Researchers have confirmed the presence of a soupfin shark in the Salish Sea, an area where they were not previously thought ...
The carving away at the stone from the sea is called coastal geomorphology. A local legend tells a chilling tale of how the shark fin formation came to be. It’s undoubtedly fueled some ...
The practice involves "cutting off a shark's fin, often while the shark is still alive, and dumping the animal back into the sea to die slowly," according to Humane Society International.
Campaigns against shark's fin soup have led many to believe that ... An additional strain comes from territorial disputes in the South China Sea, which have ignited competition for natural ...
To the north and west is the Irish Sea and to the south is the Bristol ... How to spot them These torpedo shaped sharks have very long front fins. They can usually be found about 10 miles offshore.
They are caught mainly for their fins, a coveted delicacy ... it will be practically impossible to catch blue sharks in the open sea. The Kesennuma fisheries cooperative in Miyagi Prefecture ...
Thirteen years ago, an enormous great white shark sprawled on a beach near Guaymas, Mexico, on the mainland side of the Sea of Cortez, quickly became a spectacle. Commercial fishermen Guadalupe ...
Shortfin makos are the fastest sharks in the sea, but they're failing to outpace the scale of overfishing that is driving them to extinction. Global demand for their meat and lucrative fins has ...