0943_BO

Page 10

%,

6A40C F78C4 B70A:B

observers from approaching to within 50 meters of a white shark. Mick Menigoz, who has hosted shark-viewing trips to the Farallones for five years on his boat Superfish, says that he advocated for the tightening of protective measures for white sharks. “We pushed for the new regulations, and we’ve bent over backwards for years to not hurt or bother the sharks,� Menigoz says. “We’re not even allowed to approach them, and now they’re letting these guys come in and use baited hooks to catch them. I’d be surprised if they don’t kill one.�

Kimberly Henry

P L A S T I C S U R G E RY

MD

‘I’d be surprised if they don’t kill one.’ —Mick Menigoz

V O T E D O N E O F M A R I N C O U N T Y ’S B E S T P L A S T I C S U R G E O N S

North Bay Bohemian 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006 2 009 N O M I N E E B E S T O F T H E B AY KRON TV 4

141 Lynch Creek Way Petaluma

350 Bon Air Road Greenbrae

707. 778 .2 313

4 1 5.9 2 4 .1 313

W W W. D R K I M B E R L Y H E N R Y. C O M

Primary and Specialty Care

Taking New Patients!

Growing Practice • Recruiting Doctors • Close to Home ‡ )DPLO\ 0HGLFLQH ‡ 1HXURORJ\ ‡ ,QWHUQDO 0HGLFLQH ‡ *DVWURHQWHURORJ\ ‡ ,QWHJUDWLYH 0HGLFLQH

Call for Appointment (707) 823-7616 6800 Palm Avenue Suite C1 and D Sebastopol, CA 95472

www.palmdrivehospital.com

Lowest Price in Town!

Brazilian Waxing 35 $

“Always Professional, Always Affordable�

Touchstone Therapies 707.331.0631

882 2nd Street, Santa Rosa | www.touchstonespatherapies.com

10

10.28.09-11.03.09

THE BOHEMIAN

Domeier, who returned no phone calls or emails from the Bohemian, aims to fit captured sharks with advanced SPOT (smart position or temperature transmitting) devices. To install these, which communicate with satellites only when the sharks break the surface, researchers must drill a small hole in a shark’s dorsal fin and bolt the tag in place. The operation requires hauling the animal onboard for as long as 20 minutes. Cameras, which sources say will be filming for National Geographic, will be rolling. Brown of the NOAA says that SPOT tags last longer than many existing transmitter types and, fitted to the dorsal fins of white sharks, could help to solve the unknowns about their migration patterns, such as whether the fish return to the Farallones on a strict annual or a biannual schedule. But Dr. Ken Goldman, now with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game but who tagged and studied white sharks in California extensively in the 1990s, wonders how significantly Domeier’s SPOT tag project will contribute to the existing pool of knowledge of great white behavior, and he wonders if it’s worth the risk. Goldman has seen large great whites die of stress-related causes days after capture and release by sport fishermen. “With great whites, it’ll take a long time to pull them in and handle them, and there’ll be a major stress factor on the fish,� Goldman says. “I’m concerned that the sharks will be stressed, lose their capacity to maintain their core body temperature and die.� Superfish skipper Menigoz sits on the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary’s advisory council along with 12 other individuals. The council’s job, according to the sanctuary’s website, is to provide “the Sanctuary manager with advice on the management of the Sanctuary.� But Menigoz says he was never consulted for his opinion on Domeier’s SPOT tagging project. “I’m very surprised I wasn’t contacted. At least a courtesy notice would have been nice, but it’s been top secret. Now everyone’s saying, ‘How can this be happening in a sanctuary?’ Well, believe it—it’s happening.�


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.