Entry

Tiger Shark Takes a Bite of Bated Camera

Take by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), this clip shows a routine filming from one of their bated camera. All types of underwater animals are attracted to the food scent, but one had to have the whole thing… keep an eye on the clip until the end.

Here’s what AIMS has to say on [...]

Take by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), this clip shows a routine filming from one of their bated camera. All types of underwater animals are attracted to the food scent, but one had to have the whole thing… keep an eye on the clip until the end.

Here’s what AIMS has to say on this:

Baited Remote Underwater Video Stations (BRUVS) have been developed by AIMS scientists in order to monitor the vast areas of deeper inter-reef and shelf habitats inaccessible to research divers so that important bioregions there can be included in marine protected areas.

BRUVS consist of tourist-grade “HandiCam” video cameras in simple underwater housings made of PVC sewer pipe and acrylic, with a canister of minced pilchards on the end of a bait arm in the field of view. The housings are held in steel frames, and are deployed in strings of four to six under separate ropes and floats, to be picked up after one or two hours filming at the seabed.

Baited videos record species attracted to the bait plume or camera station, species attracted to the commotion caused by feeding and aggregation at the station, species occupying territories within the field of view of the camera, and species indifferent to the station but present in or passing through the field of view during the deployment.

The range of fish, sharks, rays, sea snakes and other animals sighted on BRUVS tapes has been remarkable – over 300 species to date, from 3cm leatherjackets to 3m hammerhead sharks.

Hat tip to Kevin Z @ Deep Sea News and Climate Shifts.

Related Posts

  1. Shark Bite C-Section Gives Birth to Babies
  2. Vintage Nikonos 1 Underwater Camera Surfaces
  3. New Trend: Petting Tiger Sharks
  4. Damien Hirst | Tiger Shark sells for $17 Million
  5. Casio Exilim EX-G1 Camera Can Snap Aquarium Pics Underwater
  • btaylor66
    I wonder how much the Heisenberg uncertainty principle comes into play when performing these studies. The fact that someone or something is there filming alters the way they interact with the environment, which can then give us a poor representation of how they really act.
blog comments powered by Disqus