This Technology Shocks Sharks to Save Them – Bloomberg

Posted under Cibercommunity, Technology On By James Steward

Bloomberg Law speaks with prominent attorneys and legal scholars, analyzing major legal issues and cases in the news. The show examines all aspects of the legal profession, from intellectual property to criminal law, from bankruptcy to securities law, drawing on the deep research tools of BloombergLaw.com and BloombergBNA.com. Reporters from Bloomberg’s Washington, D.C. bureau are prominently featured as they offer analysis of policy and legal issues.
Upside Foods opened the largest synthetic meat factory in the world. It’s designed to grow thousands of pounds of chicken, beef and pork. Backed by Bill Gates and Richard Branson, Upside is betting consumers will go for vat-grown meat.
Thailand Says Most Institutional Investors Must Pay Stock Tax
Delta, Pilots Reach Four-Year Deal With 31% in Pay Raises
Argentina’s $44 Billion IMF Deal Gets Latest Staff Approval Seal
The Job Market Is Too Tight for Fed Comfort as Labor Pool Shrinks
More Americans Leave the Workforce as Participation Rate Drops Again
‘Tax Penalty’ Risks Keeping Polluting Cars on the Road Longer  Analysis
Influential Delaware Court Has Diversity Problem, Top Judge Says
Microsoft Is Ready to Fight For Its $69 Billion Activision Deal
Salesforce Loses Cybersecurity Executive in Leadership Shuffle
Twitter Firings Shrank Its Compliance Teams. Now It Risks Investigations and Big Fines
Fixing Czechs’ Money Woes Helps Turn Tide on Pro-Moscow Protests
South African Markets Hostage to Embattled President’s Fate
China Oceanwide Has Potential Buyer for $1.2 Billion LA Project
Carolina Panthers’ Owner Tepper Under Investigation for Scrapped NFL Facility
Russian Tourists Return to Thailand on Chartered Flights
New York Film Critics Circle Names ‘Tár’ Best Picture
That Fed Pivot on Interest Rates May Be Delayed Awhile
Service Wages Keep Bedeviling Powell and the Markets
Last Exit from Blackstone?
Can Duolingo Actually Teach You Spanish?
Ryanair, EasyJet Scale Back in Germany Over Airport Fees
11 Hours With Sam Bankman-Fried: Inside the Bahamian Penthouse After FTX’s Fall
UAW Presidential Race Heads Toward Runoff in a Rebuke of Leaders
Influential Delaware Court Has Diversity Problem, Top Judge Says
Seaweed Plastic, Farming Startups Among 2022 Earthshot Prize Winners
Hurricane-Force Wind Gusts Whip Across Central US, Including Texas and Colorado
Flu Hospitalizations Nearly Double Over the Last Week in the US
Federal Transportation Program Expands to Curb Crashes and Emissions
New San Francisco DA Vows to Fight the City’s ‘Lawlessness’
This Week in Crypto: BlockFi’s Chapter 11 Bankruptcy (Podcast)
Crypto Feels the Wrath of FTX’s Demise Through Bankruptcies (Podcast)
Bankman-Fried’s Latest Crypto Advice Rings Hollow After FTX Failures
Industrial fishing kills tens of millions of sharks every year. The SharkGuard attaches to fish hooks and sends out an electrical pulse that repels the animals to keep them from taking the bait. 
A photograph of a blue shark taken by an underwater pole camera during a juvenile shark survey.
Photographer: Mark Conlin/Southwest Fisheries Science Center/NOAA

Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Sign In
Tuna sashimi may be tasty but every bite comes with a high body count: the millions of sharks killed each year when they’re inadvertently caught by industrial fishing vessels. Now a new technology has shown promising results in sharply reducing the slaughter of a top predator key to keeping ocean ecosystems healthy.
Called a SharkGuard, the cylindrical device is attached to a baited fishing hook and emits a three-dimensional electric field that can be sensed by sharks and rays. The electrical pulse overstimulates the animal’s electroreceptors that it uses to locate prey, and like fingernails on a chalkboard, repels the shark away from the hook.

source

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.