![]() This takes a lot of trial and error, so don’t be surprised if most of the tags you see are in various stages of falling off the shark. The whole goal is to figure out the best way of attaching these tags so that they will stay on the animals without inhibiting them. We will be taking advantage of this in the coming months by testing a number of different tag packages and attachment styles, some of which you may see on animals when you visit the aquarium. I now have easy access to a number of different sharks and rays (and other species) just 20 minutes from my house. ![]() This is one of the things I am excited to work on with my new colleagues at Newport Aquarium. So I spend a lot of time brainstorming ideas on how we can combine different tags, how we can attach them to animals, and how we can get them back. By that I mean we often have to design and build new tag packages for different projects. I’m also involved with exciting research on the behavior of sea turtles and other species, and all of my work involves a heavy logistical component. Our tags allow us to determine whether the sharks live or die, and how long it takes them to recover and start swimming normally again. My research now focuses largely on what happens to sharks after they are caught and released by fishermen. It sounds complicated, and it took some time to set up, but so far it’s fantastic. It’s now 2017 and you can do whatever you want from almost anywhere! Take it from a shark scientist working for an organization in Boston, MA ( New England Aquarium) living in Cincinnati, OH, working in Newport, KY, who still does much of his fieldwork in Florida. I’ll talk more about these cool tools/toys in an upcoming post. These tags use the same sensors found in Fitbits, smartphones, and video game controllers to reveal fine-scale details about the secret lives of sharks. Working in Hawaii for 8 years and Florida for another 7 after that put me on the front lines of shark research, and in the process I started learning how to use a new type of tag called an accelerometer. I also learned science skills that made me a good candidate for graduate school at the University of Hawaii. I learned how to handle myself on the water and how to handle sharks without getting bitten (most of the time). Nick Whitney tags a nurse shark while on a tagging exhibition in the Florida Keys, as an undergrad at Albion College. I had the time of my life – no one screamed at me, there were no nail guns, and my boss was the one sending me on spring break trips to Florida. It took me about half a second to accept this invitation, and as an undergraduate I spent three summers capturing, tagging, and tracking nurse sharks on their mating grounds in the Florida Keys. Jeff took the time to meet with me and eventually invited me to come to Albion and help him with his shark research. I had been fascinated with sharks all my life, and my experience in the aquarium industry (including breeding some endangered species in a series of tanks in my bedroom), made me the closest thing to a marine biology student that this professor could find at a small liberal arts college in Michigan. A shark scientist in the Midwest? What a concept! Jeff Carrier, a professor at nearby Albion College (Albion, MI), who was studying sharks in the Florida Keys. ![]() With all of these career failures during high school, college seemed like a logical choice for me. I worked in an aquarium store but got fired for missing too much work (spring break trip to Florida). I worked construction for a while but accidentally shot my boss in the hand with a nail gun (he handled it well). What could be better than riding around on the back of a truck all day, wearing whatever you want, and playing your music at full blast?Īs I grew up I tried various other jobs: I umpired softball but was always getting screamed at by half the people (the half that knew the rules). Read more here: Newport Aquarium announced Renowned Shark Scientist, Nick Whitney, joined the Newport Aquarium team.įrom the time I was a young kid growing up in Michigan I knew exactly what I wanted to be when I grew up: a garbage man. We announced last fall, the arrival of Dr. By: Nick Whitney, Senior Research Scientist
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