Wednesday, July 2, 2014

To anybody who regularly checks this blog, I'm very sorry for my lack of posts the last several months. Although I'm on summer vacation now, I was quite busy with school for a while and I didn't have much to say on this blog anyway. I still care very much for the wellness of animals in this world, and I still wish I could do more to help, but this blog has been pretty dead recently. Besides, I never really felt like it was getting attention. "Somebody will see this, and it will make a difference somewhere in the world," I would be told, but I never saw it that way. I started this blog nearly three years ago (which I can't believe, by the way), and at very first I had this mentality that it would make a difference. Not long afterwards, I began to lose hope, despite the fact that I continued to post. People have always told me I'm too pessimistic and maybe I am, but I personally think I'm just a realist. Because honestly, who looks at this blog and actually learns something? Who actually sees one of my posts and is inspired to get out and do something?

So in all honesty, I guess you could say that I'm somewhat retiring from this blog. Or at least taking a break for a while until I have something important to say. I did take a trip to Alaska a few weeks ago and had the wonderful opportunity to see some magnificent wildlife; besides that, there's not much else to say.

This doesn't mean I'm going to stop doing all I can to help animals in general, I'm never going to stop doing that, it's simply part of who I am. Is that fortunate or unfortunate? I think both. It's fortunate for obvious reasons, but it's also unfortunate because I always find myself caring too much. Sitting and thinking about all the horrible things that go on in the world, knowing that there really isn't much I can do. It upsets me a lot, and I almost don't think I'll ever be completely happy and content with life due to these things. People call me strange for this, trying to convince me, "but there's beautiful things in the world too," and yeah, I totally get that. I've seen some very beautiful things in my life, but awful factors will always overshadow good factors to me, because that's how my mind works. However, I'm not going to sulk and feel sorry for myself, I am going to get out there and do something. And I know there has always been evil, and there always will be. I don't need to be preached to about that, because I completely understand.

I do apologize to anybody who is reading this lengthy post, it's a bit late at night where I live (or maybe I should say early in the morning...) and I tend to have deep thoughts this time of day. Anyway, this will be my last post for a while, but I promise I haven't disappeared.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

It's been a while!

Hello all, it's been forever since I've updated! I don't have much to say here, but I'm accepting any and all questions my followers may have. Or if you'd like to share any interesting stories about your experiences or just marine creatures in general, please do!

Monday, September 17, 2012

Why Must The World Be So Cruel?

About 1,000 dolphins are now dying annually in Taiji, Japan. That is still too many, but think about the millions of sharks that are still being killed each year. The death toll for them hasn't decreased at all, and it's because people don't care. Also, there are thousands of dogs each and every year being abused, killed, and  spending their whole lives in shelters (I praise everyone who rescues dogs and doesn't buy!). The world is filled with too much cruelty, and I don't understand it. Why do some people have to be so inhumane, so heartless? Why can't everyone just leave the poor animals alone and let them live their lives? They have just as much of a right to live here as us humans do. To be honest, I think when it comes to most situations, the "humans" shouldn't even be classified as humans. But then again, I guess that's what makes us humans. The power and ability to rule everything, both bigger and smaller than us. If we can effortlessly slaughter the largest animal on the planet (the blue whale, of course) nearly to extinction, then we can do anything. But without weapons, we are nothing. If we weren't intelligent enough to create weapons as we do, we would have died off long ago. We're smart, but that's about our only advantage. We are tiny and insignificant without weapons. Sometimes, I feel ashamed to be human.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Carcharodontosaurus

This post isn't about a shark, but did anybody know that there was a dinosaur named for one? The name of Carcharodontosaurus actually means "shark-toothed lizard". It lived in Africa in the Cretaceous period about 110-90 million years ago. Believe it or not, it was actually larger than Tyrannosaurus Rex, despite having a smaller and lighter head (Gigantosaurus and Spinosaurus were also larger than T-rex).

Here is an interesting Wikipedia pic comparing five carnivorous theropods (two-legged dinos). Click to zoom in.


