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News > Latin America

Researchers Discover Million-Year-Old Hidden Home of Hammerhead Sharks in Galapagos

  • The hammerhead sharks grow as long as three meters (yards) and live for up to 50 years.

    The hammerhead sharks grow as long as three meters (yards) and live for up to 50 years. | Photo: Wikipedia

Published 29 January 2018
Opinion

"The females arrive to give birth and then leave. The young have all the food they need here and the reefs afford protection from large predators," an expert said.

A group of Ecuadorean scientists has discovered a hammerhead shark nursery where they have been born and sheltered for nearly a million years on the Galapagos Islands, the remote archipelago tucked away 1,000 kilometers off South America’s Pacific coast.

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"It was quite by chance that we found this natural nursery for baby hammerheads, a species that is under a high level of threat," Eduardo Espinoza, the biologist in charge of monitoring ecosystems in the Galapagos Marine Reserve, told AFP.

"It is a unique area, of great interest to conservationists."

"The females arrive to give birth and then leave. The young have all the food they need here and the reefs afford protection from large predators," he added. 

The hammerhead sharks grow as long as three meters and live for up to 50 years. After a year or two, when they are grown and are in need of more food, they travel, sometimes for thousands of kilometers. 

For several years now, park rangers in the region have been monitoring and tagging hundreds of sharks at the marine reserve, which was named as a Natural Heritage site. 

In 2016, the government of Ecuador added extra protections for the species' preservation by creating a 38,000-square-kilometer sanctuary zone between Darwin and Wolf islands, where all fishing is banned.

Jose Marin, a biologist at the Charles Darwin Foundation, an international scientific research nonprofit, said Ecuador was making “titanic efforts” in the field of conservation of sharks. 

"These studies, sometimes using satellite tracking, alert us to where these sharks are being caught when they leave the marine reserve, and allow us to notify other countries so they can help us protect them,” he said.

In August, when a Chinese-flagged ship was intercepted in the Galapagos marine reserve with 300 tons of fish, including some hammerheads, an Ecuadorean court sentenced the criminals with stiff sentences for environmental crimes, sentencing the captain and his officers to three years of jail time and fining the owners of the ship US$6 million.

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