,760 --> 00:36:01,080
which will reveal,
for the first time,
500
00:36:01,080 --> 00:36:02,720
where these curious sharks go.
501
00:36:06,720 --> 00:36:10,080
One method that we can use
to catch silkies is
502
00:36:10,080 --> 00:36:13,440
that you can actually bend the top
of the tail over
503
00:36:13,440 --> 00:36:17,880
and it sends them into this kind of
bizarre trance-like state.
504
00:36:17,880 --> 00:36:20,840
And if you turn them upside down
at the same time,
505
00:36:20,840 --> 00:36:24,240
then they're almost playing dead,
they're just out.
506
00:36:24,240 --> 00:36:26,280
It's not fully understood why,
507
00:36:26,280 --> 00:36:29,680
but many shark species enter
this trance-like state
508
00:36:29,680 --> 00:36:32,920
called tonic immobility
when upside down,
509
00:36:32,920 --> 00:36:36,280
enabling the team to tether
the shark next to the boat.
510
00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:38,000
INDISTINCT SPEECH
511
00:36:42,360 --> 00:36:44,920
A satellite tag
is fixed to its dorsal fin.
512
00:36:47,120 --> 00:36:50,720
Every five minutes, this tag will
record important information,
513
00:36:50,720 --> 00:36:54,720
including depth, light level
and water temperature.
514
00:36:58,520 --> 00:37:01,400
After 30 days,
it'll pop to the surface
515
00:37:01,400 --> 00:37:04,280
and start sending a stream of data
to Tristan.
516
00:37:06,800 --> 00:37:09,400
TRISTAN: There's nothing more
exciting than the few days
517
00:37:09,400 --> 00:37:11,200
when we know a tag is going to pop
518
00:37:11,200 --> 00:37:12,680
as to where it's going to pop.
519
00:37:14,080 --> 00:37:18,440
It's very important that we learn
more about their migration patterns,
520
00:37:18,440 --> 00:37:19,920
their population structure,
521
00:37:19,920 --> 00:37:23,080
in order to try and put management
measures in place
522
00:37:23,080 --> 00:37:24,760
to improve their conservation.
523
00:37:27,560 --> 00:37:30,600
They deserve to be on this planet.
524
00:37:30,600 --> 00:37:33,840
Like us and like anything,
they deserve to be here
525
00:37:33,840 --> 00:37:37,880
and we, as humans,
should be responsible.
526
00:37:37,880 --> 00:37:41,440
So it is critical that we learn
more about these animals
527
00:37:41,440 --> 00:37:43,440
and it's critical
that we protect them.
528
00:37:47,040 --> 00:37:50,920
Tristan's tags have shown that these
sharks not only traverse oceans...
529
00:37:53,040 --> 00:37:56,480
..but dive down to feed at depths
of over 400 metres.
530
00:37:58,800 --> 00:38:01,200
Showing that if we want
to protect sharks,
531
00:38:01,200 --> 00:38:04,120
we need to look after
every part of our oceans.
532
00:38:13,120 --> 00:38:15,280
Satellite tags
are now being deployed
533
00:38:15,280 --> 00:38:17,960
on many different species of sharks
534
00:38:17,960 --> 00:38:20,520
and they're revealing
some incredible journeys.
535
00:38:24,560 --> 00:38:26,760
The greatest distance ever recorded
536
00:38:26,760 --> 00:38:30,040
was by a great white shark
named Nicole,
537
00:38:30,040 --> 00:38:33,560
who swam from South Africa
to Australia
538
00:38:33,560 --> 00:38:35,160
and back again -
539
00:38:35,160 --> 00:38:39,120
a staggering 12,000 miles
in just nine months.
540
00:38:48,720 --> 00:38:53,080
While understanding where
these top predators go is important,
541
00:38:53,080 --> 00:38:55,920
another vital piece
of this conservation puzzle
542
00:38:55,920 --> 00:38:58,120
is understanding why they go.
543
00:39:07,800 --> 00:39:10,920
Just off the coast of Bimini
in the Bahamas,
544
00:39:10,920 --> 00:39:14,000
there's a dive site that,
for a few months each year,
545
00:39:14,000 --> 00:39:16,200
provides a close encounter
546
00:39:16,200 --> 00:39:20,360
with one of our most iconic
and well-known migratory sharks.
547
00:39:24,240 --> 00:39:27,040
This is the only place
in the whole world
548
00:39:27,040 --> 00:39:31,120
where you can reliably see
great hammerhead sharks.
