Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles I'm out here with my team and we're doing surveys for sharks so we're using drones to fly along the beach to look for sharks that we see close to shore and if we see them from the video we can use that to estimate their size and determine what species most of the sharks you see here are juvenile white sharks and we believe this is a really good nursery habitat for them my name is Chris Lowe a professor of marine biology and the director of the shark lab at Cal State Long Beach so this new project that we've embarked on is a survey study where we're shooting video transects along the beach so the goal is to come up with what we'd call an encounter assessment who's most likely to encounter sharks and under what conditions and then we can also use that same video footage to look at how sharks behave when they're in close proximity to people are attacking aggressively are they attracted to people are they repelled by people or do they just ignore people so we have hours of footage of people in the water surfing swimming sharks swimming right by them sometimes right underneath them and completely ignoring them they don't change their speed they don't change their heading they don't turn around and come back when we show that video footage to people they're astounded because it doesn't match what they think of as encountering a shark so we're right in the middle of a two-year study and hopefully by the end of this study we'll be able to answer those questions so one of the challenges of doing a large-scale study like this is you end up with hundreds of hours of video footage that somebody would have to screen through so by working with engineers computer scientists we're developing machine learning algorithms that will go through and identify surfers stand-up paddleboarders boogie boarders swimmers waders and then the software will automatically identify those and then measure their distance to the wave break into the shore line so to my knowledge this has never been done at this scale so if we can develop those predictive models here the goal should be we can do this anywhere in the planet we've been studying juvenile white sharks in Southern California for about 15 years now we've tagged over 80 sharks right now that have active transmitters we have listening stations all along the shoreline from Santa Barbara all the way down to San Diego so anytime the tagged shark swims within 300 yards of one of our underwater receivers the receiver will log the time the date of the ID number and then all the lifeguards or our partners can become subscribers to that alert system so they will get text alerts or they'll get email alerts and then they will use that information at their own discretion to decide whether they want to pull people out of the water or not we also have an autonomous underwater robot that we use to characterize the water column around these beaches where we know the sharks are hanging out the robots also have video cameras on them so as they're moving up and down through the water we're videotaping the seafloor what's in the water column there's also on the robot a receiver so it's listening for tag sharks while it's swimming along doing its transects so this new technology coupled with our aerial surveillance coupled with our tagging is doing something nobody else has ever done before and giving us really high resolution information about why the Sharks are here at this Beach and not that Beach and not that Beach so the idea there is maybe with enough data we'll be able to predict why they're here and where they're gonna be next you
B2 US beach footage shark swimming receiver juvenile Science Captures Close Encounters Between Great White Sharks and Beachgoers With Drones 9 1 joey joey posted on 2021/04/28 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary