Dr Vincent Raoult
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sawsharkman.bsky.social
Dr Vincent Raoult
@sawsharkman.bsky.social
Ecologist and fisheries biologist specialising in sharks and rays. Stable isotope expert and general technology aficionado. Senior lecturer in marine ecology, Griffith University (he/him)
Pinned
2024 saw a global bleaching event, but bleaching doesn't always mean corals die. Using drones, we found the 2024 bleaching event killed over 90% of shallow corals at Lizard Island. 🧪🦑🧵

We have to act now.

@griffith.edu.au JCU MQ @geonadir.bsky.social CSIRO

link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Coral bleaching and mass mortality at Lizard Island revealed by drone imagery - Coral Reefs
Quantitatively assessing mortality post coral bleaching at scale is inherently difficult, yet can be achieved with georeferenced imagery from aerial drones. Here, we assess the coral bleaching mortali...
link.springer.com
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Grateful to spend two days on the Klamath watching chinook, liberated by dam removal, return to streams from which they’d been precluded since the Titanic sank. Fish are everywhere, in numbers that stagger the mind & locations that biologists figured would take years to repopulate. Too beautiful.
November 5, 2025 at 9:17 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
NEW PAPER: Survival and recovery of three shark species in North-East Atlantic recreational fisheries.

academic.oup.com/icesjms/arti...

@garzonfrancesco.bsky.social @drmjwitt.bsky.social
🦑🐟🧪🌐🌊🎣
Survival and recovery of three shark species in North-East Atlantic recreational fisheries
Abstract. Understanding how sharks respond to catch and release (C&R) recreational fisheries is an important requirement for effective management. Post
academic.oup.com
November 3, 2025 at 1:58 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
October 23, 2025 at 8:14 PM
Perhaps a dumb milestone, but still amazed to see me hit the 2000 citations mark in Google Scholar. What a wild ride it's been to get to where I am!
October 19, 2025 at 10:42 PM
Teaching-intensive trimesters can be tough, but it can be so rewarding to look at student feedback. Favourite this trimester:

"Vince is the G.O.A.T."
October 16, 2025 at 11:38 AM
I really shouldn't have to spend extra hours just checking to see if the references in student assessments are all just AI hallucinations. What a collective waste of time AI is for our society!
a cartoon character is standing next to a toilet with the words oh that 's al on the bottom
ALT: a cartoon character is standing next to a toilet with the words oh that 's al on the bottom
media.tenor.com
October 13, 2025 at 11:38 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Did my honours lit review manually back in 1998…took me a full day working till 2am to finish. Then someone said oh there’s this program called endnote that does that for you. Saved myself hundreds if not thousands of hours since.
October 13, 2025 at 1:19 AM
Use reference managers people. So many wasted hours doing it manually...
100% stand by this.
October 13, 2025 at 1:14 AM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
100% stand by this.
October 12, 2025 at 2:02 PM
Time to move marine surveying into the 21st century. Our work demonstrates that underwater drones produce sea cucumber surveys that are equivalent to snorkellers and SCUBA

@griffith.edu.au @geonadir.bsky.social @jcu @mq @gbrf

link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Modernising sea cucumber surveys using remotely operated vehicles and aerial drones - Coral Reefs
There is an urgent need for improved monitoring approaches to rapidly and accurately assess sea cucumber populations at ecologically relevant scales. Timely surveys are critical for informing effective fisheries management and decision-making. Traditional surveys, undertaken via snorkelling, manta tows, or SCUBA, are limited to shallow and accessible areas; however, sea cucumbers inhabit a broad range of depths, including areas beyond safe diving limits and exposed shallow waters inaccessible by boat. To overcome these limitations and increase the rapidity of field collection, we propose the use of remote sensing technologies to survey sea cucumber populations across a range of depths. Here, we evaluated the effectiveness of aerial drones and in-water remote operated vehicles (ROVs) for assessing sea cucumber species and abundances across various depth ranges (< 50 m) on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Aerial drone orthomosaics and ROV video footage were compared to more traditional snorkel and SCUBA-based assessments conducted at similar depths. The vast majority of pairwise comparisons between in-water ROV video counts and snorkel or SCUBA assessments found no significant differences in sea cucumber assemblages. Counts from aerial drone-derived orthomosaics, however, were significantly lower, counting approximately half as many sea cucumbers as snorkel counts. This was largely attributed to poor weather during the drone surveys. Remote methods were significantly faster in the field for surveying a given area than traditional methods. Given that towed ROVs can efficiently cover a broader depth range and aerial drones are effective for survey shallow areas under suitable weather conditions, we recommend using a combination of aerial drones and towed ROVs to survey sea cucumbers, with tool selection guided by prevailing weather conditions. This approach offers the advantages of collecting multiple types of data from a single data source, vastly increasing survey efficiency, and providing a historical record for future assessments. The methods have the potential to be used to survey other benthic–associated species.
link.springer.com
October 10, 2025 at 2:42 AM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Goniatite fossils packed throughout this piece of shale. The shells of these ancient relatives of Squid and Octopus must have littered the sea floor that covered this part of the earths surface over 300 million years ago.
County Clare, Ireland
October 8, 2025 at 1:25 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Eastern Australian humpback whale population now well above pre-whaling levels, report finds - ABC News 🦑🧪🌎
These whales were hunted to 150 individuals. Now there's 50,000 of them
Once hunted almost to extinction, the population of humpback whales currently migrating down Australia's east coast has bounced back and is now greater than before whaling.
www.abc.net.au
October 8, 2025 at 7:03 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
85% of Australians Agree: You Can’t “Shark-Proof” the Ocean. New research (from me) - A new nationwide survey (from me) and collected by YouGov has revealed overwhelming agreement among Australians: shark attacks cannot be completely prevented. #sharkattack #shark #nswpol #qldpol
October 2, 2025 at 12:05 AM
This great anecdote speaks to the character quality of both Jane Goodall and Gary Larson.
I knew the first half of this story— that Gary Larsen’s cartoon joking Dr. Goodall was sleeping with chimpanzees caused her Institute to lawyer up only for her to find the comic super amusing upon her return from the field— but I’d never heard Larsen got attacked by a chimpanzee!
October 2, 2025 at 4:05 AM
Vale Jane. A giant.
October 1, 2025 at 10:12 PM
One of my 'hobbies' it taking macro pictures of corals at night. Up close these are always beautiful, alien looking things, often with fluorescent colours. This way, you can see individual coral polyps that make up the colonies!
September 28, 2025 at 10:42 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
I am not anti-fishing.

