Raoult and his colleagues decided to test whether magnets could help keep sharks out of the traps. Sharks have sensory organs in their snouts that sense electromagnetic fields. The organs may help sharks detect prey, says Raoult, because animal muscle movements rely on electrical signals. Magnets can create a much stronger magnetic field than a swimming fish. The team’s hypothesis was that magnets might overstimulate sharks’ sensory organs and repel the animals away from traps. For a shark, Raoult explains, the experience might be “like a really bad smell—it doesn’t hurt, but it’s very unpleasant.”
Raoult and his collaborators tested the idea on 1,015 traps divided into three groups. For the first batch, they glued four 10 centimeter (4 inch) magnets around each trap’s entrances (see Trap Test). For the second batch, they attached non-magnetic metal pieces the same size and shape as the magnets. That would tell the scientists whether sharks were responding to the metal’s appearance or to magnetic effects. The third batch was left unchanged. These last two groups served as controls to compare against the magnet group.