Sharks Content / Sharks Content for ٺƵ en Sharks and Rays Leap Out of the Water for Many Reasons, Including Feeding, Courtship and Communication /news/sharks-and-rays-leap-out-water-many-reasons-including-feeding-courtship-and-communication <div><p>Many sharks and rays are known to breach, leaping fully or partly out of the water. In a <a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-024-01584-5">recent study</a>, colleagues and I reviewed research on breaching and ranked the most commonly hypothesized functions for it.</p></div> September 23, 2024 - 12:15pm Andy Fell /news/sharks-and-rays-leap-out-water-many-reasons-including-feeding-courtship-and-communication Sharp Decline in Basking Shark Sightings in California /climate/news/sharp-decline-basking-shark-sightings-california <p><span><span>About the size of a small school bus, the basking shark is the second largest fish in the ocean and is found in temperate and tropical waters across the globe. In the mid-1900s, basking sharks were observed by the thousands each year off California’s coast. Now they are rarely seen at all in this region, called the California Current Ecosystem, or CCE.</span></span></p> February 22, 2022 - 12:00pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/sharp-decline-basking-shark-sightings-california Shark Park /climate/news/shark-park <p>North America’s biggest marine protected area — Mexico’s Revillagigedo National Park — may have been nearly seven times smaller if not for shark-tracking data collected by researchers and alumni from the University of California, Davis.</p> <p>The park, known as the “Galapagos of North America,” protects more than 57,000 square miles around the Revillagigedo Archipelago, a UNESCO World Heritage site composed of a string of four volcanic islands about 300 miles southwest of the Baja Peninsula.</p> July 19, 2018 - 4:28pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/shark-park Reef Fish That Conquer Fear of Sharks May Help Control Excess Algae /news/reef-fish-conquer-fear-sharks-may-help-control-excess-algae <p>Coral reef fish experience “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPr8HKBHL40">landscapes of fear</a>” depending on where and how much shelter from predators&nbsp;is available, according to a ٺƵ study. However, the study found that&nbsp;<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=td2UE6ZdMoU">reef fish are willing to move past that fear</a>. They will stray far from their sheltered coral refuge and risk the possibility of being eaten by sharks and other predators&nbsp;if the pay-off in tasty algae is higher.</p> January 12, 2017 - 1:08pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/reef-fish-conquer-fear-sharks-may-help-control-excess-algae