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  1. A close-up of Dr. George Benz, Chief Research Scientist at the Tennessee Aquarium and Director of the Southeast Aquatic Research Institute, standing by a shark cartilage skeleton that is in a jar on a table or shelf. He has his left hand on the jar.

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  2. George Benz. Abstract Fifty lemon sharks, Negaprion brevirostris, were captured in a shallow, mangrove-fringed, shark nursery at Bimini, Bahamas, and examined for the presence of skin-dwelling...

  3. Aug 3, 2010 · In a paper I found written by George Benz and Susan Dippenaar they go on to say that the blue shark holds the record for having the most different kinds of Copepods. They could have some on their pectoral fins, on their nose, in their gills, and on their body.

  4. bioone.org › journals › comparative-parasitologyIn Memoriam - BioOne

    Larry was George's first parasitological mentor and had a big influence on him as a young scientist. Soon after Larry died in 1985, George named Dermophthirius penneri Benz 1987, an ectoparasitic monogenoid that infects the skin of blacktip sharks to honor his “good friend and advisor” (Benz, 1987).

  5. Dr. George Benz, Chief Research Scientist at the Tennessee Aquarium and Director of the Southeast Aquatic Research Institute, stands by a shark cartilage skeleton that is in a jar on a table or shelf.

  6. This fully revised and updated edition of the bestselling The Shark Handbook features an all-new, expanded feature on the Great White Shark, plus stunning, full-colour photos and a complete overview of every known shark in the world!

  7. Subsequently, however, George Benz and colleagues captured a sleeper shark estimated to be 2.4m (8 ft.) in length on a submersible camera at 2,657m (8,700 ft.) in the western Gulf of Mexico during October 2001.

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