Thursday, June 28, 2012

Summer Swimming Lessons

As you know, I really want to dive with sharks and dolphins someday. Unfortunately, I am not a very strong swimmer and I have to be in order to dive. The good news is that my family and I moved recently, and my parents are going to try to find a good place for my brother and I to take swimming lessons over the summer. I really want to take them. If I take swimming lessons, I'll be able to hopefully take snorkeling and diving lessons someday. I'm not sure how long it will take for me to become a good enough swimmer to take snorkeling/diving lessons, but hopefully not long. I will update my blogs once I start the lessons.

This post is also on my blog, They Need A Voice

Monday, June 4, 2012

How I Think the World will Really End

Everybody has heard of the Mayan calender and the big deal about 12/21/12. I believe that all that is a bunch of bologna. The Mayans lived in ancient times. It is impossible for them to have had any way of knowing how and when the world would end. Sure, their calender ends, but according to the NASA website, nothing bad is going to happen. I'm going to believe the modern technology of NASA over some five thousand-year-old calender. I know the world is going to end someday when my generation and many others are dead, and I have an idea about how it will end. I think we are going to destroy ourselves. How the world may end, however, could be related to the oceans and other ecosystems that we depend on for survival. As you know, humans are destroying the ocean and its inhabitants. Eventually, we will completely wipe out the important species of the world, including our ocean dwellers. Only invasive species will be left, destroying everything else. The plankton will be gone due to the overpopulation of fish, and we will slowly run out of oxygen and suffocate. Doesn't sound very pretty, does it? And that's if people don't start caring and striving to make a difference. I honestly don't want the world to end that way, but it is possible if we don't make some important changes. We need future generations to be aware of these problems. Most adults and seniors can't really do anything right now. We need children. More children like me to make sure that destruction of the oceans doesn't happen. Kids need to be educated. I need more people to join me in my fight. I really hope that future generations won't have to see the world end that way, but we can't just sit here and whine and feel sorry for ourselves. We must get up and do something to save the most beautiful, complex ecosystem on our majestic planet.

This post is also on my blog, They Need A Voice

Thursday, April 26, 2012

200 Petitions


I have been waiting a long time to add this post and now I've finally accomplished a goal. I have signed a total of 203 petitions on the Care2 petition site to help animals all around the world! My goal was 200, and I told myself that I would post it on my blogs once I reached that goal. I am very happy about this. Next goal, 300!

There are thousands of petitions available for you to sign at http://www.thepetitionsite.com/

This post is also on my blog, They Need A Voice

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Website

I just found a cool website I'd like to share. Here it is:

mantarayofhope.com

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Devil's Teeth

Devil's Teeth is a pretty cool book that many young marine life enthusiasts might enjoy. I've posted my review of the book below!

Susan Casey, a journalist, becomes intrigued by white sharks and the Farallon Islands some thirty miles from San Francisco. After fighting through restrictions and barriers, she manages to get onto the island and observe a group of scientists studying predation by great white sharks within the so-called red triangle. Her description of the islands' flora and fauna are very good. Detailed descriptions of shark attacks also give the story some excitement. She doesn't provide much scientific detail about the research she observed; however, she's a journalist, not a biologist. She's a story-teller and does a good job.

If your a shark junkie who enjoys scientific detail about the behavior and biology of sharks, you'll most certainly be disappointed. On the other hand, if you enjoy tales of natural adventures and the hardships endured along the way, you'll be entertained.

Enjoy,
K

Friday, April 6, 2012

Prevention Of Cruelty To Animals Month

April 4th was World Stray Animals Day, and April is Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Month. Many probably think of it as a month dedicated to pets such as dogs, cats, horses, etc but I see it as a month to ALL animals, including dolphins and sharks. These creatures face just as much cruelty as dogs, cats, and horses, maybe even more in some cases. So why should this month not be dedicated to them too? I think it should. Who agrees?

This post is also on my blog, They Need A Voice

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Asia's Getting on my Nerves

Like the title says, Asia is beginning to get on my nerves. Japan kills the dolphins in Taiji and is a whaling country. China is the cause for all of the sharks and large rays that are killed each year. Lastly, Korea as well as China beats dogs to death (in public) to release blood into the meat in the belief that if an animal suffers horrible pain before death that the meat will be tastier and of higher quality.

These things make me very mad and sad, but I know that not all people in these countries are like that and most are good people. But the ones who do do these things are bad people, although they may not know it.

