For
the first time, an international team of researchers has used
satellites to track the movements of manta rays, providing valuable new
information about the massive rays, which are considered "vulnerable" to
extinction by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The
preliminary findings for the Atlantic mantas showed that they traveled
as far as 680 miles over a one- to two-month period searching for food,
sticking close to the coastline. They also spent considerable time in
shipping lanes, which rendered them vulnerable to being hit by
freighters.
The manta ray, Manta birostris, is the largest of the rays, reaching as
big as 25 feet across. Although they are closely related to sharks and
are often called "devilfish" because of their frightening appearance,
they are actually harmless to humans. The animals are filter feeders,
straining large volumes of water through their mouths to extract
zooplankton and fish eggs. They are considered vulnerable because
fisherman often capture them to use as bait for sharks. Their gill
rakers (fingerlike structures that filter out prey) are also used in
traditional Chinese medicine.
A team headed by Rachel T. Graham of the Wildlife Conservation Society
in Punta Gorda, Belize, attached transmitters to six individuals -- four
females, one male and one juvenile -- off the coast of Mexico's Yucatan
peninsula. They reported in the journal PLoS One that they monitored
the rays for periods ranging from 27 to 64 days, until the transmitters
fell off.
Although the rays traveled as far as 680 miles, they spent most of their
time within Mexico's territorial waters -- that is, within 200 miles of
the coastline. Only about 11.5% of the areas they traversed, however,
were within marine protected areas, and the majority of their locations
were within shipping lanes. The coastal regions they traversed were rich
in zooplankton and fish eggs, explaining the rays' presence there, the
team said.
"Studies such as these are critical in developing effective management
of manta rays, which appear to be declining worldwide," said marine
biologist Howard Rosenbaum, director of the Wildlife Conservation
Society's Ocean Giant Program.
Copyright 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment