By Kellie Britch, College of Arts and Sciences

USF undergrad Erica Molnar (left) fitting a blacknose shark with a uniquely numbered acoustic dart tag near the base of their dorsal fins. (Photo courtesy of Chase McGuire)
Students from the 最新天美传媒鈥檚 Fish Biology Lab teamed up with graduate
                  students from Florida Atlantic University鈥檚 Elasmo Lab to embark on an educational
                  cruise across Tampa Bay, where they gained hands-on experience collecting, identifying
                  and tagging sharks and performing other biological survey methods. 
 
鈥淥ur 2025 shark tagging education and research cruise was a joint effort with USF,
                  FAU and the Florida Institute of Oceanography (FIO) aboard an FIO research vessel
                  operating out of Bayboro Harbor in St Petersburg,鈥 explained Chase McGuire, a doctoral student in the Department of Integrative Biology and the trip鈥檚 main USF collaborator. 鈥淭he data collected from this project will
                  inform researchers on the relative abundance of large coastal shark species traversing
                  the southwest Florida waters to study their life histories, essential habitats and
                  overall status of shark stocks.鈥 
 
The vessel, which set out Oct. 10-13, steamed past Egmont Key where the students and
                  researchers set out drum lines and long lines baited with large chunks of bonita,
                  an oily fish that is great for attracting large predatory species. While they waited
                  for larger fish and sharks to find the bait, they dragged a trawl net in the surrounding
                  waters to survey some of the smaller sharks and fish species that inhabit the area.
                   
 
鈥淎ll sharks were identified, measured and documented with their location of capture
                  while the larger sharks (over 1 meter in length) were also fitted with a uniquely
                  numbered acoustic dart tag near the base of their dorsal fins,鈥 said McGuire. 鈥淭hese
                  tags will transmit their unique identification number whenever they are in the vicinity
                  of acoustic receivers that have been strategically placed throughout the Gulf, Caribbean
                  and Atlantic regions to track their location over time. Dr. Kajiura and his team will
                  then use this information to piece together the migration patterns of the tagged sharks.鈥

All sharks were identified, measured and documented with their location of capture before being released. (Photo courtesy of Chase McGuire)
In all, they tagged 12 sharks. 
 
鈥淢y personal highlight was being able to tag a blacknose shark myself,鈥 said Erica
                  Molnar, an undergraduate student from USF鈥檚 Department of Integrative Biology. 鈥淪eeing
                  the joy on students' faces over the course of the trip was something that was unforgettable
                  and will stay with all of us for a lifetime. Everyone had a great time applying their
                  knowledge to the real world and getting involved in hands-on research that will provide
                  long-term benefits both to education and to ongoing projects.鈥 
 
With the overwhelming success of this trip, McGuire and the Department of Integrative
                  Biology are looking for funding to make this program a regular part of the Fish Biology
                  Lab. 
 
鈥淭here is simply no replacement for hands-on experience working with the animals and
                  collection methods they're learning about in the lecture portions of these courses,鈥
                  said McGuire. 鈥淣one of this could have been possible without the guidance of Dr. Philip
                  Motta, Dr. Stephen Kajiura, my advisor, Dr. Brad Gemmell, as well as the support we
                  received from Florida Atlantic University, The Florida Institute of Oceanography and
                  the Department of Integrative Biology here at USF's College of Arts and Sciences.鈥 
 
 the Department of Integrative Biology and future tagging efforts.
