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  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran Ax01's Avatar
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    Like 100 Baby Hammerheads Dumped

    WTF people. why do we keep doing this?

    ok i get that some don't like sharks and they pose a danger to swimmers, etc. but more peeps die or are injured by lightning strikes per year. Hammerheads and other sharks and fish and animals are all apart of the ocean ecosystem. we would be overrun by shrimp, crab, octopus, rays and fish that they eat if we didn't have Hammerheads and sharks. (you know what i mean.) they are quite beautiful animals too. so it's sad when animals are massacred and dumped.

    cached story: http://cc.bingj.com/cache.aspx?q=Ham...KzthYCQQPPRtcU

    When nearly 100 baby hammerhead sharks were found dead in June at Keehi Lagoon, I felt sick.

    The photos of the little sharks, dumped like so much trash, were so disturbing that I left the TV and stalked to the beach fuming.

    It was a callous killing of some of Hawaii’s most remarkable native animals.

    Hammerhead sharks get their name from their cartoonish heads, looking like something that got smashed beneath one of Wile E. Coyote’s falling anvils. Those goofy-looking heads, spread like flattened mallets, make the sharks look clumsy.

    Not so. The head’s leading edge is bladelike, allowing the shark to cut efficiently through the water. The flat surface also acts as a kind of rudder providing lift. It’s their seemingly ungainly heads that make hammerhead sharks exceptionally maneuverable.

    And exceptional hunters. A large eye on each side of the spread-out head gives the fish an extra-wide field of vision. Near the eyes are the fish’s nostrils containing sensory cells that detect odors. Other cells embedded in the skin under the flat head pick up electric fields in living organisms hiding in the sand.

    Hammerheads find food by swinging the head back and forth over the ocean floor like a metal detector. When it detects a ray, octopus, fish or crustacean, it can pin it to the ocean floor with its head.

    Hammerheads aren’t interested in eating people. Only two, nonfatal hammerhead shark bites have been recorded in Hawaii since 1779. Those were likely mistakes on the sharks’ part.

    Hawaii hosts three species of hammerheads, the most common being the scalloped hammerhead. Between April and October scalloped hammerhead sharks come to our islands from offshore to mate and deliver their live pups in Kaneohe Bay, Keehi Lagoon, Waimea Bay and other shallow areas.

    Scalloped hammerheads grow to 13 feet, but most are around 7 feet. Mature females are 3 to 4 feet longer than males, giving birth to 15 to 31 pups that are about 20 inches long. The youngsters spend three to four months in their birth bays eating shrimp and crabs on the ocean floor. Then off they go to hunt with the grown-ups in deep water.

    No one knows who or what killed Keehi’s little sharks. One Hawaii reader believes that commercial fishers who were docked in Honolulu killed the mothers for their fins, valued on the black market, he wrote, at $2,000 each.

    Several biologists guessed that the babies got caught in gillnets and drowned.

    Whatever the cause, killing any hammerhead in Hawaii is senseless, depressing and cruel. Soup is an absurd reason to kill any shark, and gillnets should be banned here, as they are in Florida.

    But then, just when I was feeling hopeless over this incident, I found an online video shot in June at the Kaneohe sandbar by the Wayne Kishida family. With people like this in Hawaii, there’s hope for our hammerheads.

    To make your day, too, visit goo.gl/7gXAne.

    Shakas, Mommy, shakas!

    on the baby Hammerheads and shark conservation: https://www.onegreenplanet.org/anima...-beach-hawaii/
    Why Hundreds of Dead Baby Hammerhead Sharks Were Dumped on a Beach in Hawaii

    Late June 2018, a tragedy in Hawaii made international headlines. Near Oahu’s Keehi Lagoon, officials found nearly one hundred baby hammerhead shark pups. After a thorough investigation, authorities believe the baby sharks were caught by a fisherman, who then discarded them near the La Mariana Sailing Club.

    Samuel Etrata, who works at the sailing club, was the first person to discover the shark pups. He told local TV station KHON, “I see sharks right from here and then I walked farther and I see all these fish, the sharks across this barricade. It is very shocking, yeah.”

    The summer months coincide with hammerhead shark birthing season on Oahu. It is natural for the mother shark to swim close to shore to give birth to her young. Keehi Lagoon, along with Kaneohe Bay, is popular grounds for this. According to state officials, including the Hawaii Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement, nothing natural would cause the mass deaths of hundreds of hammerhead shark pups.