This post can also be seen on my blog, They Need A Voice

Mantas and Mobulas


Beautiful aren't they? These creatures are called mobula rays, a 3-10 foot cousin to the 25-foot manta ray. They are known for leaping out of the water like dolphins. To see them in action, go to this address:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63ZtKgbQWZM


Sharks are not the only victims. The mobula and manta rays are also being killed for Chinese demand. Sharkfin and dried seafood traders are trying to get additional products to boost their profit. The rays' gill rakers are being traded to be used in a traditional and "unofficial" medicine tonic in China. To meet this demand, artisanal fisheries are turning into commercial fisheries. Manta and mobula ray populations can not take this pressure.  Like sharks, these creatures mature slowly in 15-20 years and have very few young, only one pup at up to six year intervals. These rays are more vulnerable than sharks and other rays and in just a few short years, regional populations have been wiped out. These animals are pulled from the sea with fishing nets or spears in the Philippines and Indonesia just to be slaughtered and have their gills cut out. More than 2,000 mantas are killed each year in Indonesia alone. That may not seem like a very big number but with animals as rare as mantas, it's a huge number. This cannot continue. These creatures are so rare and so gentle that it makes me very sad to think that this is happening to them.


Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid


Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid


Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid


Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid

Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid

Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid

Credit goes to Manta Ray of Hope / Shark Savers / WildAid

Monday, January 9, 2012

Shark Fin Soup

You know, I would probably be okay with it if sharkfin soup were used in desperation.

For example, if there were a place in the world where only sharks and chicken broth were available AND children were starving....fine....people must eat. However, as a delicacy for the affluent in five star restaurants...ridiculous to say the least.

Personally, I'll stick with eggdrop soup. We have no shortage of chickens and eggs in the world. Haley should start a petition where participants pledge to "eat eggdrops, not fins".

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Sport Fishing

Have you ever seen a picture or video of a shark hanging by its tail with a bloody hook in the corner of it's mouth? Well, that shark was probably killed for sport, which is for pleasure and competition. Competitions will be held for who can catch the biggest shark. I do not understand sport fishing and I believe that it is unnecessary and needless. Enough sharks are already killed for shark fin soup, we don't need anymore to be killed so anglers can break records for shark sizes. If there was no finning, I don't think that sport fishing would be as bad but with the situation that sharks are in right now, anglers should just forget the competition and start thinking about the health of the oceans.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Not Too Close

I have told my mother about wanting to dive with sharks, and it worries her. I understand that it will worry her, but I don't want her to get so worried that she won't let me dive. I have explained to her that I will not get too close or be stupid like a man on an Animal Planet show who nearly got his lips bit off by a nurse shark after kissing it. I am not planning on getting up in sharks' faces and hugging them or anything like that. I may stroke them gently if they swim by me, but I will not get too close for comfort. I don't think they are dangerous, but I do know that they are very capable of hurting you if you harass or frighten them. I will not treat them like puppies or dogs but respect them as creatures whom environment I am invading and as creatures who could rip my leg off if they wanted to. They are not monsters but they can turn into them very quickly, and for that reason I will not be stupid and not get too close.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Recent Shark Attacks

Every time a new shark show premieres, I just have to watch it. So of course, when Nat Geo Wild made "Shark Attack Experiment Live", I watched it. A team of scientists are doing tests in the water with sharks to separate fact from myth, to see if sharks are out to get us. The reason is because they stated that in 2011, there have been more shark attacks and fatalities than any year in decades. Does this surprise me? A little. But does it scare me? No. I think that the reason for these attacks may be because of the growing human population. The global population recently hit 7 billion, and the more people there are on the globe, the more often beaches are visited. WE are invading their territory, they are not maliciously killing more people on purpose. Therefore, the fact of more shark attacks doesn't frighten me one bit.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Cultures

I have noticed that on both of my animal cruelty awareness blogs I have had some page views from from citizens in Europe, and on They Need A Voice I have even had a page view from somebody in China. MESSAGE TO EUROPEANS: I would very much like it if you could post a comment explaining what role dolphins and sharks play in your culture. I would love to learn from Europeans themselves (not from internet research) how these creatures are viewed in their country and their country's culture.

