Los Angeles Times

Discovered sharks have ‘sixth sense’

- By Gary Robbins Robbins writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Adrianus J. Kalmijn, the UC San Diego biophysici­st who discovered that sharks can detect the weak electric field produced by other fish — giving them a “sixth sense” and a tremendous advantage in hunting prey — has died at 88.

Kalmijn died Dec. 7 in La Jolla from complicati­ons of acute myeloid leukemia, said his son Jelger Kalmijn, a UC San Francisco researcher who often worked on his father’s projects.

The defining discovery of the elder Kalmijn’s profession­al life came in 1971, when he was a young scientist at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy.

It was widely known that sharks had an abundance of ways of sensing what was around them, especially through their sense of smell. Even a tiny droplet of blood could be picked up by sharks far, far away.

But Kalmijn and his collaborat­ors took things further, showing experiment­ally that the tiny pores in the snout of sharks and skates served as receptors that picked up the electric signals of other fish, even if the fish were hidden beneath the sand or in close relation to food, such as chum.

This dazzled scientists, who said Kalmijn had essentiall­y discovered that sharks have a “sixth sense,” one that also helps them in navigation.

“His contributi­on to shark sensory biology is not just significan­t, it is monumental,” Kyle Newton, a Washington University in St. Louis researcher, said in a statement.

Kalmijn was born Nov. 7, 1933, in the Netherland­s. His father, Joseph, was a high school math teacher. His mother, Johanna Kalmijn-Spierenbur­g, wrote children’s books.

After attending high school, Adrianus Kalmijn served in the military for about three years, where he learned about radar and signals. That experience helped him take a practical, applied approach to his work when he studied at Utrecht University in the Netherland­s.

He later served on the university’s faculty and did extensive shark research at the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n in Massachuse­tts, before he settled in at Scripps in the early 1980s.

“My father felt a deep humility toward animals,” Jelger Kalmijn said.

He is survived by his wife, Vera; children Jelger, Thera and Sander; and six grandchild­ren.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States