549
00:39:33,360 --> 00:39:35,360
So we have dozens of sharks
around us.
550
00:39:35,360 --> 00:39:38,440
Most are like this one here.
551
00:39:38,440 --> 00:39:39,720
It's a nurse shark.
552
00:39:42,040 --> 00:39:44,800
And the reason they have this name
is that when they're feeding,
553
00:39:44,800 --> 00:39:46,960
they make a sucking noise,
554
00:39:46,960 --> 00:39:50,240
kind of like a baby
when it's nursing,
555
00:39:50,240 --> 00:39:52,560
when it's feeding.
556
00:39:52,560 --> 00:39:55,280
You can see that they're quite
content lying on the bottom.
557
00:39:55,280 --> 00:39:59,720
They can pump water
through their gills
558
00:39:59,720 --> 00:40:03,000
and they don't have to swim
constantly in order to breathe,
559
00:40:03,000 --> 00:40:04,680
like many other sharks do.
560
00:40:06,880 --> 00:40:10,400
But this creature that's heading
towards us now,
561
00:40:10,400 --> 00:40:12,800
that really is the main event.
562
00:40:13,960 --> 00:40:15,440
It's a great hammerhead.
563
00:40:17,080 --> 00:40:22,120
There are at least three of them
around us right now.
564
00:40:22,120 --> 00:40:26,400
And while the nurse sharks
are quite dopey
565
00:40:26,400 --> 00:40:28,640
and just hanging out on the bottom,
566
00:40:28,640 --> 00:40:31,520
this is a far more targeted
predator.
567
00:40:32,600 --> 00:40:36,320
There is nothing else quite like
a great hammerhead shark.
568
00:40:36,320 --> 00:40:38,520
The shape of the head,
569
00:40:38,520 --> 00:40:40,760
the giant dorsal fin.
570
00:40:40,760 --> 00:40:43,080
It's so unusual-looking
571
00:40:43,080 --> 00:40:46,600
and, yet, so perfectly adapted
to its job.
572
00:40:48,240 --> 00:40:50,560
Shaking the hammerhead
from side to side
573
00:40:50,560 --> 00:40:52,160
as it moves along the bottom,
574
00:40:52,160 --> 00:40:55,360
sensing the potential
moving muscles of its prey.
575
00:41:02,400 --> 00:41:05,280
Perhaps the most incredible thing
about this
576
00:41:05,280 --> 00:41:09,000
is that great hammerheads are
an endangered species.
577
00:41:10,400 --> 00:41:13,400
There are very, very few of these
almighty sharks left
578
00:41:13,400 --> 00:41:15,000
in the whole world.
579
00:41:16,680 --> 00:41:19,720
And right now,
I think we have seven.
580
00:41:21,960 --> 00:41:24,320
I don't quite know what to say.
581
00:41:24,320 --> 00:41:26,040
I'm completely blown away.
582
00:41:33,120 --> 00:41:36,200
These great hammerheads
are seasonal visitors,
583
00:41:36,200 --> 00:41:37,920
spending the winter months here,
584
00:41:37,920 --> 00:41:39,520
between December and April.
585
00:41:43,240 --> 00:41:45,640
Many return year after year.
586
00:41:49,600 --> 00:41:52,720
The scientists have at least
30 individuals
587
00:41:52,720 --> 00:41:54,800
that they know by name...
588
00:41:56,080 --> 00:41:59,280
..and not just by name,
but by personality
589
00:41:59,280 --> 00:42:00,960
and character and behaviour.
590
00:42:02,480 --> 00:42:05,520
And even in the short time
since I've been here,
591
00:42:05,520 --> 00:42:09,520
I've been starting to get to know
the individual personalities here.
592
00:42:11,040 --> 00:42:13,800
You might not think of a shark
as having a personality,
593
00:42:13,800 --> 00:42:15,440
but they very much do.
594
00:42:15,440 --> 00:42:19,320
Some of them are quite bold
and dramatic,
595
00:42:19,320 --> 00:42:22,280
and others are real gentle giants.
596
00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:29,720
This almighty great hammerhead here
is called Gaia.
597
00:42:29,720 --> 00:42:32,080
She's a female.
598
00:42:32,080 --> 00:42:33,840
And the largest that they see here.
599
00:42:36,720 --> 00:42:38,760
What an absolute beauty!
600
00:42:44,040 --> 00:42:46,560
I will never, ever get tired
of this.
601
00:42:49,160 --> 00:42:51,160
Holy Moley!
