The fearsome tiger shark is not the shore-hugging beast scientists long believed, according to a new study by Nova Southeastern University's Guy Harvey Research Institute in Florida. The study tracked several of the fish over a two-year period and recorded them crisscrossing oceans and, in one case, logging more than 27,000 miles – this might be the longest track ever recorded for any shark – in both coastal and open waters.
Tiger sharks were thought to be a species that preferred the coast as opposed to the open sea, but these new trackings, which were observed by way of satellite–read tags, revealed that the sharks travel over 4,660 miles, round–trip, each year between the coral reefs of the Caribbean and the open waters of the mid–North Atlantic.
Don't stop with reading the story - visit nova.edu to actually look at the tracking history for tiger sharks and 14 other projects!
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 21 2015, @04:49AM
> Personally, I don't think it matters much which kind of shark is stalking you. They are all meat eaters
You watch too much shark week.
There are hundreds of species of shark. Only a handful of them are even going to consider an adult human as prey. Just because a shark's mouth might physically be big enough to bite an arm doesn't mean it is interested in doing so unless extremely stressed, like defending its territory.