This post can also be seen on my blog, They Need A Voice

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Petitions

Last month, I signed a petition to ban shark products on the U.S. Today, I signed 10 petitions for sharks all over the world including Europe, India, Australia, Singapore, and New Zealand. Some were to ban finning and other were to ban shark products, but it is all the same concept really. I put personal comments on all of them. On one for Australia, I put "Shark finning must stop everywhere, one country at a time". Sadly, most of the petitions I went to were nowhere near the goal (most had a goal anywhere from 1,000 to 10,000 but only had a few hundred signatures), but they were closed. One had a goal of 10,000 but only had like 100 signatures, and it was closed. That upset me. There was one to ban shark finning worldwide with a goal of 20,000 and I was the first person to sign it. I couldn't believe that it had zero signatures! But I was proud to be the first to sign it. I signed one with a goal of 50,000 to ban finning in European waters, but I'm sure it will never reach it's goal sadly. But I am very happy and proud to have signed 11 petitions to ban the fin trade cycle as well as 1 to end the Japanese dolphin hunt in Taiji. I know that this has nothing to do with my blog, but I as a huge dog lover, also signed a petition to end the mistreatment of dogs in Bali whether it's being beaten, neglected, starved, stolen, or poisoned for meat.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Shark Finning Awareness in School

In 7th grade, we have seven periods. I have English first, and for some reason our teacher always makes us watch CNN Student News. Usually, we pick a topic from it and write about it but today, we just watched it for fun. Surprisingly, it talked about shark finning near the end of the video. It talked about how so many species were endangered and how important they are to us. It showed somebody handling dried shark fins and people in my class were like "Eww!" and one person even said "Poor sharks". The video showed some people getting the water with reef sharks and somebody in my class yelled out "Stupid!". One of my friends beside me said "What if it thought you were fish and tried to eat you?". "They usually won't bite anything bigger than themselves" I said nicely. After the video the same person who yelled 'stupid' said "We eat sharks, sharks eat us. So what?". I didn't say anything but I wanted to say "Look, sharks kill only like 5 people a year and we kill 100 million of them a year. That is so not cool." but I thought it was better to keep my mouth shut because she was kind of a rude person anyway and I didn't want to make her mad. I thought that it was very good that we saw that today in school though. I was just thinking a few weeks ago, "Wouldn't it be neat if the student news talked about threats to the ocean?". I was really excited to see it on there, not for me but so other people could see it. But of course, it didn't go into a lot of detail so most people probably won't think anything about it. But at least it's a start.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Video Post for both of my Animal Cruelety Awareness Blogs

I know that I give links to videos both my blogs, 'They Need A Voice' and 'Sharks Need Help!!!'. I understand that some people would prefer to avoid them, but you it is hard to make a difference when you don't know what's happening. Videos make me terribly sad, but the footage from The Cove was the first thing that I'd ever seen relating to my blogs, and it changed my life. Now, I'm an activist for my ocean friends that I've always loved. If you don't want to watch a video that I put a link to, please really try to gain the courage to do so. I didn't want to watch The Cove because I was worried about it depressing me, but my parents thought is would be inspirational for me. I never thought that it would change me, but it truly did. It made me cry, but sadness it sometimes what it takes to inspire people. I can still not stand to watch those Humane Society and ASPCA commercials, but those animals are getting tons and tons of help.

If you do choose to watch my video links, they will make definitely make you sad if you have a heart unlike all those scums that murder animals. And if they bother you a lot, don't just try to pretend that it's fake (something that I do sometimes) because sadly it is all too real.

This post is also visible on my blog, They Need A Voice (theyneedavoice.blogspot.com)

Thursday, September 29, 2011

The ridiculous reason why I used to hate sharks

Like I said in my last post, I loved sharks when I was little and about a year ago I began to hate them. The reason is so ridiculous I'm ashamed to say it. I got really into dolphins at the time. I began to like them so much I just decided that sharks were stupid. I know, it doesn't make any sense. Just because you like one thing a lot doesn't mean that you can't like another thing too. Now, I love them both. I know that I've never actually interacted with either of them in the wild, but I think of them as my friends and I don't want anything bad to happen to them. But unfortunately, they're tortured brutally all the time.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

I'm now a Shark Angel

I just registered as a Shark Angel and I'm so happy! I also signed up for Shark Savers a while back. I can't believe I went from not caring about sharks about a year ago to loving them and wanting to save them right now.

