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Rabu, 19 Oktober 2011

The Meat You Eat!

Our thanks to Maneka Gandhi for permission to republish this post, whichappeared on the Web site of People for Animals, India’s largest animal-welfare organization, on September 15, 2011. Gandhi is the founder of People for Animals and a leading animal-rights and environmental activist in India.
When you bite into a hamburger or chicken sandwich, what do you think that this grass eating animal was eating before it died? Most likely it was a mixture of ground up eyeballs, anuses, bones, feathers, and euthanized dogs.
Cows in a feedlot on a dairy factory farm in Washington state, U.S.---C.A.R.E./Factoryfarm.org
Most animals that we eat spend the entirety of their short lives in factories eating recycled meat and animal fat. These herbivores have been turned into carnivores thanks to our process of “waste removal” better known as rendering.
Every day thousands of pounds of slaughterhouse waste such as brains, eyeballs, spinal cords, intestines, bones, feathers or hooves as well as restaurant grease, road kill, cats and dogs are produced. From this need for large waste disposal came the development of rendering plants. Rendering plants recycle the dead animals and their wastes into products known as bone meal, and animal fat. These products are sold to the companies that grow animals for meat or milk cattle, poultry, swine, [and] sheep and put into their feed. Each slaughterhouse has a privately owned rendering plant nearby.
These facilities operate 24 hours a day all over the world. Till the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] came to government in 1998 rendering was banned in India by the department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying, Ministry of Agriculture, which prohibited the use of animal byproducts in ruminant feeds (Order No.2-4/99-AHT/FF). However, the BJP, influenced by a coterie of slaughterhouse owners and interested bureaucrats, repealed this ban and India’s first rendering plants came up in 2001. No one in India knows about them—and few people in America where there are thousands of plants. They are not advertised—and for good reason. The process itself is very disturbing and those who have witnessed it have often sworn off meat for good. The rendering plant floor is piled high with “raw product”—tonnes of feet, tails, feathers, bones, spinal cords, hooves, milk sacs, grease, intestines, stomachs and eyeballs of slaughtered animals. In the heat, the piles of dead animals seem to have a life of their own as millions of maggots swarm over the carcasses.
First the raw material is cut into small pieces and then transported to another machine for fine shredding. It is then cooked at 280 degrees for one hour, melting the meat away from bones in the hot “soup.” This continuous batch cooking process goes on for 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
During this cooking process, the soup produces yellow grease or tallow that rises to the top and is skimmed off. The cooked meat and bone are then sent to a hammer mill press, which squeezes out the remaining moisture and pulverizes the product into a gritty powder. Shaker screens remove excess hair and large bone chips that are unsuitable for consumption. Now recycled meat, yellow grease, and bone meal are produced and used exclusively to feed vegetarian animals.
In India no testing is done of these plants. In America and Europe state agencies spot check, yet testing for pesticides and other toxins in animal feeds is not done or is done incompletely with toxic wastes accompanying the dead animals—all of which the rendering plants do not remove. Poisoned cattle stomachs, animals that have been lying dead for weeks before being picked up, animals that have been run over by trucks, all their noxious parts are part of this. The package includes euthanasia drugs given to pets, animals with flea collars containing organophosphate insecticides, fish oil laced with DDT, heavy metals from pet ID tags, and plastics from thrown away meats. Labor costs are rising and therefore many rendering plants refuse to hire extra hands to cut off flea collars or unwrap spoiled shop meat. Every week, millions of packages of plastic-wrapped meat go through the rendering process and become one of the many unwanted ingredients in animal feed.
Even if some people do realize how animal feed is made and feel that it is still too far removed to be a concern to them, most of them do not know of the risks [that] consumption of this meat entails. Perhaps the best-known health concern associated with rendering plants is Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, or Mad Cow Disease. In America regulations mandate that brain and other nerve tissue be removed from cattle after they are slaughtered for human food. Yet these most infectious parts, the brain and spinal cord, are allowed to go to a rendering facility where they can be processed into pet and animal feed. This means it is possible that a cow with Mad Cow Disease can be ground up and fed to a pig or chicken that is, in turn, fed back to other cows that are eventually eaten by people. India has no regulations of any kind. Behind the scenes and out of public view, these practices are unfolding around the world putting millions of people at risk for Mad Cow Disease.
