tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36324352.post1836142848990506479..comments2024-03-25T12:38:37.998+12:00Comments on The Best Shark Dive in the World!: Fiji's Sharks in Peril - Paper!Andrew Cumminghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14675497080700112390noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36324352.post-68784644528998797992020-08-01T22:21:14.915+12:002020-08-01T22:21:14.915+12:00:)
From my own experience, good reefie habitat is...:)<br /><br />From my own experience, good reefie habitat is patchy - eg in atolls the Greys aggregate in the passes but are rare on the outer reef slopes, Blacktips live on certain reef tops but not others, Silvertips like dropoffs, etc = good habitat selection when dropping BRUVs is essential, and methinks the researchers in French Polynesia and the FSM may have dropped the BRUVs where they DaSharkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06787762757245289307noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36324352.post-31506326445609443802020-08-01T18:02:24.481+12:002020-08-01T18:02:24.481+12:00Could Fijian sharks be less spread around looking ...Could Fijian sharks be less spread around looking for a bit of food than in other countries due to the many feeding sites ? and so less BRUVs sighting ?<br /><br />Or the conspiracy theory : The multi-million $ industry of shark diving in the Bahamas paid to the first ! (kidding !)<br /><br />What I think would be a massive massive factor in BRUVs results is the amount of oceanic volume in Thomasnoreply@blogger.com