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The Jaws Effect: How movie narratives are used to influence policy responses to shark bites in Western Australia: Australian Journal of Political Science: 50(1), 114-127 2013: Science, policy and the public discourse of shark “attack”: a proposal for reclassifying human-shark interactions: Hueter, R. Journal of Environmental Studies and Science
Eugenie Clark (May 4, 1922 – February 25, 2015), popularly known as The Shark Lady, was an American ichthyologist known for both her research on shark behavior and her study of fish in the order Tetraodontiformes. Clark was a pioneer in the field of scuba diving for research purposes.
Samuel H. Gruber (May 13, 1938 – April 18, 2019) was a shark biologist and founder of the American Elasmobranch Society.He was a professor at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science and the founder of the Bimini Biological Field Station Foundation.
He was a co-founder of the Shark Attack File now maintained by George H. Burgess at the Florida Museum of Natural History. In 1964, Springer was chief scientist, Cruise 8, International Indian Ocean Expedition aboard the research vessel Anton Brun. From 1978 to 1980, he was a member of the Shark Panel, Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council.
Shark Lab's most influential program, by far, includes monitoring hundreds of adult and juvenile sharks that swim along the Southern California coast and letting local lifeguards know when sharks ...
Peter Benchley – author of the novel Jaws, later worked for shark conservation; Eugenie Clark – American ichthyologist researching poisonous fish and the behavior of sharks; popularly known as The Shark Lady; Leonard Compagno – international authority on shark taxonomy, best known for 1984 catalog of shark species (FAO)
If a shark is spotted, SharkEye sends a text to the 80-or-so people who have signed up for alerts, including local lifeguards, surf shop owners, and the parents of children who take lessons.
Some authors consider it as equivalent to Neoselachii (the crown group clade including modern sharks, rays, and all other descendants of their last common ancestor). Other authors use the name Elasmobranchii for a broader branch-based group of all chondrichthyans more closely related to modern sharks and rays than to Holocephali (the clade ...