
Being a scientist at The Center for Shark Research is a career that studies not only migration in Sharks, but a lot of other things about the predators of the sea.
Such as, field studies of shark nursery areas and fisheries in the United States and Gulf of Mexico and California and other regions where they tag sharks and do studies of shark migration, ageing and growth. As well as studies of shark behavior and population, and shark food habits and feeding tactics, investigations of the reproduction and endocrinology of sharks are both done out in the field and in the laboratory, and studies of shark vision are also done.
Much of the work the scientists do is either in a laboratory or out in the field, in the Gulf of Mexico or California, or just out on the East or West coasts.
Dr. Robert Hueter, is the director at The Center for Shark Research (CSR) and he has many resident scientists and staff who all work hard at what they do.
In order to work in the field that these scientists do you should have a degree in biology for sure, if not other things you may be interested in like toxicology, immunology, endocrinology and so on and so forth.
Dr. Catherine J. Walsh is a staff scientist with the CSR and Mote Marine Laboratory (MML) she does much in the field of immunology.
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Sandbar Shark
Career #2