Photograph by Mauricio Handler, National Geographic
A photographer snaps a whale shark feeding near Isla Mujeres, Mexico, in an undated picture taken during a separate whale shark aggregation.
Whale sharks predictably congregate along Mexico's eastern coast each summer, but where they roam the rest of the year remains a puzzle, Maslanka noted.
"How populations are linked, if they're linked, what mixing takes place in terms of genes, whether there's any passage between the Atlantic and Pacific populations—it all still remains to be seen."
(See "NASA Tool Helps Track Whale Sharks, Polar Bears.")
Published June 13, 2011
Among Giants
Photograph by Mauricio Handler, National Geographic
Snorkelers swim with whale sharks off Isla Mujeres in an undated file picture.
Whale shark ecotourism is blooming in this region of Mexico, which is close to the major tourism hub of Cancún, Maslanka said.
Overall, tour companies have done well in establishing rules to keep the whale sharks safe—for example by not allowing people to touch the sharks and limiting the number of swimmers in the water at one time.
"It's a very easy and accessible wildlife experience for people in North America," he said. (Related video: "Swimming With Giant Whale Sharks.")
Published June 13, 2011
Filter Feeder
Photograph by Mauricio Handler, National Geographic
The whale shark (like this one pictured off Mexico's Isla Mujeres in an undated photo) is a filter feeder.
To gather its food, the beast juts out its formidable jaws to take in plankton-filled water. It then closes its mouth and opens its gill flaps, using the tooth-like dermal denticles lining its gills as a sieve to catch any organisms bigger than two to three millimeters wide.
Published June 13, 2011
Whale of a Time
Photograph courtesy Mauricio Handler
In a file picture, snorkelers and whale sharks surround a boat in Isla Mujeres.
Due to fishing, the whale shark is listed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The animals continue to be hunted in parts of Asia, primarily for their meat, liver oil, and fins.
Published June 13, 2011
Plenty of Fish
Photograph courtesy Smithsonian Institution
You could call it a whale of a "swarm"—the biggest observed gathering ofwhale sharks was spotted off the coast of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula (see map) in 2009, according to a recent study. Snapped from a small plane, the above picture shows a white boat (bottom right) amid the fishy gathering.
Usually the oceans' biggest fish—which reach lengths of up to 40 feet (12 meters)—stick to themselves as they cruise the world's tropical waters looking for plankton and other small prey. (See picture: "Smallest Whale Shark Discovered—On a Leash.")
But aerial and surface surveys spotted at least 420 of the sharks rubbing fins as they gorged on eggs freshly spawned by little tunny fish, a relative of the mackerel.
"To see a group of that many all in one place was phenomenal—to the point where you couldn't navigate a boat through that without having concern for the fish. That's impressive," said study co-author Mike Maslanka, head of the Nutrition Science Department at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia.
Other organizations that contributed to the study include the Comisión Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas in Cancún, Mexico; the Center for Shark Research in Sarasota, Florida; the Mexico-based conservation group Project Domino; and Atlanta's Georgia Aquarium.
"It doesn't go understated that they're not small animals," added Maslanka, whose study was published in April in the journal PLoS ONE. "You don't realize how big they are until you're swimming beside them or you pull a boat up next to them."
—Christine Dell'Amore
Published June 13, 2011
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