The solar-powered buoy sends alerts to lifeguards within seconds of detecting a tagged great white shark
A break in the morning rain proved all a team of marine researchers from the SWAG视频 needed to brave the choppy waters of Saco Bay to deploy a real-time shark detection buoy for the second time.
As storm clouds dissipated, a group of students from the SWAG视频鈥檚 School of Marine and Environmental programs, led by John Mohan, Ph.D., assistant professor, in partnership with a marine scientist from the Maine Department of Marine Resources (DMR), traveled from SWAG视频鈥檚 research pier to a location not far from the coastal hamlet of Ocean Park, mere miles from campus, to drop the buoy in place.
The buoy, purchased with funding from the Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund, is linked to a broader network of several other archival detection buoys in Maine and Massachusetts. With the aid of solar panels and telemetry equipment, the buoy can send a signal in real time to lifeguards and users of the Sharktivity mobile app if a tagged white shark passes within 500 meters of the device鈥檚 location.
The goal of the project, Mohan said, is to help the state of Maine more broadly monitor shark populations and their movements while also promoting education and public safety.
鈥淲hite sharks have always been in Maine waters, but this collaborative research effort aims to better understand their seasonal movements using acoustic tagging technology,鈥 Mohan explained.
This is the second year Mohan, his students, and the DMR piloted into Saco Bay to deploy the buoy, though this year鈥檚 iteration saw a new paint job and upgrades in technology.
The same device was floated last year in a nearby spot, where it was able to detect one tagged white shark as it made its way north from Cape Cod. This year, it was placed in slightly deeper waters, in hopes that the research team can identify more sharks once they make their summer journey to Maine鈥檚 waters, where they can be found feeding on seals, the population of which has rebounded in recent years.
鈥淲e hope the ongoing monitoring efforts will help us better understand Maine white shark behavior and keep the public aware and interested in these marine predators,鈥 Mohan said.
The state began monitoring the movements of white sharks after a woman was killed by a shark off of Harpswell in an extremely rare attack in 2020. In 2022, the state logged over 1,000 detections from tagged great white sharks, and there were 44 confirmed great white sightings.
Working with Maine DMR, Massachusetts Marine Fisheries, and Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, SWAG视频 hopes to track more sharks this year as they move up and down Maine鈥檚 rocky coast, sending real-time alerts to lifeguards to ensure the safety of summer beachgoers.
Watch: SWAG视频 Deploys Shark Detection Buoy
Watch SWAG视频 student and faculty researchers deploy a real-time shark detection buoy into the waters just off SWAG视频鈥檚 coastal campus. The device, powered by the sun and fitted with telemetry equipment, sends an alert to lifeguards within seconds of detecting a tagged great white shark, keeping Maine鈥檚 beachgoers safe.
鈥淪tudying the way that sharks interact with their environment throughout the seasons is so crucial to not only protecting them but keeping the public safe,鈥 said Emma Christopher (Marine Biology, 鈥25). 鈥淐oastal Maine is very popular for tourists and vacationers, so it is important that we keep ourselves and the sharks safe.鈥
The state鈥檚 ramped-up efforts to study sharks have proven to be a boon for SWAG视频鈥檚 marine science students looking to engage themselves in research.
鈥淚 have been obsessed with sharks my entire life and have been photographing them while SCUBA diving since I was nine years old,鈥 remarked Clayton Nyiri (Marine Sciences, 鈥25), who helped deploy the latest buoy. 鈥淓ngaging myself in this research not only allows me to grow as a scientist and a person but also inform the public about how the animals I love are not to be feared, but respected.鈥
As a marine researcher, Nyiri said, he wants to track sharks and learn more about their ecological movements. To have this experience as an undergraduate student, he said, will prime him for his future career.
鈥淭his is an unbelievable opportunity that allows me to get all the experience I need to go further in life, and it drives me more and more each day to study these animals,鈥 he stated.
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