Whale sharks ‘at home’ in Indonesian bays


Endangered species: A file photo showing a whale shark in the waters off Raja Ampat Islands in West Papua. — AFP/Jonathan Irish for Conservation International

A study tracking dozens of whale sharks off Indonesia’s coast has revealed the secrets of their migrations and two hotspots where they gather year-round.

The research published yesterday fills in critical gaps in knowledge about the endangered species, and builds the case for increased protection of the Indonesian bays that the species flocks to, scientists said.

Whale sharks, which are a type of shark, not whale, face threats including pollution, tourism and vessel strikes.

While their speckled skin and stunning size make them instantly recognisable and a tourist draw, little was known about how the species moved between well-established gathering points.

Researchers in Indonesia aimed to change that by tagging Indo-Pacific whale sharks, which represent about 60% of the species, and tracing their movements.

Over a decade, they tagged 70 whale sharks at sites in Indonesia. Some were tracked for nearly three years.

“We could actually map or identify many variations of whale shark movement,” said Mochamad Iqbal Herwata Putra, the study’s lead author.

“The whale sharks that we tagged moved through (waters of) 13 different countries as well as the high seas.”

The research, published in the Frontiers in Marine Science journal, also revealed that two bays in Indonesia host whale sharks year-round, rather than seasonally as previously thought.

“This is very unique,” said Mochamad Iqbal, focal species conservation senior manager at NGO Konservasi Indonesia.

While most “aggregation sites” for whale sharks are believed to be seasonal gathering points, Cenderawasih Bay off Indonesia’s Papua province and Saleh Bay in Sumbawa are “like home for them”, Mochamad Iqbal said.

A combination of protection from predators and high availability of food such as krill make the bays crucial hotspots, with some evidence they may also function as nurseries.

Cenderawasih Bay is already protected as a national park, and its remote location has helped temper mass tourism.

But Saleh Bay is both popular with visitors and in a region with growing corn production on land and aquaculture at sea. — AFP

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