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Oceans super predators

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Created by SP > 9 months ago, 30 Oct 2013
SP
10979 posts
30 Oct 2013 6:42AM
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This looks interesting...



The Scotty version,




Or for those happy to read over 50 words.... Sorry bout the formatting...


IT started as a deep-sea murder mystery.

What creature would be able to chase down and devour a 500-kilogram great white shark on the sea floor off Western Australia?


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But as filmmakers David Riggs and Leighton De Barros began to investigate what dark fate could have befallen the three-metre monster shark earlier this year, an even bigger mystery unfolded.

Why, once a year, does a rough, remote spot off the WA coast, just half a square kilometre in size, become the epicentre for a barely believable colosseum of battling marine life?

Killer whales by the dozen. Sperm whales. Giant squid. And masses of sharks, all fighting for food and supremacy.

Their resultant documentary, The Search for the Ocean???s Super Predator screens early in November, and aims to answer the question of what colossal creature killed the shark, how and why.

To watch the trailer for The Search for the Ocean's Super Predator, click here.

But as Riggs explains, the bigger mystery to arise out of the film is what is to become of the area where it happened, a marine hotspotknown as the Bremer Canyon.


It started as a film about the demise of a shark, and what could have done it ??? but it has opened up this huge other discovery,?????? Riggs said.

It is a multi-species seasonal bonanza, and it happens to be on what is now recognised as a major hydrocarbon resource.

??????It is mind boggling.??????

As the film which is to be screened on ? ABC on November 3 uncovers, the area off Bremer Bay in WA???s south-west is home to a natural phenomenon involving a leak from a massive hydrocarbon pocket under the seabed, which fuses with the surrounding water to create an ice-like reef known as methane hydrate.

This sparks a food chain involving crustaceans releasing billions of nutrient-rich eggs into the desolate waters.

And that food source brings the ocean???s big boys.

On one particular day, over a four nautical mile period, we saw in excess of 100 killer whales ??? it was ridiculous,?????? Riggs says.

That is a lot of mouths to feed, so what the hell are they doing??

To try to work that out, Riggs reached out to oil and gas company Arcadia Petroleum, which holds tenements that cover nearly 19,000square kilometres in the area.

And the company was happy to hand over its survey findings.

They supplied me with all their observations, and the observations correlated exactly with what I had observed over the last eight years.

? They referred to it as the ???hotspot???,?????? Riggs revealed.

So it definitely seems there is a link between these pressurised deep-sea systems leaking, creating methane hydrate reef systems which creatures like.??????

That link was explored during a filming expedition involving a massive catamaran travelling 60kilometres offshore, where footage was taken from inside an underwater canyon 4500metres deep using camera gear that required cable spool weighing 3000kilograms.

Marine ecologist Michelle Blewitt, great white expert Rachel Robbins, and Mark Norman, an expert on the hunting behaviour of the giant squid, from the Melbourne Museum, all signed on for the expedition.

The footage that was beamed back left them all agog.

You won???t speak to anyone on that boat that was not flabbergasted by the intensity of life out there,? Riggs said.

And having solved the original mystery of who killed the shark by the end of the film, Riggs and his collaborators are left with a bigger question.

What is to happen to the amazing summer phenomenon off WA?s south-western coastline, given the uncertain future of the resources that lie below the seabed?

It is effectively a balloon of hydrocarbon underneath the sea floor which is pressurised, and it is leaking. So what happens when you put a hole in that with an oil rig and depressurise it? Riggs asked.

Is that going to cause this [sea life phenomenon] not to happen? And if that is the case is that something worth taking notice of?

would love in 20 years for my kids to be able to go and look at this spot. That is what this is all about.??????


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The Search for the Ocean???s Super Predator will screen on ABC 1 at 7.30pm on November 3.?

thePup
13831 posts
30 Oct 2013 9:47AM
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Geez that looks interesting - might have a gander at that one mate cheers

Poida
WA, 1916 posts
31 Oct 2013 1:55PM
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local Perth film maker, with a lot of experience in this type of documentary

should be great viewing

thePup
13831 posts
6 Nov 2013 4:25AM
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Option 1 .... Pod of Killer Whales protecting territory or their young ripped it to shreds

Option 2 .... One 25 to 30 foot Super Whitey (with a mouth THAT big) smashed it

How was that last bit where all those smaller whites pissed off quick when that big bastard came silently in geez .... brrrrrrr

laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
6 Nov 2013 7:34AM
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Select to expand quote
thePup said..

Option 1 .... Pod of Killer Whales protecting territory or their young ripped it to shreds

Option 2 .... One 25 to 30 foot Super Whitey (with a mouth THAT big) smashed it

How was that last bit where all those smaller whites pissed off quick when that big bastard came silently in geez .... brrrrrrr



option 3.... wild deep sea racing mullet gang attacked it in revenge

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
6 Nov 2013 8:46AM
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You can watch this on abc/ivew - very enjoyable and informative viewing

obct
NSW, 3487 posts
6 Nov 2013 8:52AM
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Select to expand quote
laceys lane said..

thePup said..

Option 1 .... Pod of Killer Whales protecting territory or their young ripped it to shreds

Option 2 .... One 25 to 30 foot Super Whitey (with a mouth THAT big) smashed it

How was that last bit where all those smaller whites pissed off quick when that big bastard came silently in geez .... brrrrrrr



option 3.... wild deep sea racing mullet gang attacked it in revenge


option 4 ......





thePup
13831 posts
6 Nov 2013 6:33AM
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Select to expand quote
laceys lane said..
thePup said..



Option 1 .... Pod of Killer Whales protecting territory or their young ripped it to shreds



Option 2 .... One 25 to 30 foot Super Whitey (with a mouth THAT big) smashed it



How was that last bit where all those smaller whites pissed off quick when that big bastard came silently in geez .... brrrrrrr


option 3.... wild deep sea racing mullet gang attacked it in revenge


62mac
WA, 24860 posts
8 Nov 2013 6:34AM
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Dazzler75
QLD, 458 posts
8 Nov 2013 12:50PM
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Select to expand quote
Ted the Kiwi said..

You can watch this on abc/ivew - very enjoyable and informative viewing




Saw this on ABC on Sunday night. Great watching, confirmed what I though about those WA ab divers!!!!!!!



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