I am not anti- shark fishing.

But hammerheads in particular are species of significant conservation concern, and one of the worst candidates for “catch and release” of any known fish species.

And it’d be nice if media coverage *of hammerhead fishing* mentioned that
It’s truly baffling to me that so many of these stories focus on “wow big fish” and not “this is an IUCN Red List Critically Endangered species that is extremely physiologically fragile and often does not survive fishing practices like this”

www.mysanantonio.com/news/south-t... 🦑🧪🌎🦈🐠
Giant hammerhead shark reeled in at Corpus Christi beach
It was the third-largest hammerhead shark the Texas fishing guide caught this year.
www.mysanantonio.com
September 26, 2025 at 12:22 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Truly incredible that we can make a wetsuit that makes you less vulnerable to getting stabbed before we make one that doesn’t give me a mega-wedgie
September 25, 2025 at 11:42 AM
Worried about shark bite? We can now produce scientifically tested shark proof wetsuits that reduce the likelihood of traumatic injuries

www.publish.csiro.au/WR/WR25019?f...
Effectiveness of bite-resistant materials to reduce injuries from white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) and tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) bites
Context Shark bites on humans are rare but can have substantial consequences for local coastal communities and businesses, often prompting pressure to implement effective mitigation measures. Wetsuits...
www.publish.csiro.au
September 25, 2025 at 11:36 AM
For those of view wondering, we had evidence this happened for decades before it was ever witnessed. This footage is amazing!
I get that the news cycle is packed right now, but I just heard from a colleague at the Smithsonian that this is fully a GIANT SQUID BEING EATEN BY A SPERM WHALE and it’s possibly the first ever confirmed video according to a friend at NOAA

10 YEAR OLD ME IS LOSING HER MIND (a thread 🧵)
September 24, 2025 at 10:33 PM
When you're marking student assignments that cite your fish science nerd mates

RIP Rob Redford
a man with red hair and a beard is standing in the woods
ALT: a man with red hair and a beard is standing in the woods
media.tenor.com
September 24, 2025 at 3:44 AM
The fascinating about 99% of living organisms is they're just land for another organism to live on. In this case, most sea cucumbers have little scale worms that scurry across them and call the sea cucumber home.
OH WOW. Gastrolepidia moving across this sea cucumber landscape! Its like Dune except with more worms..and underwater! #wormwednesday youtu.be/aWesOXyz6dI?...
Sea Cucumber Scale Worm (Gastrolepidia clavigera) in Romblon - Philippines , July 2024
YouTube video by kay blue
youtu.be
September 17, 2025 at 10:33 PM
Reposted by Dr Vincent Raoult
Calling all isotope ecologists.
IsoEcol 2026 will be held between October 12-17th, 2026 at the University of Hong Kong
See www.isoecol.com/2026/ for more
IsoEcol 2026 – 14th International Conference on the Application of Stable Isotope Techniques in Ecological Studies
www.isoecol.com
September 15, 2025 at 8:39 AM
Some awesome news for your Monday. Critically endangered grey nurse sharks are increasing in number by about 5% a year, the first time the conservation efforts have seemed to work for this species! Still just 1500 breeding adults across eastern Australia...

www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09...
Population surge for endangered sharks labelled 'labradors of the sea'
Scientists say increasing numbers of east coast grey nurse sharks is rare good conservation news for the critically endangered species.
www.abc.net.au
September 15, 2025 at 12:20 AM