Atomic bomb tests help reveal age of world's biggest fish 
CA Source: Thomson Reuters 4/9/2020
Atomic bomb tests help reveal age of world's biggest fish
Scientists have figured out how to calculate the age of whale sharks — Earth's largest fish — with some guidance from the radioactive fallout spawned by Cold War-era atomic bomb testing.

By measuring levels of carbon-14, a naturally occurring radioactive element that also is a by-product of nuclear explosions, the researchers determined that distinct bands present inside the shark's cartilaginous vertebrae are formed annually, like a tree's growth rings.

It was already known that these bands existed and increased in number as a shark aged. But it was unclear whether new rings appeared yearly or every six months.
 

The researchers compared carbon-14 levels in the rings to data on fluctuations in its global presence during the busy years of atmospheric nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s.

"These elevated levels of carbon-14 first saturated the atmosphere, then oceans and moved through food webs into animals, producing elevated levels in structures such as the vertebrae of whale sharks," said marine ecologist Joyce Ong of Rutgers University in New Jersey, lead author of the study published this week in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science.

Scientists now will be able to calculate a whale shark's age after its death — one ring equals one year. But just as importantly the study established that these endangered marine giants possess a very slow growth rate.

 
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