When I was little, I was fascinated with them and loved watching shows about them with my dad. As I got older, I thought they were cool but I wasn't all for saving them. I didn't even know about shark finning. Suddenly, for a reason which I think is ridiculous, I began to go against them. I knew of shark finning, but it didn't bother me. I viewed them as big stupid animals that had no purpose. I hated them and cared nothing about the conservation of them. A few months later, I flew over to Atlanta Georgia to stay for a few days. I went to the Georgia aquarium, the world's largest aquarium. I did the Planet Shark exhibit which had sharks' importance awareness, information on prehistoric species, finning threats, and a fully preserved frozen mako shark. After that day, I no longer hated sharks.

It's only been in the last couple months that I've really loved sharks and cared about them. I don't know how I could have ever hated them and not been bothered by the horrible murder of them that takes place every single day. I didn't think that I could do much to help sharks. I just hoped that activists would help. But no. You don't have to live by the sea or even get out of your house to be an activist. I am only 12, and here's what I've done:

Made this blog

Signed a petition to ban the shark fin trade in the U.S, which is my country

Became a Shark Angel

Joined Shark Savers

Watched Sharkwater

Educated myself through books and the internet to know what's truly going on

Now I know it may not seem like much compared to some other activists, but what more can a 13 year old do? I could donate, but if I donated I'd want to use my own money not my parents'. If it was my parents' money, I wouldn't feel like that I was doing it. If I could, I'd donate to local humane societies and SPCAs, shark conservation websites, and savejapandolphins.org. But I just don't know what my parents would think about it. When I am older, into college, and into my own house I'll be able to help animals even more. I'll be able to help them directly, through travel and a career. But as of now, I'll just have to wait, updating my blog with my latest news and feelings. But I'm very proud of what I've done already.

You can become a Shark Angel or Cherub at sharkangels.com

Monday, September 5, 2011

I want to dive!

I've been doing tons of research on sharks lately, and now I want to get closer to them, beyond Google searches and book pages. I want to dive with sharks. That might sound very strange coming from a 13 year old girl, but I'm not like most girls. 'Scary' animals don't bother me. "Sharks and snakes and alligators, oh my!" simply doesn't fit me. Most animals don't scare me.

Now, back to the diving topic. I would do anything to jump in the sea right now and dive next to sharks in a coral reef. After becoming inches from the face of a blacktip reef shark behind glass at the aquarium restaurant, I want to become inches from a shark face with no glass. Not a great white or tiger shark face but a reef shark or some other bottom dweller. I'm not sure if I would get in the water with a great white without a shark cage, at least until I'm very experienced. Surprisingly, I'd get in with a great white without a cage before I'd jump in the sea beside a wild orca pod. But a mako on the other hand, they are not nearly as dangerous and scary as they look with their curved, jagged teeth and their huge solid black eyes. They are actually a very shy species, and I'd dive with them any day without a shark cage. Hammerheads are very similar in reputation to makos. They are strange and scary looking but actually very shy. One of the least scary-looking (you can't even see their teeth unless they are eating) large species is the beautiful blue shark, swift and agile with their long, lean bodies. They are one of the about 20 species of shark that are considered dangerous, but I have never heard of anybody being attacked by one. I've only seen pictures and videos of divers interacting with and feeding them. To tell the truth, I don't care if a shark species is on the danger list because most reports of attacks are very exaggerated and I know the cause for most attacks and it makes perfect sense. But sadly the shy and graceful blue, mako, and hammerhead sharks are three of the most targeted species for finning. Lastly, I believe that diving with a basking or whale shark would be awesome and exhilarating as well.