Photomicrograph of brain tissue of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), showing prominent spongiotic changes in the cortex (magnification 100X)---Teresa Hammett/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (Image Number: 10131) .
Other diseases that can be contracted from rendering plant product feed include tuberculosis, variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), and Alzheimer’s. All of these diseases, except Alzheimer’s, are transmissible spongiform encephalopathy diseases (TSEs), which means that they [...] are infectious diseases that leave the brain resembling a sponge. The process by rendering plants makes chickens, goats, sheep, pigs, cows and buffaloes into cannibals[---a] factor that has been cited as a cause of Alzheimer’s disease which did not exist in the world until this practice started. Millions of people are affected by Alzheimer’s making it one of the leading causes of death among the elderly across the globe. Scientific evidence shows that people eating meat more than four times a week for a prolonged period have a three times higher chance of suffering from dementia than vegetarians. A preliminary 1989 study at the University of Pennsylvania showed that over 5% of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s were actually dying from human spongiform encephalopathy. That means that as many as 200,000 people in the United States may already be dying from mad cow disease each year. God knows how many in India but certainly thousands more after 2001.
In India, in 2001 the BJP led Government prepared a secret position paper on the “Utilisation of Slaughter House Waste for the Preparation of Animal Feed.” This is what the report said:
India ranks topmost in the world in livestock holding and has the potential to utilize slaughterhouse by products to partly meet the growing requirement of animal feeds. The total availability of offal/bones in the country generated from large slaughterhouses is estimated to be more than 21-lakh tonnes/annum. It can also be used for the preparation of animal feeds.
The report further goes on to explain that “Presently in India, live stock feed production is cereal based. This results in livestock, especially poultry, pig and fish competing with humans for grains and cereals which can easily be replaced with slaughterhouse waste.”
The Office International des Epizooties (OIE World Organisation for Animal Health) had surveyed the risk of CJD/BSE in Asia. The report revealed that no attention had been paid to any risk analysis on bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in China, India, Pakistan and seven other countries. According to OIE, significant quantities of animal feed of meat origin have been imported into Asia, which may mean that the BSE agent could have reached domestic cattle in these countries. The Report noted that “the spread of BSE through rendering plants cannot be excluded in some countries such as China, India, Japan, Pakistan and Taiwan. Therefore, much more stringent management at slaughterhouses and rendering plants, as well as extensive surveillance programmes, are required in those countries.”
The Indian companies on the Internet advertise their rendered meal as having been made from “spray-dry” machines that turn blood into a fine, brown powder (gardeners know it as blood meal); gigantic kettles that boil fat to make tallow; grinders that crush bones into minuscule fragments. Millions of tons are supplied to dairy industry, poultry farms, cattle feed-lots, pig farms, fish-feed plants, and pet-food manufacturers. Leading manufacturers of “Meal,” as they call it, are Standard Agro Vet (P) Ltd., Allanasons Ltd., Hind Agro Ltd., Al Kabeer, and Hyderabad—also the four largest private slaughterhouses in the country.
All animal feed manufacturers use meat and bone meal in their feeds. Recent reports state most domestic animals are fed such rendered animal tissues. A 1991 United States Department of agriculture report states that approximately 7.9 billion pounds of meat, bone meal, blood meal, and feather meal was produced by rendering plants in 1983. Of that amount: 12% percent was used in dairy and beef cattle feed, 34% in pet food, 34% in poultry feed and 20% in pig food. This has doubled by 2006. So has the use of animal protein in commercial dairy feed since 1987 all over the globe. Grass or cereal fed cattle and other animals are nonexistent abroad and lessening in India. BSE expert Richard Lacey states “The time bomb of the twentieth century equivalent of the bubonic plague ticks away.” Do you think Nature will forgive you for a baby chick [...] eating on what’s left of her mother after she’s been stripped down, a calf being fed on her mother’s slaughtered remains, a pig being reared on a diet of dead pigs, a goat being fed on a goat’s leftovers?
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U.S. TOPS WORLDWIDE SHARK ATTACK LIST

