Video
                      Project: 
                            4.21 - Assessing the condition of natural values within priority temperate Australian Marine Parks to evaluate management effectiveness
                                    
                    Topic:  Protected place management          
                      Location: Beagle Marine Park            
                                Species (common name): Port Jackson shark            
                                Species (taxonomic name): Heterodontus portusjacksoni            
                                Habitat type: Rocky reef            
                                Date taken: August 2024                    
Credit (organisation): NESP/IMAS
                      Conservation value: Australian Marine Park            
                                Observation platform: Remotely operated vehicle                    
Caption
              Scientists on a return journey to Beagle Marine Park in central Bass Strait in August 2024 spotted thousands of sleepy Port Jackson sharks blanketing the seafloor. The mysterious gathering was videoed by an underwater robot, known as a remotely operated vehicle, being ‘flown’ above the seafloor from the South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI) research vessel MRV Ngerin.
The research team had previously seen the sharks here six years ago during the first survey of Beagle Marine Park, which is managed by Parks Australia. This two-week return survey led by the University of Tasmania Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) revisited the same places to see how conditions in the park may have changed. It was supported by the Australian Government’s National Environmental Science Program and a grant of sea time from the Southern Australian Coastal Research Vessel Fleet with National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy funding.
See the Project 4.21 summary page for more information about this voyage: https://www.nespmarinecoastal.edu.au/project/4-21/
