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New South African Tech Could Protect Swimmers From Sharks

New South African Tech Could Protect Swimmers From Sharks

For 50 years, swimmers at KwaZulu-Natal beaches on South Africa’s east coast have been protected from shark bites by shark nets, but nets caused collateral damage, trapping harmless sea life such as dolphins.

Environmental concerns prompted the development of new technology that could deliver a high-tech equivalent of a punch in the nose for sharks, IndependentOnline reports.

South African experts who invented the electronic “shark pod” for surfers and divers — now marketed by an Australian company — are experimenting with an electronic barrier that relies on the super-sensitivity of a sharks’ snout. If it’s successful in keeping swimmers and surfers safe, the technology could be applied globally, according to the report.

From IndependentOnline.

A 100-meter cable with vertical risers designed to emit a low-frequency electronic field is being fixed to the seabed off Glencairn Beach, in a small bay in Cape Town, where it will remain for five months.

“If successful, it will provide the basis to develop a barrier system that can protect bathers without killing or harming sharks or any other marine animals,” says the KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board, developer of the shark pod.

“If someone touched the small part of an electrode that is exposed, they might experience a tingling sensation” but would suffer no harmful effects, according to the group.

The barrier would mark a major shift away from the shark nets used in KwaZulu-Natal on South Africa’s east coast for the past 50 years, which also kill other animals and have been criticized as environmentally destructive.

Research shows that sharks have a gel in their noses that makes them more sensitive to electrical currents than other species. Ordinary fish and sea life such as seals and dolphins should not be affected by the barrier.

“We are doing our damndest to do something environmentally friendly,” said sharks board project specialist Paul von Blerk in an AFP interview.

But the challenges are huge.

“It is easier to design things to put in space,” said Claude Ramasami, project manager at the Institute for Maritime Technology, which is helping the sharks board put its plans into practice.

This is because of the relentless power of the sea, shifts in the seabed, undersea structures and marine life – and simply using electricity in water.

One reason that Glencairn in the Cape was chosen as the site for the experiment is that it is relatively protected compared to the often pounding surf on the tourist beaches of KwaZulu-Natal.

The clear waters will also enable fixed cameras and shark spotters on nearby cliffs to monitor the movements of the predators in the bay and see whether the barrier turns them away from their usual cruising routes.

There should be no shortage of action – in a 25-day observation period, 53 sharks were seen off the beach.

Environmentalists have welcomed the experiment.

Alison Kock, a biological scientist and research manager for Shark Spotters in Cape Town told AFP it was “a really good idea.”

“It’s an exciting opportunity to look at new technology with the ultimate aim of replacing lethal control methods like shark nets and (baited) drum lines.

“The technology is really specific in that it targets a sense that only sharks and rays have. Mammals like dolphins and whales don’t have a sense like this, so
they are not going to be affected,” she said.

The gel in the noses of sharks allows them to detect minute electrical fields such as a heartbeat to find prey in murky water, but as they approach within a
couple of meters of the barrier the power should be enough to turn them away.

John Duncan, senior manager for World Wildlife Fund’s marine program in South Africa, said the organisation was “absolutely supportive of interventions which attempt to manage human-animal interaction in a non-fatal and non-impactful way.

“And at the moment it is a growing challenge with the white shark attacks in South Africa.”

Sharks have killed 13 people in South Africa over the past 10 years, Kock said.

Read more at IndependentOnline.