More shark attacks happened in the United States last year than in any other country, according to the University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File annual report, released today.
Carcharodon_carcharias
(Great White Shark; Image: SharkDiver.com)
Worldwide, shark attacks also increased, with 79 occurring in 2010, the highest since the year 2000, when sharks attacked 80 people. Shark-related fatalities for last year were also above average, with six deaths reported.
The news might have been even worse in shark-popular spots like Florida, were it not for the lousy economy.
“Florida had its lowest total since 2004, which was 12,” said ichthyologist George Burgess in a press release.
“Maybe it’s a reflection of the downturn in the economy and the number of tourists coming to Florida, or the amount of money native Floridians can spend taking holidays and going to the beach," added Burgess, who is director of the file housed at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus.
Although Florida's number of shark attacks declined in 2010, the state still led the U.S., with 13 reported attacks. Twenty-three other attacks happened in these other states:
North Carolina: 5
California: 4
Hawaii: 4
South Carolina: 4
Georgia: 1
Maine: 1
Oregon: 1
Texas: 1
Virginia: 1
Washington: 1
Outside of the U.S., the following countries also experienced shark attacks in 2010:
Australia: 14
South Africa: 8
Vietnam: 6
Egypt: 6
Egypt is noteworthy because five of its six attacks, which included one fatality, all happened during early December and were attributed to just two sharks. The attacks occurred within a 5-day period.
“This was a situation that was hugely unusual by shark-attack standards,” said Burgess, who has researched sharks at the museum for more than 35 years. “It was probably the most unusual shark incident of my career.”
He thinks a combination of natural and human factors contributed to the attacks in the Red Sea. These include higher than normal water temperatures caused by an unusually hot summer, international livestock traders dumping sheep carcasses into the water, and divers feeding reef fishes and sharks.
“The reality is, going into the sea is a wilderness experience,” he said. “You’re visiting a foreign environment -- it’s not a situation where you’re guaranteed success.”
With that in mind, it might not be such a good time to swim off the coast of Florida, where 100,000 sharks were recently spotted swimming close to shore. Helicopter pilot Steve Irwin, who saw the sharks, believes they were spinner sharks, which received that name because of their unusual method of feeding. They swim rapidly through schools, spinning along the axis of their bodies and sometimes leaping out of the water.
Here's video footage showing the sharks:
Irwin couldn't believe so many spinner sharks were together near Florida.
"It was an truly amazing sight," he told the Daily Mail. "I've been a fisherman for 20 years and I also kayak out there and it's common to see them twist and turn and shoot through the air. They're prevalent at this time of year but what amazed me was the sheer numbers of them. There were tens of thousands of them -- I'd say maybe 100,000."
Irwin added: "I kept on flying for about 20 miles and they just kept on coming. It's common to see large predatory sharks come in and feed on schools of bait-fish - the odd thing was I didn't see any bait-fish at all!"
If you wish to avoid becoming shark bait yourself, take particular care if you surf. Surfers were the victims of slightly more than half of the incidents reported in 2010, nearly 51 percent of the cases. Swimmers and waders were the second-largest group affected, accounting for nearly 38 percent of the shark attacks internationally.
Burgess believes there are simple ways to reduce the possibility of a shark attack, such as avoiding fishing areas and inlets where sharks gather and leaving the water when a shark is sighted.
Even with the rise in shark attacks and fatalities, the number of sharks killed by humans each year is staggering, with 30 to 70 million sharks killed by fisheries alone.
“One-on-one in the sea, the sharks are going to win in a confrontation with humans if they really want to do so,” Burgess said. “But out of the sea, we can sit high and dry with a beer in our hand, put a line overboard and catch the fiercest animal in the sea.”
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CYCLOPS SHARK APPEARS TO BE LEGIT

