The lab is concerned its state funding will be significantly cut by June and it is actively seeking to raise $7 million from private and nonprofit sources to keep its programs going.
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Those programs include monitoring hundreds of adult and juvenile sharks that swim along the Southern California coast.
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That also lets them warn lifeguards if the sharks get too close to the shoreline where swimmers may be present.
"It's getting pretty serious," said Shark Lab director Chris Lowe. "We have enough money to carry us through June but after that, if we don't get more funding, we're going to have to pull out all of the equipment out of the water. We won't be able to monitor sharks along California anymore."
'Sea of Change: The New Sharks of SoCal' examines new shark gathering spot
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'Sea of Change: The New Sharks of SoCal' examines new shark gathering spot
Lowe says the state created a shark beach-safety program in 2018. Since then the shark lab has developed a high-tech system of receivers, buoys and underwater monitors that allow them to track and tag sharks in real time. An instant notification can be sent directly to lifeguards to help keep those in the water safe.
"Everything that we learned from our science gets out to the public, and this is unique," Lowe said. "It's considered one of the best shark mitigation programs in the world."