New Zealand
Sharp-toothed shark acts as midwife – National – NZ Herald News
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/ Photograph by Richard Robinson
Visitors to Kelly Tarlton’s Underwater World were stunned to see one shark give another shark an impromptu caesarean section.
Staff were initially dubious when visitors came running to tell them there were baby sharks spilling from a wound in a female school shark’s stomach – courtesy of a large bite by another shark.
But they found a female with a large gaping stomach wound and four babies swimming in the tank.
Kelly Tarlton’s aquarist Fiona Davies said it was common for sharks to take chunks out of each other, even in the wild, but she had never heard of anything like this.
“It had to bite a certain part to let them out and do it without killing them [the babies] or her [the mother].”
Ms Davies said the unusual delivery had probably saved the baby sharks’ lives.
Staff did not know the mother was pregnant and, had she given birth naturally, most likely at night, the babies would have been eaten by adult sharks and stingrays before staff could rescue them.
The young sharks have been taken to a “nursery” tank with some baby eagle rays, where visitors can see them before they are released into the wild.
>> Sharp-toothed shark acts as midwife – National – NZ Herald News.
Water rushing out of Tutukaka Marina
0An earthquake struck Samoa today at 6.48am at a depth of 35km and it was centred 205km south of the Samoan capital of Apia and 2685km northeast of Auckland.
A powerful tsunami followed and many people have been injured with homes and resorts obliterated.
Over 100 deaths have been confirmed and all over New Zealand our thoughts and prayers – and aid and funds – are being sent to Samoa to help those affected.
Civil defence director John Hamilton warned people to continue to stay away from beaches even though he has downgraded a tsunami warning.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre issued a Pacific-wide tsunami warning after the quake and witnesses estimated the wave that followed was between one and three metres high when it hit Samoa.
Mr Hamilton said while a 40cm wave had reached the East Cape, a 1m wave had been detected at Raoul Island that could hit New Zealand.Courtesy – New Zealand Herald
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10600389
Kate from Dive! Tutukaka in Northland took this footage of the water draining quickly out of Tutukaka Marina around 2pm today :
courtesy of Poor Knights Diving Videos / Dive Tutukaka, Poor Knights Diving.