The 'Cyclops shark' that went viral on the net a few months ago appears to be a legitimate one-eyed dusky shark fetus, according to LiveScience and numerous other media reports.
When photos of the shark first surfaced in the Pisces Fleet Sportfishing blog, at Facebook, and at other high traffic spots, many people thought the images were too bizarre to depict anything legitimate. The cute little bug-eyed individual looks more like a happy cartoon character than a real shark, especially when its mouth is held open.
But National Geographic shares that two scientists from the Interdisciplinary Center of Marine Sciences in La Paz, Mexico, have studied the specimen and have determined it's a 22-inch-long dusky shark fetus with a single, functioning eye that's front and center on its head.
The fetus was discovered after fisherman Enrique Lucero León "legally caught" a pregnant dusky shark near Cerralvo Island in the Gulf of California.
Biologist Felipe Galván-Magaña of the center in La Paz told National Geographic that when León sliced open his catch, he found the odd-looking male embryo along with nine normal siblings. "He said, That's incredible -- wow," according to Galván-Magaña.
Galván-Magaña and colleague Marcela Bejarano-Álvarez are ready to release a paper documenting their research. I haven't seen it yet, but apparently the scientists X-rayed the fetus and reviewed previous studies on cyclopia. If you click on that last hyperlink, you'll see images of a human baby with the disorder, characterized by one eye and often other facial problems.
Puppies and kittens born with cyclopia usually die after just a day or so. The fate of the Cyclops shark was also probably sealed, even before León caught its mother.
Jim Gelsleichter, a shark biologist at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, said that no sharks with cyclopia have been caught outside of the womb, indicating that if such sharks do enter the world, their time here is extremely short.
Most sharks receive very little mothering and have to fend for themselves from day 1. This little one-eyed individual, once born, likely could not have fended for itself in the wild.
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'MUSEUM OF ME' FACEBOOK APP: THE ULTIMATE VANITY PROJECT

As if Generation Me needed another online pedestal to flaunt its inflated sense of self-worth, along comes this: Intel's Museum of Me app for Facebook, the latest virtual temple of exhibitionism and narcissism.
Developed essentially as an ad for Intel's Core i5 processors, the Museum of Me is ideal for the yawning vainglorious hordes who have grown bored at staring into the low-tech reflecting pool of their Facebook profile and are looking for a more glamorous way to post Blue Steel-face GPOY's. Facebook's wall is certainly no place to categorically display one's Likes. Puh-lease! They belong on the wall of a museum, on video screens that surround a giant three dimensional thumbs-up statue.
If "creating a visual archive of your social life" in a trapezoidal Xanadu that looks like it was built by architectZaha Hadid - if that sounds like the bee's knees - then connect to Facebook via the Museum of Me's website and Intel will download your Facebook data and fill the halls and galleries of your very own museum.
Here you'll be waltzed through a video tour of your museum, showered by the flurried tinklings of Takagi Masakatsu's soundtrack. In various "rooms" you can witness virtual strangers gawking at photos, including those of your friends and ones that you've uploaded, dramatically enlarged on your museum wall. There are rooms, also, that exhibit a scramble of words you've used on your profile, as well as a display of places you've traveled.
Your tour ends with a spectacular grand finale, an homage that even the most decadent techie could appreciate. A squad of rank-and-file robotic arms pluck photos from your mid-air permanent collection only to assemble a photo collage revealing your museum's most coveted possession: you.
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LOCKETS STORE USB DRIVES, KEEP DATA HANDY

USB Locket Combined
USB Lockets: Full Size and Medical Lockets: $250 / Mini Version: $170
Data may hold a certain beauty for statisticians and their ilk, but for the rest of us its appeal is purely practical. Until now. New York designer Emily Rothschild has created three necklaces featuring lockets that hold a 2GB flash drive.
Inspired by a style from the early 1900s, Rothschild's full-size USB locket is available plated with either 24K satin gold or black rhodium. Either way, a detachable 2GB USB flash drive hidden within can be used to store and share personal photographs and files. After that piece won a Blogger's Choice Award at the New York International Gift Fair earlier this year, Rothschild went on to create a smaller, rectangular version. A medical version, meanwhile, is designed for storing personal medical records and critical contact information; on that one, the flash drive itself can be engraved to make the most pertinent information immediately visible to medical professionals.
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MULTIPLE SHIRT POCKETS STASH GADGETS

