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Sharks sleep with eyes wide open

03.14.22 | University of Auckland

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New Zealand and Australian researchers studied seven draughtsboard sharks from the Hauraki Gulf, off Auckland, New Zealand to explore how and why the animals sleep.

The sharks could sleep with their eyes open and, in common with other animals, sleep was associated with lying flat and a lowered metabolic rate, they wrote in the journal Biology Letters .The draughtsboard shark – sometimes called the “carpet shark” – can stay stationary, resting on the sea floor, unlike sharks which must swim constantly to stay alive.

As in humans, sleep is a method for conserving energy, it seems. The study was the first physiological evidence of sleep in sharks.

Biology Letters

10.1098/rsbl.2021.0259

Observational study

Animals

Energy conservation characterizes sleep in sharks

9-Mar-2022

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Gilbert Wong
University of Auckland
gilbert.wong@auckland.ac.nz

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Auckland. (2022, March 14). Sharks sleep with eyes wide open. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LN2XXMM1/sharks-sleep-with-eyes-wide-open.html
MLA:
"Sharks sleep with eyes wide open." Brightsurf News, Mar. 14 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LN2XXMM1/sharks-sleep-with-eyes-wide-open.html.