
Love It ^^

Awesome stamp ;3
I am 1 million % against anything to do with hurting or killing sharks <3
I am a shark lover and unfortunately have witnessed 1st hand of what shark finning is about

~Eve~ wrote:Killing sharks is only imposing a deadly and more dangerous issue: Giant Squids. Yes, it's true. Usually sharks live in the upper level of the ocean in the Gulf of Mexico, and the Giant Squids live on the level below. With sharks disappearing rapidly, the Squids are moving into the upper level of the Gulf. Before the massive shark killings, there was about one Giant Squid sighting every decade or so. Now, there's several sightings a year. D:
Let's go over why this is even worse. Squids are smarter than sharks, and can be more aggressive at times. They have tens of thousands of powerful suckers with little teeth on them. Personally, I'd rather be attacked by Shark than a Giant Squid. *Shudders*
Weredrakka wrote:~Eve~ wrote:Killing sharks is only imposing a deadly and more dangerous issue: Giant Squids. Yes, it's true. Usually sharks live in the upper level of the ocean in the Gulf of Mexico, and the Giant Squids live on the level below. With sharks disappearing rapidly, the Squids are moving into the upper level of the Gulf. Before the massive shark killings, there was about one Giant Squid sighting every decade or so. Now, there's several sightings a year. D:
Let's go over why this is even worse. Squids are smarter than sharks, and can be more aggressive at times. They have tens of thousands of powerful suckers with little teeth on them. Personally, I'd rather be attacked by Shark than a Giant Squid. *Shudders*
See, I'm worried about the same problem, but on the West Coast of North America. Smaller relatives of Giant Squid, called Humbolt Squid, (Which are more aggressive, and can live at the surface. Giant Squid are already dying if they're at the surface.) are moving up from the areas around the Baja Peninsula. Usually a warm-water species, they are taking advantage of warmer ocean waters to travel all the way up to Alaska.
Along that path lies Monterey Bay. Monterey Bay has a very deep canyon that comes almost all the way to the coast, and because of that, several kinds of rather interesting creatures that aren't seen very often are seen in the Bay. For example, the residents of Monterey have seen Blue Whales and Oarfish in the Bay, two very rare open ocean species.
However, these squid, sometimes traveling in packs numbering into the hundreds if not thousands, thrive in deep-water habitats. If they settle into Monterey Bay, there will be nothing left. The fisheries? Gone. The biodiversity? Gone. The types of rare deep-water sharks found in only one or two other places in the world? Gone.
Not to mention the fact that fishing or boating on the Bay would be an extremely dumb idea, for fear of having the squids nearby where, if you fell overboard, you might not make it out alive.
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