Wednesday, May 23, 2012
New Study on Manta Rays Reveals Their Hidden Lives
U.S, British and Mexican researchers say satellite tracking technology
has uncovered feeding habitats and threats to a mysterious ocean giant,
the manta ray. Conservationists from the Wildlife Conservation Society
of New York, the University of Exeter in Britain and the government of
Mexico have completed a ground-breaking study using satellite telemetry
to track the open-ocean journeys of the world’s largest ray, which can
grow up to 25 feet in width, the WCS reported Friday. The manta ray,
listed as “vulnerable” by the International Union for Conservation of
Nature, has become increasingly threatened by fishing and accidental
capture and now needs more protection, the researchers said. “Almost
nothing is known about the movements and ecological needs of the manta
ray, one of the ocean’s largest and least-known species,” said Rachel
Graham, director of WCS’s Gulf and Caribbean Sharks and Rays Program.
“Our real-time data illuminate the previously unseen world of this
mythic fish and will help to shape management and conservation
strategies for this species.” The research team attached satellite
transmitters to six manta rays off the coast of Mexico’s Yucatan
Peninsula. “The satellite tag data revealed that some of the rays
traveled more than 1,100 kilometers (680 miles) during the study
period,” Matthew Witt of the University of Exeter’s Environment and
Sustainability Institute said. “The rays spent most of their time
traversing coastal areas plentiful in zooplankton and fish eggs from
spawning events.” Manta rays are declining in the Caribbean and in other
tropical regions of the world’s oceans because they are captured for
shark bait or for use in the traditional Chinese medicinal trade,
researchers said.
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