Diving with Purpose: Our Recent Citizen Science Adventures
At Divexplore, we believe that every dive is an opportunity to protect the marine environments we love. Recently, our teams have been pulling double duty as adventurers and citizen scientists, turning incredible underwater excursions into vital conservation missions for the Shark Trust.
Here is a look at what we’ve been up to beneath the waves:
1. Unexpected Discoveries at Lundy Island
Our team recently headed out to Lundy Island with one main goal in mind: to enjoy some quality time diving with the island's iconic, playful seals. However, nature had a few even better surprises in store for us.
While exploring, we stumbled across an abundance of shark egg cases—affectionately known as Mermaid’s Purses. Proving that the best dive plans are the flexible ones, we instantly shifted gears. We couldn't pass up the chance to contribute to vital marine conservation, so we went with the flow and spent our time collecting and logging this unexpected data for the Shark Trust's database.
2. Mapping Nursery Grounds in West Wales
Building on that momentum, we just wrapped up our first official weekend down in West Wales acting as dedicated citizen scientists. This time, we went in with a clear, targeted mission: to locate and document shark eggs to help map critical local nursery grounds.
The trip was a massive success! In one small area alone, at a nice, easy depth of just 5 to 8 meters, our team recorded over 10+ shark eggs. Seeing that kind of density in such a concentrated spot is a fantastic, encouraging sign for our local shark populations.
Making Waves for Marine Conservation
Recording data and capturing high-quality photographic evidence while managing buoyancy and current isn't always easy, but our community did a stellar job.
- Our Impact: We successfully mapped a high-density shark nursery and logged spontaneous ecological data to aid shark protection.
- The Big Takeaway: Citizen science plays a massive role in protecting our oceans, and our divers are proving that we can dive for fun and for a purpose.