I could snorkel in the ocean easily, but scuba diving is better since you can go deep under. I am old enough to start diving now, but I still have to wait. I don't live near good beaches and I need to become a better swimmer first. My ocean friends will just have to wait for me for a few more years. Then, I'll meet my friends for the first time, but I will feel as if I've known them forever.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Learn More

Here are some good websites you can visit to learn about shark hunting and how to stop it:


sharksavers.org

stopsharkfinning.net

sharktrust.org

savingsharks.com

sharkwater.com

sharkalliance.org

sharkangels.com


I'm sure there are many more as well! :)

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

My recent aquarium trip

I went to my local aquarium recently for the second time since I've lived in the area. They have a shark exhibit, which is a train where you go through a tunnel that is a tank full of various shark species such as sandtiger sharks, sawfish, whitetip reef sharks, nurse sharks, and brown sharks. You then go on a bridge over a man-made water way and a giant animatronic shark head comes out of the water. I liked the exhibit okay the first time I went to the aquarium, but the second time I went, I was amazed by it. Not by the animatronic shark head that comes out of the water way but the tank tunnel full of sharks. I also ate at the restaurant at the aquarium, where I had some mahi-mahi fillets. In the restaurant, there was a large tank full of groupers and other fish, which our table was right beside.  There was one shark in it, a blacktip reef shark. I knew there was only one for two reasons. Reason one, it had a small black spot behind it's pectoral fin. Reason two, the pectoral fin by the black spot was bent slightly upward at the tip. The shark swam by several times, one time coming right up to the glass. When it came by, I put my face right up to the glass and watched it's face. I couldn't help but feel as if it looked at me straight in the eyes as it swam by. It felt like I was in the water with it. It might sound silly, but I couldn't help the feeling, I just think that they are so beautiful. One day when I start diving, I am going to have that same experience, only there will be no glass between us.

In the gift shop of the aquarium, I bought a T-shirt. It says on bold letters, 'Aquarium', 'Peace', and 'Love'. Under those letters, it has a small outline of a shark. I think that those three words are three things that sharks need. They need 'aquariums' as in a place to live where are they are guaranteed safe from being harmed. They need 'peace' as in free from human cruelty. Lastly, they need 'love' as in people who care.

Several months ago, I went by plane to Atlanta, Georgia so I could go to the aquarium there, which is the largest in the world. The Planet Shark exhibit was my favorite part of the aquarium. In the gift shop of the Georgia aquarium, I bought a shark encyclopedia as well as a collection of fossilized shark teeth. I would like to continue to buy shark merchandise at aquarium gift shops. I believe that if shark merchandise gains more popularity, more people will be inspired to help make a difference. They are beautiful creatures that should be protected and conserved.

P.S. The Georgia Aquarium has a new dolphin exhibit, which I have no desire to go to. To find out why I don't want to go, visit my other blog at theyneedavoice.blogspot.com.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Shark Hunting

The thought of the creatures may send shivers down your spine. Most people think of sharks as gruesome, relentless killers. Also, many people think that they are stupid and just kill everything in sight. Actually, sharks are far more intelligent than we give them credit for.  I have seen in several nature television shows people swimming beside great whites. Sharks are thought to be very dangerous to people, but you are more likely to be struck by lightning than be attacked by a shark. Elephants kill more people a year than sharks do. In reality, sharks kill on average 3-5 people a year. Crocodiles kill more people in one year than sharks do in 100 years.  Also, sharks attack us because we look like injured seals, when we thrash and splash about, which is a shark's prey. But, the shark usually takes one bite and swim off because it doesn't taste the way that they expected. The deaths are mainly caused by blood-loss. We kill 100 million or more sharks a year just for their fins. We kill many more just for meat. And that's just the ones that are killed intentionally. Hundreds more become entangled in tuna nets along with dolphins, porpoises, whales, seals, and sea lions. The number is shocking the first time you hear it, and I still can hardly believe it after knowing it for a long time. Many species are killed, including Blues, Hammerheads, and Makos. But any animal will be taken, no matter the size, age, or species. They are killed for their dorsal, pectoral, and caudal fins, which are used in a soup which is a delicacy in China (the soup is about the most tasteless, non-nutritious thing to eat). They are also eaten in other places such as Japan and Australia. The fins are sliced off while the shark is still alive and the mutilated animal is then thrown back in the water, slowly and painfully bleeding to death, starving or drowning (they need to constantly move to keep water running through their gills to breathe). It can take hours or days of suffering for the shark to finally die. While one animal is killed for fins, another is killed for meat and other uses. Thus, two animals are killed when just one could be killed for both things. May not seem like much, but it adds up. This happens in the waters of Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, New Zealand, Indonesia, Mexico, Taiwan, Spain, India, and even the Galapagos Islands. Despite being banned, shark finning still some times occurs of the coasts of the United States and Australia. Sharks are also hunted for sport, but I do not know what they are used for. If you hate sharks, think about the small number of people that they kill versus how many of them that we take.  I know that sharks aren't people and people are more important, but millions against less than a dozen is a humongous difference. But whether you like them or not, we need sharks. We need the oceans to survive. If sharks become more significantly endangered, fish beneath them in the food chain will flourish and consume more plankton. Plankton are the major oxygen producers in the world. If oxygen levels in the atmosphere start decreasing, we are all in big trouble. We need the oceans; the oceans need sharks, whales, and dolphins; and the three creatures need each other. Humans need to start thinking before they kill thousands upon millions of the creatures that we need to survive. In order to save ourselves, we must save the animals that we are slaughtering at rapid, alarming rates.

