BEIJING, June 30 (Xinhua) -- For the first time on the Chinese mainland,
fishery officials are using SPLASH, a state-of-the-art navigation technology, to
tag and track two whale sharks--an endangered species and the world's largest
mammal.
The two sharks were released Monday at Sanya of southernmost China's Hainan
Province.
The SPLASH navigation technology is one of the most accurate and innovative
techniques in the world to conserve marine animals, David Rowat, chairman of
Marine Conservation Society in Seychelles and an expert in marine conservation,
was quoted as saying by Tuesday's China Daily.
SPLASH, a technique from the United States, includes sensors to measure
depth, temperature and light levels and can provide locations within a radius of
350 m.
Speaking at the whale-releasing ceremony, Rowat said that he has guided the
project initiated by the Fishery and Fishing Harbor Administration of the South
China Sea and mounted the sophisticated GPS tags on the two whale sharks, which
will help provide accurate data to monitor the species and the environment
affecting them.
Whale sharks are usually more than 10m long and formerly targeted by
commercial fisheries for their soft white meat, thick skin, and delicate bone,
he said.
One of the tagged sharks will be monitored for six months, and the other
for 12 months. Data will be collected and analyzed through software operations
to find ways to protect the species.
The fishing, selling and trading of whale sharks for commercial purposes is
prohibited on the mainland as the whale shark is officially categorized as
endangered and is therefore protected.