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The Lady and the Sharks (1969)

de Eugenie Clark

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422596,352 (3.67)2
"Filled with the engaging explorations and the adventures of a remarkable woman, The lady and the sharks is about the joys of diving, exploring, and discovering the world that lives beneath the sea--about the pleasure and power of curiosity. This updated 4th edition recounts the birth and growth of a mjaor marine science laboratory, and describes Genie Clark's fascinating tales about the behavior and physiology of sharks, fish and marine life. Genie's stories have inspired a continually growing audience of readers, scientists, students, collaborators, friends, children, and admirers."--Page 4 of cover… (més)
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The author of this book was a famed marine biologist who began her career simply because she was so passionate about diving and interested in fishes. In the 1950's she was invited to set up and run a marine laboratory on the coast of Florida, now the Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium. It started out as just a small dock and one building where she and a few colleagues would collect, identify and study specimens they collected of various marine life. She was known for spearing fish but obtained many specimens by offering to take bycatch off the hands of fishermen in nearby waters. One chapter delightfully explains how she learned to catch small territorial fishes individually in a glass jar...

There are many pages describing dissections and what they learned from the anatomy or stomach contents of fish, particularly sharks which were her speciality. But they also caught fish alive and studied their behavior in aquariums, made films underwater and most famously, build a pen on the shore where they kept sharks. At first just intending to solve some mysteries about basic shark biology.... Then Eugenie was curious to find out if a shark could learn. So she set up experiments to test their ability to press a target and ring a bell to get a food reward, and to distinguish between targets of different shapes, patterns and colors. Reading about the experiments was my favorite part....

A lot of the book is about the work it took to set up the laboratory, difficulties in keeping tresspassers who wanted to show off to their friends from harming her live sharks, how her young children were involved at the lab, her work involving and educating the public, and many interesting discoveries in the field of ichthyology. I liked reading about the gobies, garden eels, manta rays, hermaphroditic serranus fish and others just as much as the sharks. There are many written descriptions of diving experiences- her favorite activity. One very curious chapter describes a dive into deep sinkholes in the Salt Springs and Warm Springs of Florida- where she and some other divers discovered human remains..... Reading her vivid description of what it was like to dive in that sinkhole is particularly eerie- especially when she writes about experiencing nitrogen narcosis, which sounds incredibly frightening.

more at the Dogear Diary ( )
  jeane | Sep 16, 2017 |
I prefer Lady with a Spear; Clark's tone goes better with high adventure on the South Seas than with a lab start-up in Florida. I find the sinkhole diving chapter creepy, and the archaeological controversy over the human remains found in the sinkholes weird. However, the series is still a neat scientific autobiography, with abundant information about sea life along the Florida Gulf coast. ( )
  bexaplex | Jul 15, 2011 |
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"Filled with the engaging explorations and the adventures of a remarkable woman, The lady and the sharks is about the joys of diving, exploring, and discovering the world that lives beneath the sea--about the pleasure and power of curiosity. This updated 4th edition recounts the birth and growth of a mjaor marine science laboratory, and describes Genie Clark's fascinating tales about the behavior and physiology of sharks, fish and marine life. Genie's stories have inspired a continually growing audience of readers, scientists, students, collaborators, friends, children, and admirers."--Page 4 of cover

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