The sharks that hunt in forests - Luka Seamus Wright

796,925 views ・ 2021-06-14

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In the coastal waters of the Bahamas,
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a young lemon shark is on the run from a surprising predator:
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an adult shark of her own species.
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Half of her 17 siblings have already been eaten by the older generation,
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and it looks as though she’s about to join them.
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But just as the predator closes in,
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she disappears into a thicket of underwater roots,
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safe in the refuge of the mangrove forest.
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Forests don’t usually come to mind as a habitat for sharks.
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But various marine forests cover roughly 4.2 million square kilometers
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of the planet,
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providing food and shelter for 35% of the world’s sharks.
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Deadly tiger sharks blend into seagrass meadows
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before pouncing on sea cows and sea turtles.
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White sharks hunt down seals in forests of kelp towering 65 meters tall.
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And lemon sharks stalk forests of mangroves—
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the only trees on Earth that live in the ocean.
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All these ecosystems have their quirks,
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but mangroves may be the most unique of all.
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Harboring life between their roots and among their crowns,
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mangroves function as an essential bridge between land and sea.
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And to survive between these worlds, different mangrove species
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have evolved various adaptations that protect them and their resident sharks.
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Taking root in the unstable ground of muddy coastal regions is difficult,
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so mangrove seedlings germinate attached to their mother plant.
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Once they've grown large enough to survive on their own,
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these partially developed plants begin to ride the current.
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Most take root nearby, while some travel for several months
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before landing in a different part of the world.
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Once they’ve settled down, mangroves deploy tall, skinny stilt roots,
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crutch-like prop roots or wavy buttress roots,
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to support themselves in their unsteady terrain.
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These newly established mangroves have to contend with two additional problems:
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seawater is high in dehydrating and potentially toxic salt,
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and the mud contains little to no oxygen.
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This combination would be lethal to most trees,
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but mangroves make the most of their marshy surroundings.
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Rather than being completely buried,
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mangrove roots are largely above the ground.
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This allows the microscopic pores on these roots to take in oxygen during low tide
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before closing to create a waterproof seal during high tide.
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Many mangroves also grow snorkel roots,
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which can take in oxygen through the same mechanism,
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or directly produce it via photosynthesis.
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To stop salt from entering their system,
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some mangrove species use incredibly fine filters in their roots.
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Others concentrate salt inside special cellular compartments,
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bark or dying leaves, that then drop off.
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Some species can even excrete the excess minerals
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through specially adapted salt glands.
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All these processes make mangroves more than a little salty,
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but that doesn’t deter coastal life from living in their nooks and crannies.
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While birds nest among mangrove branches,
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fish lay eggs amidst their sprawling, complex root systems.
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Symbiotic sponges and sea squirts protect their host trees
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from hungry woodboring crustaceans.
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Crabs, snails, and shrimp eat algae, mussels, barnacles,
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and salty mangrove detritus.
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These animals in turn feed fish,
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which are devoured by shark pups roaming the roots—
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alongside occasional vegetarian meals of seagrass.
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But sharks aren’t just the beneficiaries of marine forests,
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they’re part of the glue that holds them together.
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Sharks limit the abundance of animals
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which would otherwise overgraze these essential plants.
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Just as marine forests provide shelter to vulnerable baby predators,
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those predators grow up to protect their forest homes.
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Unfortunately, both sides of this delicate balance are under threat.
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Overfishing has decimated shark populations worldwide,
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and many marine forests are being polluted or cut down for coastal development.
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This destruction is especially dangerous
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because marine forests are one of the single most important ecosystems
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in mitigating climate change.
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Mangroves and seagrasses trap carbon between their roots,
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and fast-growing kelps export vast amounts of carbon to the deep ocean.
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Together, marine forests sequester around 310 million tonnes of carbon every year,
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capturing 3% of our annual global carbon emissions.
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So, like the sharks that inhabit them,
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humans need to fight tooth and nail to protect these essential ecosystems.
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