Study finds Indonesian hotspots are 'like home' for endangered whale sharks

Two bays in Indonesia are hotspots for endangered whale sharks, who frequent their waters year-round and not seasonally as previously thought, a new study has revealed. The research tracked 70 whale sharks over a decade, shedding new light on their migration habits.
ORIGINAL SOURCE →via France 24
ADVERTISEMENT
⚡ STAY AHEAD
Events like this, convergence-verified across 689 sources, land in your inbox every Sunday. Free.
GET THE SUNDAY BRIEFING →RELATED · ID
- [CONFLICT] In Indonesia, a schoolboy moves mountains on waste as government targets reform
- [CONFLICT] Wikimedia completes Indonesia registration under threat of ban
- [CONFLICT] Indonesian soldiers accused of acid attack. What happened and why?
- [CONFLICT] Indonesia should think twice about China’s bauxite rush
- [CONFLICT] Gaming platform Roblox to require facial scans for users under 16 in Indonesia
- [ENERGY] Indonesia’s Mako Gas Project on Track for First Gas in 2027