Brendan Talwar

Brendan Talwar

Oct 24, 2014

Group 6 Copy 256
3
Please wait...

About This Project

Shark populations are being fished at unsustainable levels throughout much of our oceans. Because deep sea sharks grow slowly and have few offspring, they are particularly susceptible to overexploitation. We hope to better understand the effects of capture on two species of deep sea sharks, the gulper and the Cuban dogfish, as well as identify their chances of survival if released alive. Visit the abstract page for more details!
Blast off!

Browse Other Projects on Experiment

Related Projects

Illuminating Painted Bunting breeding season diets using eDNA

Given rapid declines in songbird populations, we must understand their trophic relationships to aid in conservation...

A benchmark toward an end-to-end machine learning system for acoustic monitoring wildlife populations and ecosystems

Current passive acoustic monitoring datasets focus on single species, limiting their use for conservation...

Sensing canine behavior from an edge ML-driven haptic interface

Edge machine learning refers to the process of running embedded ML models on site using devices capable...

Backer Badge Funded

An ecology project funded by 105 people