Skip to main content
Back to Show
Changing Seas

Sharks in Belize| Changing Seas | Preview

The Belize Barrier Reef is home to a diverse array of top predators like lemon sharks, nurse sharks, tiger sharks, and Caribbean reef sharks. In a unique collaboration, local fishers leverage their generational knowledge to help marine scientists and fisheries managers keep shark populations healthy for all.

Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.
Support Provided By
Season
Fishing the Flats for Science
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:42
Scientists study tarpon, bonefish and permit to better understand their behaviors.
Lords of the Wetlands
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:42
Scientists work to save crocodiles through research and conservation.
Cryptic Critters
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:42
Deep underwater, on a shipwreck near Key West, lives a tiny potential new threat.
Dolphins: Breaking the Code
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:43
Modern technology is making it possible to correlate dolphin sounds and behavior.
Majestic Mantas
Unlock with PBS Passport
27:13
Scientists experimant to see if giant manta rays are impacted negatively by microplastics.
The Fate of Carbon
Unlock with PBS Passport
27:13
Changes to the ocean environment affect the way carbon is cycled through the seas.
Toxic Algae: Complex Sources and Solutions
Unlock with PBS Passport
27:13
Lake Okeechobee, once the blue heart of Florida, now has putrid mats of blue green algae.
The Future of Seafood
27:18
Discover ways to increase fish production in a sustainable manner.
Beneath the Bridge
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:43
Discover what lives beneath the Blue Heron Bridge in Florida.
Maug’s Caldera: A Natural Laboratory
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:43
Visit the remote Pacific, the islands of Maug - a natural laboratory for scientists.
Manatees: Conserving a Marine Mammal
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:43
Scientists take advantage of manatee gatherings to study them.
Sponges: Oldest Creatures in the Sea?
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:43
Some scientists are suggesting that ctenophores are the oldest sea animals.
Active loading indicator