SeV Button Down X-ray
SeV Button Down Shirt: $80
The early 90s called and left a message: Please return the fanny pack, and the phone holster. There's a much cooler way to carry around the gear that would otherwise help you look hip. And ironically, it's whatlooks like a normal cotton shirt. But this wrinkle-resistant, tech-enabled SeV Button Down Shirt is anything but "button-down."
It's not only got several handy hidden pockets, but also literally pockets within pockets. For instance, inside the magnetically sealing external chest pocket, it's got separate compartments sized for a pen (so it doesn'tdorkily stick out) and a smart phone. A little pocket hidden towards the bottom of the shirt in front makes a great money cache. And two stealth under-arm pockets are perfect hideaways for sunglasses, cameras, phones or music players. Best of all, they're connected to your Personal Area Network, meaning you're wired for sound and ready to jam wherever you and your classic-looking, gadget toting shirt may be.
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MARIACHI BAND SERENADES MUSIC-LOVING BELUGA WHALE

A playful beluga whale named Juno recently interacted with a mariachi band that played at a wedding held at the Mystic Aquarium in Connecticut. Check out the video:
Kelly O'Neil, senior trainer of beluga whales at the aquarium, told me that Juno was hanging out in his 750,000-gallon tank when the wedding festivities began. Juno shares the tank with two other female beluga whales.
The whales can choose to go up to the window, to watch any human happenings, or they can retreat to quiet, private areas, which include two back pools that are out of sight.
"Juno is extremely playful, so the mariachi band must have piqued his curiosity," O'Neil said. "The two females might have stayed away since he was hogging the window."
Beluga whales are known as the "canaries of the sea," due to their musical vocalizations. (You can listen to some in this beautiful clip.) O'Neil said the whales can hear outside of their tank, when they get up to the window, so there's little doubt that Juno was aware of the music.
He is also clearly aware of the mariachi players' movements, even dancing along with them as he mirrors their head bobs and sways.
O'Neil said Juno was previously trained to move his head up and down, as well as from side to side, so these motions are familiar to him. (No trainer was coaching Juno during the mariachi moment.) For enrichment outside of training sessions, the whales are additionally exposed to all sorts of different things, from bubbles to TV shows (I hope they're watching Discovery!) just to keep the whales engaged and entertained. They have active minds that need stimulation.
In the wild, beluga whales are "curious from afar" and "skittish," O'Neil said. It's no wonder. Our hunting of them and harming of their habitat has reduced their populations in the wild. The IUCN Red List classifies them as "near threatened."
Juno and his tank buddies, however, are doing their part to help turn the tide. Through public education programs at such aquariums and other conservation efforts, people like us are made more aware of these magnificent, intelligent animals.


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5 Wild Parkour Moves You Won’t Believe

While most of us may never advance beyond the basic parkour moves, the efficient, agile, acrobatic runs from skilled parkour practitioners, or traceurs, are really something to behold. There’s something really exciting about watching a fellow human move through his urban environment with catlike speed and flexibility, flying through the air and landing precisely, and if you aspire to do the same, then watching parkour masters at work is a great first step.
Get inspired to get out and train with this collection of some of the wildest and most exciting parkour moves around:

1. Incredible Parkour Flips

Watching an expert casually throw a flip makes them seem quite easy, but actually committing to the motion is much more difficult than you might think. After all, while we’re cool with jumping and running, it’s not exactly second nature to put yourself in a position where your feet are higher than your head. And what a big variety of parkour flips there are: front flips, back flips, spinning and twisting flips, flips from a higher elevation to a lower one, and on and on. Take a gander at this compilation of amazing flips from some really skilled traceurs:

2. Rockin’ Rooftop Jumps

Some of the most heartstopping parkour moves include traceurs making rooftop to rooftop jumps, or jumps from rooftop to ground, and catching big air with nothing but space beneath them. These are probably the most thrilling to watch, maybe because the exposure is so great that it has the highest injury potential of all of these moves. It’s gotta take some guts (and some serious landing skills) to nail jumps like these next guys, and I’m still curious how the last guy managed to recover:

3. Amazing Wall Gainers

Parkour moves which really amaze people tend to be really acrobatic in style, like the wall gainer. It’s hard to describe it in words, but it’s basically running at speed up to a wall, then launching yourself off of the wall and into a gainer flip, sometimes with a twist. Watch this next quick clip for an intro to the wall gainer:

