in both Florida and in the Bahamas.
You know, we know almost nothing about them.
We don't know where they migrate to or from,
where they mate, where they have their pups,
and yet, hammerhead populations in the Atlantic
have declined about 80 percent in the last 20 to 30 years.
You know, we're losing them faster than we can possibly find them.
This is the oceanic whitetip shark,
an animal that is considered the fourth most dangerous species,
if you pay attention to such lists.
But it's an animal that's about 98 percent in decline
throughout most of its range.
Because this is a pelagic animal and it lives out in the deeper water,
and because we weren't working on the bottom,
I brought along a shark cage here,
and my friend, shark biologist Wes Pratt is inside the cage.
You'll see that the photographer, of course, was not inside the cage here,
so clearly the biologist is a little smarter than the photographer I guess.
And lastly with this story,
I also wanted to focus on baby sharks, shark nurseries.
And I went to the island of Bimini, in the Bahamas,