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By Heidi Henderson | April 15th 2009 06:04 AM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Heidi Henderson

Chair of the Vancouver Paleontological Society. Co-author of In Search of Ancient BC, Volume I, Heartland Publishing.
... Full Bio


Tormented cries from mother as her cub is butchered and eaten...

Does it pull at your heart strings? Mine, too.

A rally of cries about a shark attack generally bring something less warm and fuzzy, something closer to terror and visions of a nasty end for some surfer. No surfer this time.

The 20th Century's most significant marine find became surf and turf himself at a recent feast in a village off the coast of Donsol in the Bicol Region of the Philippines.

More than a rare sighting, this is the 41st specimen ever known. A massive Megamouth, a rare breed of filter-feeding shark, was caught and killed then served up to locals eager to consume the traditional delicacy despite protests from the World Wildlife Federation.

While WWF tried to convey the magnitude of the slaying the world has to wonder if more should have been done. This was more than a rare sighting, this specimen was the 41st ever recorded of Megachasma pelagios.

Panda! Not this time. It was a deliberate ploy to get you to ponder your feelings on slugs vs. bunnies. If it is what enticed you to take a peek, however, perhaps we need to rethink our treatment of the ugly ducklings out there.

We tend to favour cute and cuddly. Dark grey, menacing distant cousins of Jaws don't bring out the maternal instinct quite as readily. Had this been a sighting of a rare panda set to be slaughtered to make soup with his paws, I'm sure Megamouth would have made both CNN and the BBC.

Might isn't right, but something more than sway was needed here.



Comments

jtwitten's picture
I'm reminded of a t-shirt I saw in an airport once (I may be paraphrasing here, but this ain't Shakespeare:
Front: There is room for all God's creatures. . .
Back: . . .on my plate next to the potatoes.

On a totally separate note, do you think the shark media blows human attacks on shark out of all proportion, too?  My guess is no, as I'm pretty sure we actually are a significant threat to their livelihood.

Fossil Huntress's picture

Love the quote!


Aside from the mass extinctions that happened on the planet before we got here, we are the meal-makers and life-takers most of the time. The cave bear, wooly mammoth, giant sloth, even our modern fishing stocks... are harvested for the table.

It pays to be cute and not terribly tasty!



Hank's picture
And don't leave out commerce in this equation.   Without meat, we're left with paleontology, which doesn't taste all that great.



Fossil Huntress's picture
Great find. I bet T-Rex would have gone for a lot more... perhaps adding what's say, 6 zeros? ; )

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