4. Mad Bar Skills

Jungle gyms and monkey bars are like a dream come true for working out the complex moves of swings and underbars and such, and as luck would have it, they tend to be pretty accessible in most neighborhoods. Check out some of these mad parkour bar moves:

5. The Twisting Spinning Corkscrew

The corkscrew, or cork, is one of those parkour moves which look right out of a martial arts flick, and those who can pull it off seem to defy gravity. It’s a flip with a twist, or a twist with a flip, or… Just watch the video and you’ll understand:
For more adrenaline-pumping content, check out The Adrenalist.
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Want a Stronger Brain? Hit the Treadmill.

exercise stronger brain jogging
I’ve never exercised more in my life than the semester I wrote my college thesis- after a workout, I found myself physically exhausted but mentally ready to go. As it turns out, my improved academic performance wasn’t a fluke, or all in my head: A new study shows that exercising not only spurs the creation of new brain cells, it strengthens the ones you already have.
Researchers at the University of South Carolina put one group of mice on an exercise regimen for eight weeks, and watched their brain development compared to couch-potato mice counterparts. The workout fiends had more developed mitochondria throughout their brains, compared to no development in the non-exercising mice.
There’s a lot of evidence that regular exercise improves cell performance throughout the body, including the brain. And the best part is you don’t need to run an Iron Man to up your IQ- the human equivalent of the mouse workout is a 30 minute jog.
So hit the treadmill, and see if you can’t exercise your way into MENSA.
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PHOTOS SHOW FISHERMAN CATCHING GREAT WHITE SHARK

Great White Shark Catch 5

(All Images: Oceans Research)
Although great white sharks are protected in South Africa, fishermen are still brazenly catching them, suggest graphic photographs taken of one such incident on Friday, October 14.
On that day, concerned members of the community at Beacon Point in Mossel Bay witnessed a fisherman in the process of catching a great white shark and hauling it onto the rocks. There are instances where this species is inadvertently hooked, but the fishermen by law must remove the hook and immediately release the protected shark back into the water.
In this case, Oceans Research scientist Ryan Johnson saw something quite different, according to a press release issued by the South Africa-based conservation group. After rushing down to the location, Johnson watched as the fisherman posed with the bleeding shark for photographs being taken by two companions.
Meanwhile, Enrico Gennari, another Oceans Research scientist, telephoned the local fisheries inspector from the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. The inspector assured Gennari that he would come to the site, located just over 1/2 mile from his office.
With no inspector evident up to 20 minutes after the call, Johnson directly confronted the fisherman and informed him that he was breaking the law, that the great white is a protected species, and asked the fisherman to move away from the injured shark to enable Johnson to return it to the ocean.
With the help of a concerned bystander, Johnson did just that, which was no easy task, as you might imagine. They had to wait for large enough swells to arrive and take some of the shark's weight. (Adult great whites can weigh well over 4,000 pounds.)
You can see much of what happened to the shark in the following images:
Great White Shark Catch 1
Great White Shark Catch 2

Great White Shark Catch 3
Great White Shark Catch 4

Great White Shark Catch 6

Following release into the water, the shark rolled onto its side, righted itself, bumped into a rock and swam out of sight. According to the scientists, it is impossible to know whether the shark will survive.
As the fisherman started to leave, Johnson noticed that all of the man's gear appeared to be designed for shark and other large prey capture. Since the compliance officer never showed up during the 20 minutes while the fisherman and his pals packed up and left, they got away.
Great white sharks are protected, so clearly there's a law enforcement problem, but Johnson believes there's more to it than that.
"The difficulty in prosecuting and investigating such cases is that fisherman officially claim that they are not targeting white sharks (when questioned) despite unofficially admitting they are targeting white sharks in social media sites such as Facebook," he was quoted as saying in the Oceans Research press release.
"Despite being equipped with tackle designed to capture sharks as large as white sharks, fishing in locations that are known great white aggregation sites, the authorities claim that 'intent' cannot be sufficiently established to lead to a successful prosecution."
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