602
00:42:51,160 --> 00:42:53,320
HE LAUGHS EXCITEDLY
603
00:42:56,200 --> 00:42:58,080
For five months of the year,
604
00:42:58,080 --> 00:43:00,560
these hammerheads are seen
virtually every day.
605
00:43:02,400 --> 00:43:05,200
But in April,
they suddenly disappear.
606
00:43:16,400 --> 00:43:19,760
One female was tagged here
at Bimini.
607
00:43:19,760 --> 00:43:22,640
She then headed north
to the coast of the Carolinas,
608
00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:24,720
before turning south again,
609
00:43:24,720 --> 00:43:27,800
ending up off the coast of Florida.
610
00:43:27,800 --> 00:43:32,000
A journey of over 3,000 miles
in less than two months.
611
00:43:39,680 --> 00:43:43,080
But what's causing these ocean
wanderers to travel so far
612
00:43:43,080 --> 00:43:44,680
and so fast?
613
00:43:51,680 --> 00:43:53,880
I'm taking to the air to find out.
614
00:44:02,360 --> 00:44:04,800
This is Palm Beach, Florida.
615
00:44:04,800 --> 00:44:07,320
It's a playground for the rich
and the famous.
616
00:44:07,320 --> 00:44:10,280
But little do they know that
just off the coast
617
00:44:10,280 --> 00:44:13,680
is one of the greatest gatherings
of large predators on the planet.
618
00:44:22,880 --> 00:44:24,920
These are blacktip sharks.
619
00:44:31,400 --> 00:44:33,160
Massing in their thousands
620
00:44:33,160 --> 00:44:36,680
before migrating north
to their summer feeding grounds
621
00:44:36,680 --> 00:44:38,640
off the coast of North Carolina.
622
00:44:40,560 --> 00:44:45,040
It's these sharks that attract
a host of larger predatory sharks,
623
00:44:45,040 --> 00:44:47,120
including the great hammerheads,
624
00:44:47,120 --> 00:44:50,920
which travel from the Bahamas
to feast on this bounty of food.
625
00:44:54,400 --> 00:44:56,360
I've joined Stephen Kajiura,
626
00:44:56,360 --> 00:44:59,080
a professor at
Florida Atlantic University.
627
00:45:01,160 --> 00:45:05,040
Each year, he takes to the air
to monitor the number of sharks.
628
00:45:08,040 --> 00:45:14,000
Just a slick of sharks going on
all the way parallel to the coast.
629
00:45:14,000 --> 00:45:15,800
That is absolutely fantastic.
630
00:45:17,040 --> 00:45:20,280
They stand out so well against
the sandy bottom, don't they?
631
00:45:20,280 --> 00:45:22,240
That's one of the reasons
we're so successful
632
00:45:22,240 --> 00:45:23,920
with the aerial surveys here.
633
00:45:23,920 --> 00:45:26,000
We have clear water,
a light, sandy bottom,
634
00:45:26,000 --> 00:45:27,280
we're able to see everything.
635
00:45:27,280 --> 00:45:29,720
And they're in nice and shallow.
They're nice and shallow.
636
00:45:29,720 --> 00:45:31,960
They really make it easy for you,
don't they?
637
00:45:33,000 --> 00:45:35,200
But all's not what it seems.
638
00:45:35,200 --> 00:45:37,320
Stephen's long-term study has shown
639
00:45:37,320 --> 00:45:40,240
that this spectacular migration
is changing.
640
00:45:41,960 --> 00:45:45,120
And this could have serious
consequences.
641
00:45:45,120 --> 00:45:48,280
I've been doing these aerial surveys
for the last nine years.
642
00:45:48,280 --> 00:45:51,000
We've seen this decline
in the number of sharks
643
00:45:51,000 --> 00:45:52,400
over the past nine years.
644
00:45:52,400 --> 00:45:53,760
At the same time,
645
00:45:53,760 --> 00:45:56,400
we've seen an increase
in the water temperature down here.
646
00:45:56,400 --> 00:45:58,440
They have a very narrow
thermal tolerance.
647
00:45:58,440 --> 00:46:01,640
They like water between about
21 and 25 Celsius.
648
00:46:01,640 --> 00:46:03,880
And as water temperatures
keep rising,
649
00:46:03,880 --> 00:46:06,400
we're getting fewer and fewer sharks
coming this far south.
650
00:46:06,400 --> 00:46:09,120
Presumably the blacktips
that you've got here,
651
00:46:09,120 --> 00:46:11,320
there are constant interactions
between them
652
00:46:11,320 --> 00:46:12,920
and the larger predatory sharks
653
00:46:12,920 --> 00:46:15,480
like the tigers,
the great hammerheads and the bulls.
