Meet some of the Canadian researchers getting to know the hundred-year-old sharks in our oceans - Action News
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British ColumbiaCoastlines

Meet some of the Canadian researchers getting to know the hundred-year-old sharks in our oceans

The oceans surrounding Canada are home to many shark species, and researchers Kirsti Burnett and Eric Ste Marie are among those trying to better understand and change the narrative around the mysterious animals.

'Coastlines' is a new series from CBC's Creator Network exploring Canada's oceans

One of the most common large sharks in Canada is the blue shark, pictured here. It is also the most heavily fished shark in the world. (by wildestanimal/Getty Images)

This story is part of Coastlines, an original series with the CBC Creator Network exploring Canada's oceans. You can watch every episode of the serieshere.

What's the scariest thing in the ocean?

Many would sayit's sharks. But the people who research these animals say their fearsome reputation is a misunderstanding.

"The ocean as we know it today, has been formed with these animals as part of the ecosystem," saidKirsti Burnett, a marine biologist and researcher from Halifax, N.S., now based in Germany.

Burnett isone of many passionateshark scientiststrying to better understand and change the narrative around the animals,which have been part of the marine ecosystem for thousands of years.

The oceans surrounding Canada arehome to many shark species, including the spiny dogfish that measures around 100 to 125 centimetres, andthe giant basking shark,almost as big asa school bus.

WATCH | Sharks may bethe most misrepresented species in the ocean

One of themost common large sharks in Canada is the blue shark, which can be found in southeastern Newfoundland and the Bay of Fundy between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick all the way south to Argentina. They are also the most heavily fished shark in the world.

Part of Burnett'sresearch involves tracking blue sharks to better understand them and the threats they face.

"Our [shark] populations here in Atlantic Canada travel all over the Atlantic, and therefore it's really important for us to understand their movements, their habitat use, and see if it overlaps with any regional threats,"Burnett said.

Another researcher looking to better understand sharksisEric Ste Marie, a PhD student at the University of Windsor, who studiesGreenland sharks in the Arctic.

Greenland sharks have the longest known lifespan of any vertebrate on earth, with lifespans of at least 250 years, researchers say. (Eric Ste Marie)

"I'm super lucky because I get to work with one of the coolest species on the planet. They live in the Arctic, they'rethe oldest living vertebrate on the planet,the largest fish in the Arctic as well,"Ste Marie said.

"Greenland sharks are a consumer of things like fish and whales for example a lot of that is probably scavenged, although we don't know really the extent to which they might be also hunting live animals."

Thesharks can live up to250 years,althoughFisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO)notes there currently isn'treliable research on their lifespan. Little is also knownabout their role in the ecosystem.

Eric Ste Marie studies the metabolism of Greenland sharks swimming in Canada's Arctic Ocean. (Submitted by Eric Ste Marie)

Ste Marie is trying to change that by studyingthe shark's metabolic rate.

"The metabolic rate is the speed at which our bodies process energy," he said, addingthat it givesscientists an idea of what Greenland sharks need to eat in order to survive.

Thisinformation is crucial to understanding how they fit in the Arctic food web and how they can be conserved, he says.

Ste Marie says researchers like himself and Burnetthaveonly just started to scratch the surface of the mysteriousspecies.

"There is still so much we do not understand," he said.


About this series

Coastlinesis an original series with the CBC Creator Network that dives into the future of Canadian coastlines and marine life, and the young researchers who are trying to protect them.

Co-hosted by wildlife conservationist and educator Connel Bradwell of Vancouver Island, and commercial fisher and science technician Erica Porter ofNova Scotia, every episode of Coastlines features researchers from the West, North and East coasts.

You can watch every episode of Coastlinesoncbc.ca.

About the Creator Network

The Creator Network amplifies the voices of the next generation of Canadian storytellers and connects them with CBC platforms, where they tell compelling stories and share unique perspectives that reflect the country in all its diversity. Learn more.