    Andrew Rossiter, director of the Waikiki Aquarium, suspects that a fisherman snagged the baby sharks in a gill net (a vertical hanging net notorious for entangling threatened species). Within a few minutes, the baby sharks would have suffocated. “To breathe they have to keep moving so once they’re in the net for even two to three minutes, they’re unable to breathe and they suffocate,” Rossiter said. Likely out of guilt and due to fear, the fisherman dumped the pups on the shore.

    Etrata was quick to call the State Department of Land and Natural Resources, which manages the state’s ocean waters. Reportedly, an investigation is presently being conducted. So far, no additional leads have been shared with the public. Whoever leases the Keehi land is now tasked with removing the shark carcasses, reports the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

    About Hammerhead Sharks
    According to Honolulu Magazine, there are more than 40 types of hammerhead sharks that live near Hawaii. The dead baby sharks are more than likely the scalloped species. As National Geographic points out, hammerhead shark species have an oblong head shape and wide-set eyes. These features give them better visual range than most other sharks. Another feature that sets hammerhead sharks apart is the sensory organ in their heads that allows them to detect the electrical fields of their prey.

    The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List considers the coastal and semi-oceanic creatures to be endangered. This distinction makes the latest incident even more heartbreaking. Explains the IUCN on its website: “All life-stages are vulnerable to capture as both target and bycatch in fisheries.” The entry goes on to note that “hammerhead shark fins are more highly valued than other species because of their high fin ray count, leading to increased targeting of this species in some areas.”

    Taking Action
    What’s being done to protect the endangered species? According to Motherboard, state legislation that would punish those who kill sharks is currently pending. The bill, which was introduced in 2016, would make the capture or kill of sharks in this way a crime. While it is heartening that action is being taken, the bill isn’t likely to pass until 2019 at the earliest.

    3 Ways to Help the Sharks
    Don’t despair while you’re waiting for legislation to pass and go into effect. There are other, simple ways you can assist the aquatic wildlife. Following are three ways you can help all sharks:

    1. Change Your Spending Habits
    Shark species are clearly in danger. That’s why it’s important to pay attention to your spending habits, as items you purchase can directly promote their death. Buying shark fin soup, jaws, liver, cartilage, skins, and teeth all affect the market for shark products and thus, the poaching of sharks. Avoiding products that contribute to the death of sharks is the first step in aiding the aquatic creatures. Learn more here and here.

    2. Combat Myths and Stereotypes
    One of the reasons few people feel remorse for mass shark deaths is because Hollywood portrays the animals to be ferocious, human-eating beasts. While it is true that sharks can be incredibly dangerous, they are responsible for far fewer deaths than most people think. North Americans are 30 times more likely to be killed by lightning than a shark. People are also more likely to be killed by vending machines than sharks. Only a dozen or so deaths are caused by sharks each year. Compare that to the number of sharks killed each year, and you’ll realize why advocating for the aquatic species is a worthy cause. Learn more here.

    3. Stand Up Against Unsustainable Fishing Practices
    Did you know — approximately 50 percent of all shark deaths are caused by commercial fishing practices each year? In addition to researching your country’s laws concerning this practice, then writing a letter of concern to public officials, you can support organizations that are working to protect sharks. These include Protect the Sharks Foundation, The Humane Society, Oceana.org, Wildaid.org, The Dorsal Fin, and Saving sharks.com. You can also campaign in your local area and hold a free awareness event at your school, college, or local library to educate others.

    4. Adopt a Plant-Based Diet
    The easiest way to help reduce suffering in the oceans is to omit fish and other animal products from your diet. Humanity’s insatiable appetite for animals is resulting in the phenomena known as “overfishing.” Essentially, this means the oceans are being emptied of wildlife. Learn more here.

    Please share this news to spread awareness and comment your thoughts below.
    RIP Mamba
    ----------------

    Wicked ones now on IG & FB!6292

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    ladywhipple02 (09-04-2018)

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    So messed up!!!!!

  4. #3
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    Booo, why all the sad posts today!???

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  5. #4
    BPnet Veteran Ax01's Avatar
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    Re: Like 100 Baby Hammerheads Dumped

    Quote Originally Posted by hilabeans View Post
    Booo, why all the sad posts today!???
    oh i just wanted to pile on the feels after the elephant and turtle threads.
    RIP Mamba
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    Wicked ones now on IG & FB!6292

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