654
00:46:15,480 --> 00:46:17,600
How is that likely to be affected?
655
00:46:17,600 --> 00:46:19,040
That's a really good question.
656
00:46:19,040 --> 00:46:21,880
If you don't have these blacktips
sweeping down here
657
00:46:21,880 --> 00:46:24,240
in the tens of thousands
every spring,
658
00:46:24,240 --> 00:46:26,400
there's no food
for the big hammerheads
659
00:46:26,400 --> 00:46:28,840
and these blacktips are not eating
all the bait fish.
660
00:46:28,840 --> 00:46:31,240
And so, we don't even know
what might happen.
661
00:46:36,760 --> 00:46:38,080
You know, these ecosystems
662
00:46:38,080 --> 00:46:40,400
have remained pretty much unchanged
for millennia,
663
00:46:40,400 --> 00:46:43,720
but they are dramatically changing
in my lifetime,
664
00:46:43,720 --> 00:46:46,600
and where that will lead
we simply don't know.
665
00:46:53,720 --> 00:46:57,240
The rate at which our seas
are heating up is accelerating.
666
00:46:59,000 --> 00:47:02,120
And the effects of this warming
are now being felt
667
00:47:02,120 --> 00:47:04,080
in every one of our oceans.
668
00:47:17,680 --> 00:47:21,120
Sharks are under pressure
from all sides -
669
00:47:21,120 --> 00:47:23,760
fishing, their habitats changing,
670
00:47:23,760 --> 00:47:26,800
and now, in these protected waters,
671
00:47:26,800 --> 00:47:28,640
their fellow sea creatures.
672
00:47:35,160 --> 00:47:39,240
Recently, an unwanted visitor
has appeared in Caribbean waters.
673
00:47:46,400 --> 00:47:49,080
This is a lionfish.
674
00:47:52,520 --> 00:47:56,600
A predator that could eat
fish populations out of existence...
675
00:47:58,200 --> 00:48:01,120
..threatening the future
of the resident sharks.
676
00:48:07,680 --> 00:48:09,920
Ten years ago, I saw for myself
677
00:48:09,920 --> 00:48:14,000
just what devastating predators
they are in their native waters
678
00:48:14,000 --> 00:48:15,440
off Malaysia.
679
00:48:17,360 --> 00:48:19,520
There's a small fish over here.
680
00:48:19,520 --> 00:48:21,200
The lionfish has spotted it.
681
00:48:22,600 --> 00:48:24,440
This could be trouble.
682
00:48:25,760 --> 00:48:28,000
{\an8}It's moving in.
683
00:48:28,000 --> 00:48:31,560
{\an8}Oh! Unbelievable!
684
00:48:31,560 --> 00:48:34,120
{\an8}Did you see the speed
of that strike?
685
00:48:36,880 --> 00:48:41,520
Lionfish eat about 70 different
species of fish and invertebrate.
686
00:48:44,480 --> 00:48:46,320
If it fits in their mouth,
687
00:48:46,320 --> 00:48:48,040
they'll eat it.
688
00:48:52,880 --> 00:48:54,360
It did it again.
689
00:48:55,840 --> 00:49:00,000
This is just the most astounding
display of feeding
690
00:49:00,000 --> 00:49:02,160
I think I've ever seen.
691
00:49:09,800 --> 00:49:12,880
Such an elegant fish is,
unsurprisingly,
692
00:49:12,880 --> 00:49:14,880
a favourite of the aquarium trade.
693
00:49:16,240 --> 00:49:20,920
And in the 1980s, a few unwanted
pets ended up being released
694
00:49:20,920 --> 00:49:22,440
in the seas off Florida...
695
00:49:25,000 --> 00:49:26,920
..with devastating results.
696
00:49:31,200 --> 00:49:34,920
In just over 30 years,
they've spread from coastal Florida
697
00:49:34,920 --> 00:49:36,360
with alarming speed.
698
00:49:38,600 --> 00:49:41,600
They're now found as far north
as New York
699
00:49:41,600 --> 00:49:44,280
and south to Brazil.
700
00:49:45,480 --> 00:49:48,560
This is the wrong fish
in the wrong place
701
00:49:48,560 --> 00:49:50,040
and at the wrong time.
702
00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:57,320
And it's threatening to unbalance
the already fragile system
703
00:49:57,320 --> 00:49:59,480
upon which the sharks depend.
