Sharks appear to monitor local weather conditions, and take the marine equivalent of heading for higher ground when storms threaten. Of course being in the sea this involves diving deeper to avoid the inclement weather.
This has raised the possibility in some minds of using sharks to monitor the weather.
Back in 2001 it was observed that some sharks moved into deeper water before the approach of a hurricane (research paper). Lauren Smith, a marine biologist at the University of Aberdeen, is now testing the ability of sharks to spot bad weather both with in the field monitoring and by putting dogfish into a hyperbaric chamber (press release).
“How many other students get the chance to put a shark in a chamber to study its behaviour?” she asks (Daily Mail).
The actual results of Smith’s work are (disappointingly) not revealed by the press release. This hasn’t stopped the “sharks could be used to predict the weather” headlines, and many jokes about UK weather man Michael Fish.
Some of the work done by Smith has previously been presented at conferences:
Hydrostatic Pressure Receptors and Path Integration in Crustacea and Fish
Smith’s work is pretty cool – putting sharks in a pressure chamber to see what happening is neat. However the amount of coverage the story is getting (28 stories and rising) seems down to the good headlines.
And sadly, using sharks to predict the weather just doesn’t stand up. If sharks are heading deeper due to changes in pressure, wouldn’t it be simpler to simply monitor pressure, say by watching the weather report?
Still, if anyone makes a barometer with a miniature shark inside I’ll be queuing up for one.
Image: a water-proof, independently roaming, marine barometer / NOAA