Hate sharks if you like, but just face the fact that you need them. I completely understand if you dislike them because you or a family member's been attacked, because I probably wouldn't like them as much. For a long time, I got nervous in murky waters. Now, It doesn't worry me. I know that they kill very few people, and that they are actually afraid of us. I used to hate them until I started doing research on them. Now, I love them. Many think that if an animal causes the deaths of a few people it means that they should all be wiped out. I do not believe that because an animal is considered dangerous means that we should kill them. The world has dangerous animals, but humans are the most dangerous creature on the planet. Think differently if you want, but understand the point I'm trying to make.

If you like sharks and want to learn more about dangers to them, you can see the movie Sharkwater. It has very good reviews. Even if you dislike sharks, it is still a good movie to see. I have heard that it has changed many people's opinions about sharks. I've seen The Cove and Sharkwater. It ordered Sharkwater from Amazon and watched it the day it came in. It is very good and all people who love sharks as well as haters should watch it.

Here are some more facts. Three sharks are killed every second and 10,000-10,400 are killed every hour. More sharks are killed in three hours than dolphins in a whole year in Taiji. Sure enough, everybody wants to save the dolphins and cares nothing about the sharks. The dolphins have lots of people helping them, the sharks don't. Everybody wants to save all of the cute, cuddly animals like dolphins, seals, dogs, and cats. I don't think that dolphins, seals, dogs, and cats should be tortured though, but they are getting tons of help. Animals that need the most help are the ones that are getting the least help. THEY NEED PEOPLE WHO CARE!!!

Does the description of the killing nor the pictures not bother you or make you care? Maybe if you see some videos you will understand. Here are a few videos, two with finning and the other with fin-less sharks all over the seabed.


WARNING: THERE IS BLOOD (lots of it)
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zep7B1esW-M
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaZjmT8mHbU&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0qkr2cIe5c (this is first footage ever filmed of shark finning)

You can also search shark finning on youtube and find a ton of videos. On most of them, there are age restrictions where you have to enter your date of birth, so for that reason I did not put links to them. You can see them as long as you have a youtube account and are over a certain age which I think is 18. I guess you could enter a false birthday if you are under 18, but it is probably smart not too. It is for a very good reason that it is restricted. Shark finning is extremely graphic and disturbing, not for the young or squeamish. None of the links are to videos with age restrictions.














Saturday, August 6, 2011

Megalodon, Whale Shark, and Great White

Here's just a quick little post with a picture that shows the size comparison of a human (blue), a whale shark (violet), a great white (green), and the maximum (gray) and conservative (red) sizes of Megalodon. I'm glad that Megalodon is extinct; I'd never go to the beach! Click on the picture to zoom in.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Sharks' Importance

You may think of sharks as monsters. The majority of people think so. Like them or not, they are very important to the ocean. The ocean has a balance, and if one species is taken out, it will put the balance out of whack. Shark skeep the fish populations from getting out of hand. They are only second to Orcas as apex predators (followed by dolphins), and are extremely important. If they didn’t exist, fish would consume all of the plankton, our main source of oxygen. This would affect humans, cetaceans, and all other marine creatures.