704
00:50:03,280 --> 00:50:05,400
This is a growing problem
705
00:50:05,400 --> 00:50:08,200
that people like marine biologist
Alex Fogg
706
00:50:08,200 --> 00:50:10,080
are trying to find a solution to.
707
00:50:11,120 --> 00:50:13,280
ALEX: The reefs have changed
actually quite a bit
708
00:50:13,280 --> 00:50:14,520
since I first started diving.
709
00:50:14,520 --> 00:50:17,840
I started diving about ten years ago
and in this area in particular,
710
00:50:17,840 --> 00:50:19,560
lionfish weren't here yet.
711
00:50:26,640 --> 00:50:29,160
When we first started seeing
lionfish on the reef
712
00:50:29,160 --> 00:50:32,320
it was one here or one there,
but now you go to a reef site
713
00:50:32,320 --> 00:50:34,920
and you can see upwards
of 100 lionfish.
714
00:50:34,920 --> 00:50:36,960
I mean, they're here eating
everything.
715
00:50:36,960 --> 00:50:39,520
It's like an all-you-can-eat buffet,
if you will.
716
00:50:41,520 --> 00:50:43,640
They're not just voracious hunters,
717
00:50:43,640 --> 00:50:45,720
they're prolific breeders too.
718
00:50:47,240 --> 00:50:53,640
A female lionfish can lay more than
20,000 eggs every four days.
719
00:50:55,400 --> 00:50:59,760
They can reach densities of
over 200 adults per acre of reef
720
00:50:59,760 --> 00:51:04,920
and that quantity can hoover up
nearly half a million fish a year.
721
00:51:08,200 --> 00:51:12,720
This is having a devastating effect
on an already fragile ecosystem.
722
00:51:14,000 --> 00:51:16,280
But Alex has a plan.
723
00:51:20,320 --> 00:51:22,280
You can't really catch them
on hook and lines.
724
00:51:22,280 --> 00:51:24,440
There's really only one way to
harvest lion fish
725
00:51:24,440 --> 00:51:27,240
and that's through diving
and harvesting with spears.
726
00:51:32,960 --> 00:51:35,360
And all these fish
don't go to waste.
727
00:51:37,880 --> 00:51:41,080
Lionfish are definitely one of the
most environmentally-friendly fish
728
00:51:41,080 --> 00:51:42,440
that you can actually eat.
729
00:51:44,200 --> 00:51:46,760
This is one fish that we want to
eat into extinction.
730
00:51:48,200 --> 00:51:50,840
Hey, Chef. Got you a bunch of fish.
Right, man. Appreciate it.
731
00:51:50,840 --> 00:51:52,440
Thank you very much. Thank you.
732
00:51:58,560 --> 00:52:01,120
Alex hopes that by making
a commercial market
733
00:52:01,120 --> 00:52:03,520
for these lionfish,
more will be caught...
734
00:52:04,760 --> 00:52:07,320
..allowing reefs and sharks
to recover.
735
00:52:10,520 --> 00:52:12,560
Ten years down the road from now,
736
00:52:12,560 --> 00:52:14,640
lionfish are still going to be here.
737
00:52:14,640 --> 00:52:17,080
Are they going to be at the numbers
that we have today?
738
00:52:17,080 --> 00:52:20,440
I'm not sure. I think that if we can
just get lionfish to a point
739
00:52:20,440 --> 00:52:22,680
to where the ecosystem can actually
deal with it,
740
00:52:22,680 --> 00:52:24,760
or they find their space
in the ecosystem,
741
00:52:24,760 --> 00:52:25,800
that's our best bet.
742
00:52:28,440 --> 00:52:31,760
The market for lionfish
in restaurants is growing.
743
00:52:32,840 --> 00:52:35,040
But to fully combat this invasion,
744
00:52:35,040 --> 00:52:37,360
things are being taken
a step further.
745
00:52:45,440 --> 00:52:50,440
Along the coast of America, locals
have created lionfish derbies.
746
00:52:53,080 --> 00:52:57,120
The aim - to collect and remove
as many lionfish as possible.
747
00:53:06,760 --> 00:53:10,600
Each fish is measured and prizes
are awarded for catching the most,
748
00:53:10,600 --> 00:53:12,840
the biggest,
749
00:53:12,840 --> 00:53:15,040
and the smallest lionfish.
750
00:53:26,640 --> 00:53:28,920
Hundreds gather
to share in the prize...
751
00:53:30,520 --> 00:53:31,960
..and eat the catch.
752
00:53:42,120 --> 00:53:45,120
These derbies serve to
reduce numbers,
753
00:53:45,120 --> 00:53:47,720
as well as raising awareness
of a fish
754
00:53:47,720 --> 00:53:52,000
that threatens the ocean ecosystems
upon which the sharks rely.
755
00:53:57,160 --> 00:53:59,720
INDISTINCT CHATTER
756
00:54:07,680 --> 00:54:10,720
Our blue planet is defined
by its oceans...
757
00:54:15,360 --> 00:54:18,480
..and if they are to stay healthy
and productive,
758
00:54:18,480 --> 00:54:22,160
we need a healthy population
of sharks.
759
00:54:25,120 --> 00:54:29,880
At present, sharks are being killed
faster than they can reproduce
760
00:54:29,880 --> 00:54:33,800
and we're set to lose
some of our most iconic species
761
00:54:33,800 --> 00:54:35,400
in the next 50 years.
762
00:54:41,760 --> 00:54:43,320
But across the globe,
763
00:54:43,320 --> 00:54:48,040
many people are working tirelessly
to uncover the secrets of sharks
764
00:54:48,040 --> 00:54:49,640
in order to save them.
765
00:54:53,200 --> 00:54:56,560
People are seeing sharks
in their true light
766
00:54:56,560 --> 00:54:58,800
and starting to appreciate them
767
00:54:58,800 --> 00:55:01,680
for the essential role
they play in our oceans.
768
00:55:05,560 --> 00:55:08,200
There is still much work
that needs to be done...
769
00:55:10,400 --> 00:55:12,400
..but, for now, there is hope...
770
00:55:14,160 --> 00:55:18,320
..for our oceans are packed
with the ingredients for recovery.
771
00:55:23,160 --> 00:55:27,960
The seas are full
of tiny, microscopic life
772
00:55:27,960 --> 00:55:32,680
just looking for somewhere
to fix and make home.
773
00:55:37,320 --> 00:55:39,800
This is the Sapona.
774
00:55:44,360 --> 00:55:48,920
It was grounded here in a hurricane
many decades ago,
775
00:55:48,920 --> 00:55:52,800
and ever since,
it's become a living reef...
776
00:55:54,280 --> 00:55:56,560
..absolutely bursting with life.
777
00:56:00,800 --> 00:56:02,160
So many fish.
778
00:56:04,960 --> 00:56:06,320
So beautiful.
779
00:56:11,680 --> 00:56:15,480
The superstructure
makes a perfect habitat,
780
00:56:15,480 --> 00:56:19,320
places for them to hide
from predators.
781
00:56:19,320 --> 00:56:24,600
And it's covered with encrusting
soft corals and fans.
782
00:56:30,200 --> 00:56:33,120
All sorts of animals
take up shelter inside.
783
00:56:37,600 --> 00:56:39,920
Oh, stingray!
784
00:56:44,040 --> 00:56:50,560
It's like swimming through
the ribcage of an almighty whale
785
00:56:50,560 --> 00:56:52,560
lying on the bottom.
786
00:56:52,560 --> 00:56:54,120
Incredible.
787
00:56:59,400 --> 00:57:04,000
This is the basis of the food chain
upon which sharks depend.
788
00:57:15,280 --> 00:57:19,760
If we protect our seas then life
will bounce back in our oceans,
789
00:57:19,760 --> 00:57:21,600
if we give it the chance.
790
00:57:27,080 --> 00:57:30,600
The interconnectedness of our oceans
and their inhabitants
791
00:57:30,600 --> 00:57:32,840
is intricate and far-reaching.
792
00:57:35,440 --> 00:57:38,360
Sharks depend on the creatures
around them
793
00:57:38,360 --> 00:57:39,920
as these creatures in turn
794
00:57:39,920 --> 00:57:41,480
depend on the sharks.
795
00:57:44,080 --> 00:57:49,320
They've been stalking our seas
for at least 400 million years.
796
00:57:49,320 --> 00:57:52,480
I hope they've got a few million
more left in them yet.
797
00:57:55,200 --> 00:57:59,160
The Bahamas are at the forefront
of shark research and conservation.
798
00:58:00,400 --> 00:58:03,280
And lessons learnt here
now need to be applied
799
00:58:03,280 --> 00:58:04,960
all across our blue planet.
800
00:58:10,360 --> 00:58:13,320
The future of sharks
is in our hands.
801
00:58:15,920 --> 00:58:20,160
And it's for us to decide where
this sharks' tale goes next.
95637
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