Prøve GULL - Gratis
Melissa Cristina Márquez
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
|Issue 63
Meet the marine biologist who is standing up for sharks.
-
"I have always had this fascination for not only sharks, but just misunderstood predators as a whole,” Melissa Cristina Márquez tells The Week Junior Science+Nature, “Snakes, wolves, coyotes, bears… anything that has a bad reputation I’ve always been really interested in.” Márquez is a marine biologist (someone who studies life in the sea) with a particular focus on sharks. Márquez researches the areas where sharks live, and has been studying how people’s attitudes towards them affect the way they’re treated in the wild. Sometimes she’s even lucky enough to swim with these magnificent, but unappreciated, creatures.
At one with the ocean
Márquez has always felt at home in the sea. “I was born on an island and my first memories are of me being in the ocean,” she says. Not long afterwards she fell in love with sharks. Her family had just moved from Mexico to the US, and while watching TV, she stumbled upon Shark Week – a series all about these fierce fish. Márquez says she was in awe, and “that night at the dinner table, I was like, ‘I’m going to be a shark scientist’.”
It wasn’t until she was around 14 years old that Márquez had her first interaction with a shark. She was in the sea off the coast of the British Virgin Islands in the Caribbean when she spotted a nurse shark, a slow-moving shark that lives near the sea bed. Márquez remembers being so excited that she screamed. “I still feel that way every time I see a shark,” she admits, “Doesn’t matter their species, I get really, really excited. But now I just scream in my head.”
Denne historien er fra Issue 63-utgaven av The Week Junior Science+Nature UK.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
NEW SCIENTIST LIVE 2025
Head to New Scientist Live 2025, from 18 to 20 October, for loads of mind-blowing science, technology and interesting ideas.
1 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
THE MAGIC OF MUSHROOMS
Ciaran Sneddon takes you to a weird and wonderful world filled with superpowered lifeforms.
6 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Thinking machines
With the rise of artificial intelligence, could computers ever get smarter than humans?
2 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Wildlife watch
Something wicked this way comes... join Jenny Ackland to spot some nasty nature.
1 min
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Trailblazing treatment for deadly disease
One of the world’s most deadly diseases has been successfully treated for the first time. Huntington’s disease is a sickness that attacks the brain, and affects people's movement, ability to think and their emotions.
1 min
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Should schools stop setting homework?
It can boost your school performance, but would children be better off doing other things?
1 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Digging dens for wombats
Meet the relocation experts helping wombats find a new home.
1 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
HEADSCRATCHERS
Hi, I'm Pete and I love science and the natural world. I work with the Royal Institution (Ri) in London, where you can find exciting, hands-on science events for young people. We've teamed up with The Week Junior Science+Nature to answer your burning science questions.
2 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Ben Lamm
Meet the tech expert who wants to bring back woolly mammoths and reawaken Earth's lost wilds.
3 mins
November 2025
The Week Junior Science+Nature UK
Life is "spotted" on Mars
A piece of spotted rock on Mars may prove that there was once life on the Red Planet.
1 min
November 2025
Translate
Change font size