        People don’t understand that you are more likely to be killed by a dog, horse, deer, or rabid raccoon or squirrel. We call lion “king of beasts” thinking that they are magnificent. They are no less dangerous than sharks.
       The filter feeding sharks such as Whale sharks, Basking sharks, and Megamouth sharks eat plankton. The predatory sharks such as Great White sharks, Shortfin and Longfin Makos, Bull sharks, Tiger sharks, Porbeagles, Salmon sharks, Lemon sharks, Hammerhead sharks, Greenland sharks, Sixgill sharks, Goblin sharks, Blue sharks, Thresher sharks, and Sandtiger sharks keep the fish populations balanced.
       Sharks have been around for 450 million years. Some of the first being the Megaladon, Helicoprion, Orthacanthus, Paleocarcharias, Symmorium, Echinochimaera, Belantsea, Scapanorhynchus (a resembling relative of the goblin shark), Hybodus shark, Stethacanthus, Falcatus, Acrodus, Erquitaia, Cretoxyrhina, Squalicorax, Physogaleus, Otodus, Tristchius, Cobelodus, Anomotodon, Cladoselache, Glikmanius, Akmonistion, Cardabiodon, Wodnika, Triodus, and Dunkleosteus. But since the 1970s, 95% of the ocean’s oldest predators’ populations have been decimated.
      In the shark/human relationship, we think that sharks are monsters. In fact, we’re the monsters. We think that killing them for meat and fins is a delicious, tasty decision. Actually, it’s not. Only 8-10 people are attacked and 3-5 killed by sharks each year. We kill 100 million or more of them a year. As we kill them, we are slowly messing up our world. We need to start thinking before we slaughter them.
       When caught, their dorsal, pectoral, and caudal fins are sliced off and the mutilated animal is thrown back in the water alive and either drowns, is eaten by another shark, bleeds to death, or starves to death. Shark Fin soup is a delicacy in China, and as the Chinese population grows, the demand for the soup also grows.
       Here’s a fact, shark fins are just cartilage. The soup is about the most tasteless, non-nutritional thing to eat. There is absolutely no use for it. But still, the fins alone as well as canned soup are sold in Asian markets, today. Chinese restaurants all over the world (including the USA) sell the soup, averaging $25.00 a bowl. There are four restaurants in my state that sell the soup, three of them being close to where I live (Yes, I'm sickened by it) and the last one being where most of my family lives. I went online to see the menu of one of the ones near my house, and shark fin soup was the most expensive soup on the soup menu. One pound of shark fin is worth $200 U.S and a whale shark caudal fin can be worth as much ad $10,000 in China. Scientists estimate that sharks may be all gone in 10-20 years, if we don’t act fast. We need sharks. Sharks need us.

Go to this address to find out what restaurants in your country sell shark fin soup:


http://www.stopsharkfinning.net/boycott.htm





 Copy pasted from my science project

Monday, August 1, 2011

Sharks in Movies

Sharks are often portrayed as villains in movies, most famously the Jaws movies and Deep Blue Sea. Though there are many shark horror films, they are all somewhat similar. Here are some of the movies about sharks, some well known, other not so much:

The four Jaws movies: Jaws, Jaws 2, Jaws 3, and Jaws: The Revenge

Another fairly popular shark horror film is Deep Blue Sea

Mega Shark Versus Crocosaurus and Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus are monster/disaster films

Open Water and Open Water 2: Adrift are two films that are said to be based off of true events

Shark Tale is an animated film

Sharkwater is a documentary where they are trying to save sharks from hunting

Shores of Silence: Whale Sharks in India is another film about trying to save sharks

12 Days of Terror is a non-fiction, docudrama made for the Discovery Channel

Great White is an Italian Horror film that is extremely similar to the Jaws movies

Monster Shark is another Italian Horror film

Deep Blood is another Italian shark movie

Tintorea, a British-Mexican Horror film, is also very similar to the Jaws movies

Cruel Jaws is based on the Jaws movies

Megalodon is an American shark film

Mako: Jaws of Death is a 1970's thriller


Dinoshark is a 2010 low budget Syfy film

Shark Night is a 2011 Horror film