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13th October 2011

WEYMOUTH: Sharks teeth help to unravel the mysteries of the ancient seas

By Harry Walton

WEYMOUTH Sea Life Park and other centres are set to help scientists unravel the mysteries of ancient seas.

That is the goal of a major research project announced as the centres mark European Shark Week this month to promote shark conservation.

Researchers believe clues to marine biological diversity over millions of years may be locked up in sharks’ teeth.

Oxygen isotopes which are incorporated into sharks’ teeth as they develop can reveal the temperature of the seawater the shark lived in at the time.

Now a research team led by Birmingham University senior palaeobiology lecturer Dr Ivan Sansom hopes sharks at Sea Life centres will establish whether this applies to all shark teeth or just certain species.

Dr Sansom said: “That will validate the study of age-old fossil shark teeth as a technique to learn more about sea conditions in prehistoric times.

 “Other work in the field has suggested that cooling waters were a factor in driving major evolutionary changes whilst warming waters led to extinctions.

 “With the current evidence for warming oceans the evidence from the past suggests we are going to see a major extinction in our oceans.

 “Reconstructing past climate systems using evidence such as that we hope to find in shark teeth may help us understand what happened in the past, and what may happen in the future.” 

Initial research funded by the EU’s Marie Curie Fellowship scheme and involving teeth collected from the bed of Sea Life centre ocean tanks will take two years to complete.

Centres across Europe will collect discarded shark teeth from the beds of their ocean tanks and send them to Birmingham along with regular water samples from their shark tanks.

The Birmingham-based research may ultimately provide more clues as to what caused the extinction of major marine predators such as the megalodon, a 60-foot long shark that suddenly disappeared after a 14-million year reign at the top of the ocean food chain.

Fossil remains show that it was once found almost worldwide, yet it vanished forever about 1.6 million years ago and no-one really knows why.

Dr Sansom added that the work with shark teeth might later be extended to include studying deposits in the ear-bones of a wide range of fish, which can also reveal details of water chemistry.

While Dr Sansom’s work could help in forecasting climatic impact on the oceans, the planned Shark Week will focus more on man’s impact and in particular on the world’s shark species.

Tens of millions of sharks are killed annually as by-catch or to provide fins for shark fin soup.

Many species are already teetering on the brink of oblivion and Shark Week will feature a host of activities highlighting their plight and seeking to persuade visitors of the need to protect rather than persecute sharks.

PICTURE: Sea Life aquarist Tom Prakash holding the extinct Megalodon’s tooth on the left and a modem day black tip reef shark’s tooth on the right

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