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Sharks may help improve climate forecasts, reveals new research

Neil Hammerschlag, Ph.D. and Laura McDonnell, Ph.D. attach a satellite tag to a blue shark that transmitted location, temperature, and depth data. (Nola Schoder / MPS via SWNS)

By Stephen Beech

Sharks may help improve climate forecasts, according to a new study.

Sharks may help improve climate forecasts, reveals new research

Example shark-derived temperature-depth profiles across four regions, with the distribution of all transmitted profile locations (October 2021 - April 2022). Top panels compare tag-derived profiles within a 1° × 1° grid cell on a given day to the concurrent control (CFSR) profile (black), with shark tag data showing minimum (blue) and maximum (red) temperatures. Summary statistics for each grid cell are provided in-panel. The bottom map shows all profile locations and maximum depths (N = 8,242), with colored diamonds marking example profiles, orange lines indicating the Gulf Stream, and the black line marking 200 m depth. (Dr. Laura McDonnell via SWNS)

Screenshot 2026-05-11 at 8.50.52 AM

A sensor is attached to a shark. (Nola Schoder / MPS via SWNS)

Screenshot 2026-05-11 at 8.51.19 AM

A shark is released back into the ocean after a sensor was put on it. (Nola Schoder / MPS via SWNS)

Originally published on talker.news, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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